Willa Brown was born January 22, 1906, and spent her early
years as a Chicago social worker and a schoolteacher. But she wanted something
more. Coming of an age in an era in which the daring trailblazers were
aviators, she sought to become a pilot herself. She was inspired in part by
Bessie Coleman of Chicago who had become the world’s first African American
woman pilot when she earned a pilot’s license in France.
Brown earned her MBA from Northwestern in 1937. While she
was studying at Northwestern she met some members of a unit of African American
aviators called the Challenger Air Pilots Association. Interested in what made
flying machines work, she studied aircraft maintenance at Curtiss-Wright
Aeronautical University in Chicago, which was the first flight school to accept
African American students. She put her skills to work at Harlem
Field in Oak Lawn, as a student and later an instructor in the Coffey
Flying School, a pilot training program headed by the legendary aviator
Cornelius Coffey. Theirs was the first African American-owned and operated
flight school in the United States.
Brown knew Coffey from the Curtiss-Wright school and was
eager to take the next step in her aeronautical education: moving from mechanic
to pilot. In 1938, Willa Brown became the first African American woman to earn
a private pilot’s license in the United States. She did so with a nearly-perfect
score on her exam. A year later she accomplished another first when she earned
her commercial pilot’s license as well.
The timing was propitious for Brown and for the nation. War
clouds were gathering in Europe and the Pacific, and unlike the wars of the
past this one was shaping up to be in large part an aerial conflict. While
America remained reluctant to fight, President Franklin Roosevelt sought ways
to prepare for the inevitable. One of these methods involved training as many
civilian pilots as possible so that they would be ready to transition into
military aviation should that become necessary.
Lola Albright (left) and Willa Brown (right) at Harlem Airport in Chicago. |
As the Secretary for the NAAA she worked tirelessly,
contacting decision-makers in Washington to urge them to include African
American pilots in the effort, and to let Harlem Field and the Coffey School
play a leading role in their training.
Pilot training took on new urgency with the outbreak of war
in Europe in 1939, and Brown succeeded in seeing that the federal government’s
plan included seven training sites for prospective African American pilots (the
most famous of which was in Tuskegee, Alabama). One of the sites chosen for the
new Civilian Pilot Training Program was Harlem Field, where Willa Brown would
be in charge of coordinating operations and, reflecting her background as both
a pilot and a teacher, be the head of the ground school for trainees.
But even after they were up and running, the school and the
training effort continued to face challenges from War Department officials
skeptical about African American pilots. Brown wrote to First Lady Eleanor
Roosevelt in 1941 that, “during the past three years I have devoted full time
to aviation, and for the most part marked progress has been made,” she wrote.
“I have, however, encountered several difficulties – several of them I have
handled very well, and some have been far too great for me to master.”
She was determined that as many young pilots as possible
make it through the program, and she would sometimes take matters into her own
hands to help a struggling pilot find what it took to earn his wings. One such
trainee, Quentin Smith, who had known Brown before the war, tells of just how
dedicated she was.
“She said, ‘I’ve been watching you, Quentin, and I know you
can learn to fly. Let me show you something,’ ” Smith told Air and Space
Magazine in 2010. “She pulled it up into a stall and we spun seven or eight
times—and you don’t spin a (Piper) Cub!—and then she pulled it out and this
little lady said to me, ‘You can’t be King Kong, Quentin. You’ve got to be
gentle. You’re going to learn to fly today.’”
She was right. Smith graduated from the program and went
into the Army Air Force. He was just one of many: the Harlem Field school
graduated hundreds of pilots without losing a single airplane.
Another former student, Chauncey Spencer, credited Brown
with being, “the foundation, framework, and builder of people’s souls. She did
it not for herself, but for all of us.”
Many of the pilots Brown helped train would go on to join
the famed Tuskegee Airmen, including two of the original ten pilots and 15 of
their mechanics. In all, nearly 200 Tuskegee Airmen would come from the Harlem
Field training center.
With the war won, Brown recognized that there was still much
to do. She ran unsuccessfully for Congress from Chicago’s South Side in 1946
and again in 1950, the first African American woman to seek a Congressional
seat from Illinois. Undeterred, she kept up her advocacy for integration of the
armed forces, something finally achieved shortly after the war.
She returned to education, teaching high school business and
aeronautics until her retirement in 1971. But even in retirement she remained
engaged in the aviation industry. During the mid-1970s Willa Brown served on
the Federal Aviation Administration’s Women’s Advisory Board. A trailblazer
once again, she was the first African American woman to serve in that capacity.
Willa Brown, blazer of so many trails in American aviation,
died July 18, 1992, in Chicago.