Many exceptional teachers use their instructional expertise to work
with students outside of the classroom. Willa Brown Chappell, the first African
American woman licensed to fly in the United States, is an excellent
example of this.
Willa was born January 22, 1906, in
Glasgow, Kentucky. She earned her degree in education from Indiana State
Teachers College in 1927. She also completed the requirements for an
MBA from Northwestern University in 1937. Following her college
graduation, Willa was employed as a high school teacher at Roosevelt
High School in Gary, Indiana, and later as a social worker in Chicago.
Willa
was always seeking challenges and adventures in her life, especially if
they could be found outside the limited career fields normally open to
African Americans at that time. She decided to learn to fly, studying
with Cornelius R. Coffey, a certified flight instructor and expert
aviation mechanic at a racially segregated airport in Chicago. Willa
earned her private pilot's license in 1938. Later, Willa and Cornelius
married and founded the Coffey School of Aeronautics at Harlem Airport
in Chicago, where together they trained black pilots and aviation
mechanics. Willa conducted the classroom instruction and Cornelius
conducted the in-flight practice.
In 1939, Willa,
Cornelius, and their friend Enoch P. Waters founded the National
Airmen's Association of America. Their goal was to secure admission
for black aviation cadets into the US military. As the organization's
national secretary and the president of the Chicago branch, Willa became
an activist for racial equality. She persistently lobbied the US
Government for integration of black pilots into the segregated Army Air
Corps and the federal Civilian Pilot Training Program (CPTP), a system
established by the Civil Aeronautics Authority just before the outbreak
of World War II. The CPTP's purpose was to provide a pool of civilian
pilots for use during national emergencies. Willa was given the rank
of an officer in this first integrated unit. In 1948, when Congress
finally voted to allow separate-but-equal participation of blacks in
civilian flight training programs, the Coffey School of Aeronautics was
one of a select few private aviation schools selected for participation.
Later, her flight school was selected by the US Army to provide black
trainees for the Air Corps pilot training program at the Tuskegee
Institute. Willa was instrumental in training more than 200 students who
went on to become
Tuskegee pilots. Eventually, Willa Brown became the coordinator of
war-training service for the Civil Aeronautics Authority and a member of
the Federal Aviation Administration's Women's Advisory Board. She was
the first black female officer in the Civil Air Patrol and the first
black woman to hold a commercial pilot's license in the United States.
This
remarkable educator and pioneer aviatrix passed away on July 18, 1992.
In 2010, Willa was awarded the Distinguished Alumni Award by the Indiana
State University Alumni Association. She was inducted into the Aviation
Hall of Fame in her native Kentucky in 2003.
To find out more about
this remarkable chalkboard champion, you can read a chapter about her in
my next book, Chalkboard Heroes, which has just been published and is available on amazon.com and the website for Barnes and Noble.
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