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Amy Johnson

Amy Johnson CBE (born 1 July 1903 – disappeared 5 January 1941) was a pioneering English pilot, who was the first woman to fly solo from London to Australia.

Amy Johnson
Amy Johnson c. 1930
Born(1903-07-01)1 July 1903
Disappeared5 January 1941(1941-01-05) (aged 37)
Thames Estuary, near Herne Bay, Kent, England
StatusBelieved to have died in an aviation accident
EducationBoulevard Municipal Secondary School
Alma materUniversity of Sheffield
Occupation(s)Aviator and Engineer
Spouse
(m. 1932; div. 1938)
AwardsSegrave Trophy (1932)

Flying solo or with her husband, Jim Mollison, she set many long-distance records during the 1930s. In 1933, Katharine Hepburn's character in the film Christopher Strong was inspired by Johnson. She flew in the Second World War as a part of the Air Transport Auxiliary and disappeared during a ferry flight. The cause of her death has been a subject of discussion over many years.

Early life edit

Born in 1903 in Kingston upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire, Amy Johnson was the daughter of Amy Hodge, granddaughter of William Hodge, a Mayor of Hull, and John William Johnson whose family were fish merchants in the firm of Andrew Johnson, Knudtzon and Company. She was the eldest of three sisters, the next in age being Irene who was a year younger.[1]

Johnson was educated at Boulevard Municipal Secondary School, later Kingston High School, and the University of Sheffield, where she graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in economics.[2] She then worked in London as secretary to a solicitor, William Charles Crocker. She was introduced to flying as a hobby, gaining an aviator's certificate, No. 8662,[3] on 28 January 1929, and a pilot's "A" licence, No. 1979, on 6 July 1929, both at the London Aeroplane Club under the tutelage of Captain Valentine Baker. In 1929, she became the first British woman to obtain a ground engineer's "C" licence.[4]

Johnson was a friend and collaborator of Fred Slingsby whose Yorkshire based company, Slingsby Aviation of Kirbymoorside, North Yorkshire, became the UK's most famous glider manufacturer. Slingsby helped found Yorkshire Gliding Club at Sutton Bank and during the 1930s she was an early member and trainee.[5][6]

Aviation edit

 
Johnson in her Gipsy Moth leaving Australia for Newcastle, 14 June 1930
Amy Johnson when flying solo from England to Australia

Johnson obtained the funds for her first aircraft from her father, who was always one of her strongest supporters, and Lord Wakefield.[2] She purchased a secondhand de Havilland DH.60 Gipsy Moth G-AAAH and named it Jason after her father's business trade mark.[7][Note 1]

In 1930, Johnson achieved worldwide recognition when she became the first woman to fly solo from England to Australia. Flying G-AAAH Jason, she left Croydon Airport, Surrey, on 5 May and landed at Darwin, Northern Territory on 24 May, 11,000 miles (18,000 km) later.[8] Six days after, she damaged her aircraft while landing downwind at Brisbane airport and flew to Sydney with Captain Frank Follett while her plane was repaired. Jason was later flown to Mascot, Sydney, by Captain Lester Brain.[9][10] Jason is now on permanent display in the Flight Gallery of the Science Museum in London.

She received the Harmon Trophy as well as a CBE in George V's 1930 Birthday Honours in recognition of this achievement, and was honoured with the No. 1 civil pilot's licence under Australia's 1921 Air Navigation Regulations.[11][12][Note 2]

 
Amy Johnson and Jack Humphreys visit to Japan, September 1931

Johnson next obtained a de Havilland DH.80 Puss Moth G-AAZV which she named Jason II. In July 1931, she and co-pilot Jack Humphreys became the first people to fly from London to Moscow in one day, completing the 1,760 miles (2,830 km) journey in approximately 21 hours. From there, they continued across Siberia and on to Tokyo, setting a record time for Britain to Japan.[13]

In 1932, Johnson married Scottish pilot Jim Mollison, who had proposed to her during a flight together, eight hours after they had first met. In July 1932, Johnson set a solo record for a flight from London to Cape Town, South Africa in a Puss Moth G-ACAB, named Desert Cloud, breaking her new husband's record.[13] De Havilland Co and Castrol Oil featured this flight in advertising campaigns.[14]

 
Amy Johnson and Jason in Jhansi, India in May 1930
 
Amy Johnson and Jim Mollison were married, on 29 July 1932

In July 1933, Johnson and Mollison flew a G-ACCV, named Seafarer, a de Havilland DH.84 Dragon I,[13] nonstop from Pendine Sands, South Wales, heading to Floyd Bennett Field in Brooklyn, New York.[15] The aim was to take Seafarer to the starting point for the Mollisons' attempt at achieving a world record distance flying non-stop from New York to Baghdad.

Running low on fuel and flying in the dark, the pair made the decision to land short of New York. Spotting the lights of Bridgeport Municipal Airport, now Sikorsky Memorial Airport, in Stratford, Connecticut they circled it five times before crash landing some distance outside the field in a drainage ditch. Both were thrown from the aircraft but suffered only cuts and gashes.[16] After recuperating, the pair were feted by New York society and received a ticker tape parade down Wall Street.[4]

In 1934, the Mollisons flew in record time, from Britain to India in a G-ACSP, named Black Magic, a de Havilland DH.88 Comet, as part of the Britain to Australia MacRobertson Air Race. They were forced to retire from the race at Allahabad because of engine trouble.[13]

In September 1934, Johnson, under her married name of Mollison, became the youngest president of the Women's Engineering Society, having been vice-president since 1934.[17] Johnson succeeded Elizabeth M. Kennedy in the role.[18] Johnson was succeeded as President by Edith Mary Douglas.[19] She was active in the society until her death.[20]

On 4 May 1936, Johnson made her last record-breaking flight, starting from Gravesend Airport and regaining her Britain to South Africa record in G-ADZO, a Percival Gull Six.[21] In 1936, she was awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Aero Club.[4]

She further honed her gliding skills with the Midland Gliding Club, based in Shropshire, which she joined in October 1937, and remained an active flying member until gliding was suspended following the outbreak of the Second World War.[22] In 1938, Johnson overturned her glider, when landing after a display at Walsall Aerodrome in England, but was not seriously hurt.[23] Following the accident, she told reporters, "I still declare that gliding is the safest form of flying."[22] In 1937, she divorced Mollison. Soon afterwards, she reverted to her maiden name.[24]

Johnson began to explore other ways to make a living through business ventures, journalism and fashion. She modelled clothes for the designer Elsa Schiaparelli and created her a travelling bag sold under her own name.[25]

In 1939, Johnson found work flying with the Portsmouth, Southsea and Isle of Wight Aviation Company, piloting short flights across the Solent and flying as a target for searchlight batteries and anti-aircraft gunners to practise on.[26]

Second World War edit

During the Second World War, Johnson's employing company’s aircraft were taken over by the Air Ministry in March 1940. She was served a notice of redundancy alongside all other pilots in the company, as all the aircraft were requisitioned for the war effort. She received a week's pay and a further four weeks' pay of £40 as a redundancy package.[27]

Two months later, Johnson joined the newly formed Air Transport Auxiliary (ATA), which transported Royal Air Force aircraft around the country. She rose to first officer under the command of her friend and fellow pilot Pauline Gower.[28] Her former husband also flew for the ATA throughout the war.[29] Johnson described a typical day in her life in the ATA in a humorous article, published posthumously in 1941, for The Woman Engineer journal.[20]

Disappearance edit

In a last letter to her friend, Caroline Haslett, on New Year's Day 1941, Johnson wrote: "I hope the gods will watch over you this year, and I wish you the best of luck (the only useful thing not yet taxed!)".[20] On 5 January 1941, while flying an Airspeed Oxford for the ATA from Prestwick via RAF Squires Gate to RAF Kidlington near Oxford, Johnson went off-course in adverse weather conditions. Reportedly out of fuel, she bailed out as her aircraft crashed into the Thames Estuary near Herne Bay.

A convoy of wartime vessels in the Thames Estuary spotted Johnson's parachute coming down and saw her alive in the water, calling for help.[30] Conditions were poor: there was a heavy sea and a strong tide, snow was falling and it was intensely cold.[31] Lt Cmdr Walter Fletcher, the Captain of HMS Haslemere,[Note 3] navigated his ship to attempt a rescue.[31] The crew of the vessel threw ropes out to Johnson, but she was unable to reach them and was lost under the ship. A number of witnesses believed there was a second body in the water.[30]

Fletcher dived in and swam out to this, rested on it for a few minutes and then let go. When the lifeboat reached him he was unconscious and as a result of the intense cold he died in hospital days later.[31][32] Johnson's watertight flying bag, her log book and cheque book later washed up, and were recovered near the crash site.[33][25]

A memorial service was held for Johnson in the church of St Martin-in-the-Fields on 14 January 1941. Lt Cmdr Walter Fletcher was posthumously awarded the Albert Medal in May 1941.[31]

Disputed circumstances edit

In 1999, it was reported that Johnson's death may have been caused by friendly fire.[34] Tom Mitchell, from Crowborough, Sussex, claimed to have shot Johnson's aircraft down when she twice failed to give the correct identification code during the flight. Mitchell explained how the aircraft was sighted and contacted by radio. A request was made for the signal. She gave the wrong one twice. "Sixteen rounds of shells were fired and the plane dived into the Thames Estuary. We all thought it was an enemy plane until the next day when we read the papers and discovered it was Amy. The officers told us never to tell anyone what happened."[34]

In 2016, Alec Gill, a historian, claimed that the son of a ship's crew member stated that Johnson had died because she was sucked into the blades of the ship's propellers. The crewman did not observe this to occur, but believes it is true.[35]

As a member of the ATA with no known grave, her body never recovered, Johnson is commemorated, under the name of Amy V. Johnson, by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission on the Air Forces Memorial at Runnymede.[36]

 
A memorial for UK Air Transport Auxiliary personnel, who went missing presumed dead during the Second World War

Honours and tributes edit

 
English Heritage blue plaque at Vernon Court, Cricklewood, London
 
The KLM McDonnell Douglas MD-11 named Amy Johnson
 
Amy Johnson Building, University of Sheffield

In June 1930, Johnson's flight to Australia was the subject of a contemporary popular song, "Amy, Wonderful Amy", composed by Horatio Nicholls and recorded by Harry Bidgood, Jack Hylton, Arthur Lally, Arthur Rosebery and Debroy Somers. She was also the guest of honour at the opening of the first Butlins holiday camp, in Skegness in 1936. From 1935 to 1937, Johnson was President of the Women's Engineering Society.[37]

A collection of Amy Johnson souvenirs and mementos was donated by her father to Sewerby Hall in 1958. The hall now houses a room dedicated to Amy Johnson in its museum.[38] In 1974, Harry Ibbetson's statue of Amy Johnson was unveiled in Prospect Street, Hull where a girls' school was named after her (the school closed in 2004).[39]

In 2016, new statues of Johnson were unveiled to commemorate the 75th anniversary of her death. The first, on 17 September, was at Herne Bay, close to the site where she was last seen alive,[40] and the second, on 30 September, was unveiled by Maureen Lipman near Hawthorne Avenue, Hull, close to Johnson's childhood home.[41]

In 2017, The Guardian listed the Amy Johnson bronze as one of the "best female statues in Britain".[42] A blue plaque commemorates Johnson at Vernon Court, Hendon Way, in Childs Hill, London NW2.[43] She is commemorated with a green plaque on The Avenues, Kingston upon Hull. She is commemorated with another blue plaque in Princes Risborough where she lived for a year.

 
The Amy Johnson Comet Restoration Centre, 2017

Buildings named in Johnson's honour include:

  • "Amy Johnson Building" housing the department of Automatic Control and Systems Engineering at the University of Sheffield.
  • "Amy Johnson Primary School" situated on Mollison Drive on the Roundshaw Estate, Wallington, Surrey, which is built on the former runway site of Croydon Airport.[44]
  • "The Hawthornes @ Amy Johnson" in Hull, a major housing development by Keepmoat Homes on the site of the former Amy Johnson School.
  • "Amy Johnson Comet Restoration Centre" at Derby Airfield, where the Mollisons' DH.88 Comet Black Magic is being restored to flying condition.
  • "Amy Johnson House" in Cherry Orchard Road, Croydon was named for her; built in the 20th century, it was demolished in the mid-2010s.[45]
  • "Amy's Restaurant and Bar" at the Hilton hotels at both London Gatwick and Stansted airports are named after her.

Other tributes to Johnson include a KLM McDonnell-Douglas MD-11 and, after that aircraft was retired, a Norwegian Air UK Boeing 787-9,[46] named in her honour.

"Amy Johnson Avenue" is a main road running northwards from Tiger Brennan Drive, Winnellie, to McMillans Rd, Karama, in Darwin, Australia.

"Amy Johnson Way" is a road linking commercial premises in Blackpool, Lancashire, UK, adjacent to Blackpool Airport. It is also the name of a road in Clifton Moor, York.

"Johnson Road" is one of the roads built on the site of the former Heston Aerodrome in west London.

In 2011 the Royal Aeronautical Society established the annual Amy Johnson Named Lecture[47] to celebrate a century of women in flight[Note 4] and to honour Britain's most famous female aviator. Carolyn McCall, Chief Executive of EasyJet, delivered the Inaugural Lecture on 6 July 2011 at the Society's headquarters in London. The Lecture is held on or close to 6 July every year to mark the date in 1929 when Amy Johnson was awarded her pilot's licence.

Over a six-month period, inmates of Hull Prison built a full-size model of the Gipsy Moth aircraft used by Johnson to fly solo from Britain to Australia. In February 2017 this went on public display at Hull Paragon Interchange.[48]

In 2017, Google commemorated Johnson's 114th birthday with a Google Doodle.[49]

In 2017, the airline Norwegian painted the tail fin of two of its aircraft with a portrait of Johnson. She is one of the company's "British tail fin heroes", joining Queen singer Freddie Mercury, children's author Roald Dahl, England's World Cup winning captain Bobby Moore and aviation entrepreneur Sir Freddie Laker.[50][51]

A mural reading QUEEN OF THE AIR (which was a nickname the British press gave Johnson) was painted in Cricklewood railway station to commemorate the 100-year anniversary of women obtaining the right to vote in the UK.[52]

St Mary's Church in Beverley, East Yorkshire announced their intention of installing a stone carving of Amy Johnson as part of a programme of celebrating women in the restoration of the stonework of the medieval church in 2021. The other eight figures will include fellow engineer and WES member Hilda Lyon, Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary Seacole, Marie Curie, Rosalind Franklin, Helen Sharman and Ada Lovelace.[53][54][55]

In popular culture edit

Johnson's life has been the subject of a number of treatments in film and television, some more accurately biographical than others. In 1942, a film of Johnson's life, They Flew Alone, was made by director-producer Herbert Wilcox, starring Anna Neagle as Johnson, and Robert Newton as Mollison. The movie is known in the United States as Wings and the Woman.

Amy! (1980) was an avant-garde documentary written and directed by feminist film theorist Laura Mulvey and semiologist Peter Wollen. A 1984 BBC television film Amy starred Harriet Walter in the title role. In the 1991, Australian television miniseries The Great Air Race, aka Half a World Away, based on the 1934 MacRobertson Air Race, Johnson was portrayed by Caroline Goodall.

Johnson earned a passing mention in other works such as the 2007 British film adaption of Noel Streatfeild's 1936 novel Ballet Shoes, wherein the character Petrova is inspired by Johnson in her dreams of becoming an aviator.

In radio, the 2002 BBC Radio broadcast The Typist who Flew to Australia, a play by Helen Cross, presented the theme that Johnson's aviation career was prompted by years of boredom in an unsatisfying job as a typist and sexual adventures including a seven-year affair with a Swiss businessman who married someone else.[56]

In music, Johnson inspired a number of works, including the song "Flying Sorcery" from Scottish singer-songwriter Al Stewart's album, Year of the Cat (1976).[57] A Lone Girl Flier and Just Plain Johnnie (Jack O'Hagan) sung by Bob Molyneux,[58] and Johnnie, Our Aeroplane Girl sung by Jack Lumsdaine.[59] Queen of the Air (2008) by Peter Aveyard is a musical tribute to Johnson.[60] Indie pop band The Lucksmiths used a clip of her Australia welcome speech as an intro to their song The Golden Age of Aviation.

More fictionalised portrayals include a Doctor Who Magazine comic story in 2013 titled "A Wing and a Prayer", in which the time-travelling Doctor encounters Johnson in 1930. He tells Clara Oswald her death is a fixed point in time. Clara realises what's important is that it appears Amy died. They save her from drowning and then take her to the planet Cornucopia.[61]

The character Worrals in the series of books by Captain W. E. Johns was modelled on Amy Johnson.[62]

In 2023, screenwriter Sally Wainwright, best known for Happy Valley, revealed that she was interested in writing a drama about Johnson but "failed to convince" TV channels [63]

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Her father was a partner in the Andrew Johnson Knudtzon Fish Merchants.
  2. ^ A de Havilland DH 60G Gipsy Moth G-ABDV, named "Jason III" was given to Johnson on her return to England.[13]
  3. ^ Haslemere was a small, former ferry that in Royal Navy wartime service was being used as a barrage balloon ship.
  4. ^ In 1911, Hilda Hewlett became the first British woman to earn her pilot's licence.[47]

References edit

  1. ^ "Amy Johnson pioneering aviator" (PDF). Hull Local Studies Library, Hull City Council. Retrieved 19 February 2013.
  2. ^ a b Dunmore, Spencer (2004). "Undaunted: Long-Distance Flyers in the Golden Age of Aviation" Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 0771029373. pp. 194–195.
  3. ^ "The Royal Aero Club of the United Kingdom: Official notices to members". Flight. 25 October 1929. p. 1141. Retrieved 4 October 2018.
  4. ^ a b c Aitken, Kenneth (July 1991). "Amy Johnson (The Speed Seekers)." Aeroplane Monthly, Vol. 19, no. 7, Issue no. 219. p. 440.
  5. ^ "Amy's Yorkshire Flying Club". Amy Johnson Arts Trust. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
  6. ^ "Amy's Yorkshire Flying Club". Yorkshire Post. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
  7. ^ Eden, P. E. Civil Aircraft 1907–Present 2012 p. 46 colour drawing ISBN 9781908696649
  8. ^ Marshall, A. C., ed. (1934). Newnes Golden Treasury. George Newnes Ltd. p. 488 (photo plate opposite). The photograph was taken at Insein, and shows how the plane was damaged in landing.
  9. ^ Captain Lester Brain beside Amy's "Jason". Ted Hood. 1931. information from original catalogue record[permanent dead link]
  10. ^ "Miss Amy Johnson". The Canberra Times. Vol. 4, no. 813. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 30 May 1930. p. 1. Retrieved 24 May 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  11. ^ "No. 33611". The London Gazette (Supplement). 30 May 1930. p. 3481.
  12. ^ . Treasures of the Battye Library. State Library of Western Australia. Archived from the original on 10 October 2009. Retrieved 15 July 2007.
  13. ^ a b c d e "Amy Johnson." 17 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Science Museum (South Kensington. UK), 2013.
  14. ^ De Vries, G. Wingfield. A Pictorial History 1991 pp. 79–80 with photos ISBN 0620159391
  15. ^ Ignasher, Jim (30 December 2015). "Stratford, CT – July 23, 1933." 10 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine New England Aviation History. Retrieved: 9 January 2016.
  16. ^ "Fly ocean, crash near goal." Chicago Daily Tribune, 24 July 1933. Retrieved: 9 January 2016.
  17. ^ "The Women Engineer, vol 3 p. 309". www2.theiet.org. Retrieved 4 March 2020.[permanent dead link]
  18. ^ "The Woman Engineer vol 3 pg 235". twej.theiet.org. Retrieved 2 October 2022.
  19. ^ "The Woman Engineer vol 3 pg 397". twej.theiet.org. Retrieved 2 October 2022.
  20. ^ a b c "The Woman Engineer Vol 5". www2.theiet.org. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  21. ^ De Vries, G. Wingfield. A Pictorial History 1991 p. 99 with photo ISBN 0620159391
  22. ^ a b "Aviation heroine's close shave". Shropshire Star. 20 July 2022. p. 24.Article by Toby Neal, title referred to the gliding accident in Walsall in 1938.
  23. ^ "Helliwells aircraft component factory at Walsall airport." 28 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Black Country Bugle, 25 November 2010. Retrieved: 19 May 2013.
  24. ^ Smith, Constance Babington (2004). Amy Johnson. Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK: The History Press Ltd. ISBN 978-0-75093-703-0. pp. 312–313.
  25. ^ a b . Amy Johnson Project. Archived from the original on 20 October 2018. Retrieved 25 July 2021.
  26. ^ "Air Transport Auxiliary". www.rafmuseum.org.uk. from the original on 21 June 2021. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
  27. ^ "Letter of Redundancy". from the original on 24 June 2021.
  28. ^ "ATA Letter of Promotion". from the original on 24 June 2021.
  29. ^ "8 Unsung Women Explorers". Our Amazing Planet, LiveScience.com. 30 April 2012. Retrieved 30 April 2012.
  30. ^ a b Gillies, Midge (2004). Amy Johnson : queen of the air. London: Phoenix. ISBN 0753817705. OCLC 56451512.
  31. ^ a b c d "Heroes Of Air Raids Civil Defence Awards, Rescues In Face Of Danger." The Times (London), Issue 48928, 17 May 1941, p. 2. Retrieved: 27 December 2012.
  32. ^ Luff, David (2002). Amy Johnson: Enigma in the Sky. Airlife. ISBN 9781840373196.
  33. ^ "BBC - A History of the World - Object : Amy Johnson's Flying Bag". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 25 July 2021.
  34. ^ a b Gray, Alison (6 February 1999). "I think I shot down Amy Johnson". The Scotsman.
  35. ^ Jameson, Sophie; Foster, Patrick (6 January 2016). "Flying pioneer Amy Johnson 'chopped to pieces by Royal Navy ship's propeller', historian says". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 18 August 2016.
  36. ^ "CWGC Casualty Record: Johnson, Amy V. Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved: 10 January 2016.
  37. ^ "Past Presidents." 29 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine Women's Engineering Society. Retrieved: 21 November 2010.
  38. ^ "The House". Sewerby Hall. Retrieved 22 June 2021.
  39. ^ "Amy Johnson." 15 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Hull History Centre via hullhistorycentre.org.uk. Retrieved: 14 December 2010.
  40. ^ "Aviator Amy Johnson: Statue unveiled at Herne Bay". BBC News. 17 September 2016. Retrieved 1 October 2016.
  41. ^ "Amy Johnson statue unveiled in Hull". BBC News. 30 September 2016. Retrieved 1 October 2016.
  42. ^ Pidd, Helen (9 January 2017). "Britain to celebrate pioneering women with three new statues". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 18 May 2019.
  43. ^ "Blue Plaque – Johnson, Amy (1903–1941)". English Heritage. Retrieved 1 October 2016.
  44. ^ "Amy Johnson Primary School." 4 September 2010 at the Wayback Machine lgfl.net, 2010. Retrieved: 25 December 2010.
  45. ^ "Geograph:: Amy Johnson House, Cherry Orchard Road". www.geograph.org.uk. Retrieved 5 January 2022.
  46. ^ "Norwegian Air UK G-CKHL "Amy Johnson". Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  47. ^ a b Bossom, Emma (3 June 2011). "Carolynn McCall to speak at inaugural Amy Johnson Named Lecture." 23 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Royal Aeronautical Society's Amy Johnson Named Lecture via aerosocietychannel.com. Retrieved: 9 June 2011.
  48. ^ "Full-size model of Amy Johnson's Gipsy Moth on show in Hull". BBC News. 9 February 2017. Retrieved 12 February 2017.
  49. ^ "Amy Johnson's 114th Birthday". Google Doodle. Retrieved 1 July 2017.
  50. ^ Caswell, Mark (3 July 2017). "Freddie Mercury unveiled as Norwegian's latest tail fin hero". Business Traveller.com. Retrieved 5 July 2017.[permanent dead link]
  51. ^ Munro, Scott (30 June 2017). "Freddie Mercury's image to appear on Norwegian aircraft". Teamrock.com. Future Publishing Limited. Retrieved 5 July 2017.
  52. ^ Nathalie Raffray (29 November 2018). . Kilburntimes.co.uk. Archived from the original on 4 December 2018. Retrieved 3 December 2018.
  53. ^ "Yorkshire church to install stone carvings celebrating women". The Guardian. 21 May 2021. Retrieved 31 May 2021.
  54. ^ Correspondent, Kaya Burgess, Religious Affairs. "Medieval church puts historic women on a pedestal". The Times. ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 31 May 2021.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  55. ^ Roland Deller (21 May 2021). "Carvings of local heroes and global pioneers commissioned to replace damaged stonework". St Mary's Church, Beverley. Retrieved 31 May 2021.
  56. ^ "BBC Radio 4 Extra - Helen Cross - The Typist Who Flew to Australia". Bbc.co.uk. 10 September 2018. Retrieved 3 December 2018.
  57. ^ Dyer, Kim (29 January 2016), "Review of 'Flying Sorcery'." 13 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine alstewart.com. Retrieved: 27 October 2010.
  58. ^ National Film and Sound Archive of Australia: Songs about Amy Johnson in "Our Heroes of the Air." The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia. Retrieved: 1 January 2014.
  59. ^ "National Film and Sound Archive of Australia: Songs about Amy Johnson; Our Heroes of the Air. 31 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine National Film and Sound Archive of Australia. Retrieved: 18 May 2012.
  60. ^ "Queen of the Air: Peter Aveyard's tribute to Amy Johnson." 7 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine queenoftheair.co.uk. Retrieved: 24 September 2010.
  61. ^ "Doctor who Magazine #263." doctorwhonews.net, 24 July 2013. Retrieved: 1 January 2014.
  62. ^ "The blaggers guide to Worrals of the WAAF". The Independent. 28 July 2013. from the original on 16 November 2016. Retrieved 15 November 2016.
  63. ^ "Sally Wainwright: Happy Valley creator says TV soaps have become unbelievable." BBC News, 25 August 2023. Retrieved: 25 August 2023.

Further reading edit

  • Gillies, Midge. Amy Johnson, Queen of the Air, London, Phoenix Paperback, 2004. ISBN 0753817705.
  • Moolman, Valerie. Women Aloft (The Epic of Flight). Alexandria, Virginia: Time-Life Books, 1981. ISBN 0-8094-3287-0.
  • Nesbitt, Roy. "What did Happen to Amy Johnson?" Aeroplane Monthly (Part 1), Vol. 16, no. 1, January 1988, (Part 2) Vol. 16, no. 2, February 1988.
  • Sugden, Philip. Amy's Last Flight: The Fate of Amy Johnson in 1941. Beverley, East Yorkshire: Highgate Press, 2015. ISBN 978-1-902645-62-9
  • Turner, Mary. The Women's Century: A Celebration of Changing Roles 1900–2000. Kew, Richmond, Surrey, UK: The National Archives, 2003. ISBN 1-903365-51-1.

External links edit

  • by Science Museum, London
  • BBC Humber article on Johnson
  • BBC page on Amy Johnson's death
  • The RAF Museum, Hendon, includes another Johnson display
  • CWGC record
  • "In Case You've Never Heard of Amy Johnson". Experimental Aircraft Association. 28 March 2017.
  • Science Museum article on women in engineering including Amy Johnson 5 December 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  • de Havilland Gipsy Moth G-AAAH "Jason" in display at the Science Museum in London
  • Comet Racer G-ACSP Restoration
  • British Library – 'The Story of My Flight' Amy Johnson describes her flight to Australia in a National Sound Archive recording.
  • One minute silent film; close-ups of Amy Johnson speaking. Pathe News, Cape Town, 1932
  • , including Charles Kingsford Smith, Amy Johnson and Bert Hinkler talking about their journeys on the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia's website: "Our Heroes of the Air"

johnson, this, article, about, british, aviator, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, july, 2023, born, j. This article is about the British aviator For other uses see Amy Johnson disambiguation This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article July 2023 Amy Johnson CBE born 1 July 1903 disappeared 5 January 1941 was a pioneering English pilot who was the first woman to fly solo from London to Australia Amy JohnsonCBEAmy Johnson c 1930Born 1903 07 01 1 July 1903Kingston upon Hull East Riding of Yorkshire EnglandDisappeared5 January 1941 1941 01 05 aged 37 Thames Estuary near Herne Bay Kent EnglandStatusBelieved to have died in an aviation accidentEducationBoulevard Municipal Secondary SchoolAlma materUniversity of SheffieldOccupation s Aviator and EngineerSpouseJim Mollison m 1932 div 1938 wbr AwardsSegrave Trophy 1932 Flying solo or with her husband Jim Mollison she set many long distance records during the 1930s In 1933 Katharine Hepburn s character in the film Christopher Strong was inspired by Johnson She flew in the Second World War as a part of the Air Transport Auxiliary and disappeared during a ferry flight The cause of her death has been a subject of discussion over many years Contents 1 Early life 2 Aviation 3 Second World War 4 Disappearance 4 1 Disputed circumstances 5 Honours and tributes 6 In popular culture 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life editBorn in 1903 in Kingston upon Hull East Riding of Yorkshire Amy Johnson was the daughter of Amy Hodge granddaughter of William Hodge a Mayor of Hull and John William Johnson whose family were fish merchants in the firm of Andrew Johnson Knudtzon and Company She was the eldest of three sisters the next in age being Irene who was a year younger 1 Johnson was educated at Boulevard Municipal Secondary School later Kingston High School and the University of Sheffield where she graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in economics 2 She then worked in London as secretary to a solicitor William Charles Crocker She was introduced to flying as a hobby gaining an aviator s certificate No 8662 3 on 28 January 1929 and a pilot s A licence No 1979 on 6 July 1929 both at the London Aeroplane Club under the tutelage of Captain Valentine Baker In 1929 she became the first British woman to obtain a ground engineer s C licence 4 Johnson was a friend and collaborator of Fred Slingsby whose Yorkshire based company Slingsby Aviation of Kirbymoorside North Yorkshire became the UK s most famous glider manufacturer Slingsby helped found Yorkshire Gliding Club at Sutton Bank and during the 1930s she was an early member and trainee 5 6 Aviation edit nbsp Johnson in her Gipsy Moth leaving Australia for Newcastle 14 June 1930 source source source source source source source source Amy Johnson when flying solo from England to Australia Johnson obtained the funds for her first aircraft from her father who was always one of her strongest supporters and Lord Wakefield 2 She purchased a secondhand de Havilland DH 60 Gipsy Moth G AAAH and named it Jason after her father s business trade mark 7 Note 1 In 1930 Johnson achieved worldwide recognition when she became the first woman to fly solo from England to Australia Flying G AAAH Jason she left Croydon Airport Surrey on 5 May and landed at Darwin Northern Territory on 24 May 11 000 miles 18 000 km later 8 Six days after she damaged her aircraft while landing downwind at Brisbane airport and flew to Sydney with Captain Frank Follett while her plane was repaired Jason was later flown to Mascot Sydney by Captain Lester Brain 9 10 Jason is now on permanent display in the Flight Gallery of the Science Museum in London She received the Harmon Trophy as well as a CBE in George V s 1930 Birthday Honours in recognition of this achievement and was honoured with the No 1 civil pilot s licence under Australia s 1921 Air Navigation Regulations 11 12 Note 2 nbsp Amy Johnson and Jack Humphreys visit to Japan September 1931 Johnson next obtained a de Havilland DH 80 Puss Moth G AAZV which she named Jason II In July 1931 she and co pilot Jack Humphreys became the first people to fly from London to Moscow in one day completing the 1 760 miles 2 830 km journey in approximately 21 hours From there they continued across Siberia and on to Tokyo setting a record time for Britain to Japan 13 In 1932 Johnson married Scottish pilot Jim Mollison who had proposed to her during a flight together eight hours after they had first met In July 1932 Johnson set a solo record for a flight from London to Cape Town South Africa in a Puss Moth G ACAB named Desert Cloud breaking her new husband s record 13 De Havilland Co and Castrol Oil featured this flight in advertising campaigns 14 nbsp Amy Johnson and Jason in Jhansi India in May 1930 nbsp Amy Johnson and Jim Mollison were married on 29 July 1932 In July 1933 Johnson and Mollison flew a G ACCV named Seafarer a de Havilland DH 84 Dragon I 13 nonstop from Pendine Sands South Wales heading to Floyd Bennett Field in Brooklyn New York 15 The aim was to take Seafarer to the starting point for the Mollisons attempt at achieving a world record distance flying non stop from New York to Baghdad Running low on fuel and flying in the dark the pair made the decision to land short of New York Spotting the lights of Bridgeport Municipal Airport now Sikorsky Memorial Airport in Stratford Connecticut they circled it five times before crash landing some distance outside the field in a drainage ditch Both were thrown from the aircraft but suffered only cuts and gashes 16 After recuperating the pair were feted by New York society and received a ticker tape parade down Wall Street 4 In 1934 the Mollisons flew in record time from Britain to India in a G ACSP named Black Magic a de Havilland DH 88 Comet as part of the Britain to Australia MacRobertson Air Race They were forced to retire from the race at Allahabad because of engine trouble 13 In September 1934 Johnson under her married name of Mollison became the youngest president of the Women s Engineering Society having been vice president since 1934 17 Johnson succeeded Elizabeth M Kennedy in the role 18 Johnson was succeeded as President by Edith Mary Douglas 19 She was active in the society until her death 20 On 4 May 1936 Johnson made her last record breaking flight starting from Gravesend Airport and regaining her Britain to South Africa record in G ADZO a Percival Gull Six 21 In 1936 she was awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Aero Club 4 She further honed her gliding skills with the Midland Gliding Club based in Shropshire which she joined in October 1937 and remained an active flying member until gliding was suspended following the outbreak of the Second World War 22 In 1938 Johnson overturned her glider when landing after a display at Walsall Aerodrome in England but was not seriously hurt 23 Following the accident she told reporters I still declare that gliding is the safest form of flying 22 In 1937 she divorced Mollison Soon afterwards she reverted to her maiden name 24 Johnson began to explore other ways to make a living through business ventures journalism and fashion She modelled clothes for the designer Elsa Schiaparelli and created her a travelling bag sold under her own name 25 In 1939 Johnson found work flying with the Portsmouth Southsea and Isle of Wight Aviation Company piloting short flights across the Solent and flying as a target for searchlight batteries and anti aircraft gunners to practise on 26 Second World War editDuring the Second World War Johnson s employing company s aircraft were taken over by the Air Ministry in March 1940 She was served a notice of redundancy alongside all other pilots in the company as all the aircraft were requisitioned for the war effort She received a week s pay and a further four weeks pay of 40 as a redundancy package 27 Two months later Johnson joined the newly formed Air Transport Auxiliary ATA which transported Royal Air Force aircraft around the country She rose to first officer under the command of her friend and fellow pilot Pauline Gower 28 Her former husband also flew for the ATA throughout the war 29 Johnson described a typical day in her life in the ATA in a humorous article published posthumously in 1941 for The Woman Engineer journal 20 Disappearance editIn a last letter to her friend Caroline Haslett on New Year s Day 1941 Johnson wrote I hope the gods will watch over you this year and I wish you the best of luck the only useful thing not yet taxed 20 On 5 January 1941 while flying an Airspeed Oxford for the ATA from Prestwick via RAF Squires Gate to RAF Kidlington near Oxford Johnson went off course in adverse weather conditions Reportedly out of fuel she bailed out as her aircraft crashed into the Thames Estuary near Herne Bay A convoy of wartime vessels in the Thames Estuary spotted Johnson s parachute coming down and saw her alive in the water calling for help 30 Conditions were poor there was a heavy sea and a strong tide snow was falling and it was intensely cold 31 Lt Cmdr Walter Fletcher the Captain of HMS Haslemere Note 3 navigated his ship to attempt a rescue 31 The crew of the vessel threw ropes out to Johnson but she was unable to reach them and was lost under the ship A number of witnesses believed there was a second body in the water 30 Fletcher dived in and swam out to this rested on it for a few minutes and then let go When the lifeboat reached him he was unconscious and as a result of the intense cold he died in hospital days later 31 32 Johnson s watertight flying bag her log book and cheque book later washed up and were recovered near the crash site 33 25 A memorial service was held for Johnson in the church of St Martin in the Fields on 14 January 1941 Lt Cmdr Walter Fletcher was posthumously awarded the Albert Medal in May 1941 31 Disputed circumstances edit In 1999 it was reported that Johnson s death may have been caused by friendly fire 34 Tom Mitchell from Crowborough Sussex claimed to have shot Johnson s aircraft down when she twice failed to give the correct identification code during the flight Mitchell explained how the aircraft was sighted and contacted by radio A request was made for the signal She gave the wrong one twice Sixteen rounds of shells were fired and the plane dived into the Thames Estuary We all thought it was an enemy plane until the next day when we read the papers and discovered it was Amy The officers told us never to tell anyone what happened 34 In 2016 Alec Gill a historian claimed that the son of a ship s crew member stated that Johnson had died because she was sucked into the blades of the ship s propellers The crewman did not observe this to occur but believes it is true 35 As a member of the ATA with no known grave her body never recovered Johnson is commemorated under the name of Amy V Johnson by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission on the Air Forces Memorial at Runnymede 36 nbsp A memorial for UK Air Transport Auxiliary personnel who went missing presumed dead during the Second World WarHonours and tributes edit nbsp English Heritage blue plaque at Vernon Court Cricklewood London nbsp The KLM McDonnell Douglas MD 11 named Amy Johnson nbsp Amy Johnson Building University of Sheffield In June 1930 Johnson s flight to Australia was the subject of a contemporary popular song Amy Wonderful Amy composed by Horatio Nicholls and recorded by Harry Bidgood Jack Hylton Arthur Lally Arthur Rosebery and Debroy Somers She was also the guest of honour at the opening of the first Butlins holiday camp in Skegness in 1936 From 1935 to 1937 Johnson was President of the Women s Engineering Society 37 A collection of Amy Johnson souvenirs and mementos was donated by her father to Sewerby Hall in 1958 The hall now houses a room dedicated to Amy Johnson in its museum 38 In 1974 Harry Ibbetson s statue of Amy Johnson was unveiled in Prospect Street Hull where a girls school was named after her the school closed in 2004 39 In 2016 new statues of Johnson were unveiled to commemorate the 75th anniversary of her death The first on 17 September was at Herne Bay close to the site where she was last seen alive 40 and the second on 30 September was unveiled by Maureen Lipman near Hawthorne Avenue Hull close to Johnson s childhood home 41 In 2017 The Guardian listed the Amy Johnson bronze as one of the best female statues in Britain 42 A blue plaque commemorates Johnson at Vernon Court Hendon Way in Childs Hill London NW2 43 She is commemorated with a green plaque on The Avenues Kingston upon Hull She is commemorated with another blue plaque in Princes Risborough where she lived for a year nbsp The Amy Johnson Comet Restoration Centre 2017 Buildings named in Johnson s honour include Amy Johnson Building housing the department of Automatic Control and Systems Engineering at the University of Sheffield Amy Johnson Primary School situated on Mollison Drive on the Roundshaw Estate Wallington Surrey which is built on the former runway site of Croydon Airport 44 The Hawthornes Amy Johnson in Hull a major housing development by Keepmoat Homes on the site of the former Amy Johnson School Amy Johnson Comet Restoration Centre at Derby Airfield where the Mollisons DH 88 Comet Black Magic is being restored to flying condition Amy Johnson House in Cherry Orchard Road Croydon was named for her built in the 20th century it was demolished in the mid 2010s 45 Amy s Restaurant and Bar at the Hilton hotels at both London Gatwick and Stansted airports are named after her Other tributes to Johnson include a KLM McDonnell Douglas MD 11 and after that aircraft was retired a Norwegian Air UK Boeing 787 9 46 named in her honour Amy Johnson Avenue is a main road running northwards from Tiger Brennan Drive Winnellie to McMillans Rd Karama in Darwin Australia Amy Johnson Way is a road linking commercial premises in Blackpool Lancashire UK adjacent to Blackpool Airport It is also the name of a road in Clifton Moor York Johnson Road is one of the roads built on the site of the former Heston Aerodrome in west London In 2011 the Royal Aeronautical Society established the annual Amy Johnson Named Lecture 47 to celebrate a century of women in flight Note 4 and to honour Britain s most famous female aviator Carolyn McCall Chief Executive of EasyJet delivered the Inaugural Lecture on 6 July 2011 at the Society s headquarters in London The Lecture is held on or close to 6 July every year to mark the date in 1929 when Amy Johnson was awarded her pilot s licence Over a six month period inmates of Hull Prison built a full size model of the Gipsy Moth aircraft used by Johnson to fly solo from Britain to Australia In February 2017 this went on public display at Hull Paragon Interchange 48 In 2017 Google commemorated Johnson s 114th birthday with a Google Doodle 49 In 2017 the airline Norwegian painted the tail fin of two of its aircraft with a portrait of Johnson She is one of the company s British tail fin heroes joining Queen singer Freddie Mercury children s author Roald Dahl England s World Cup winning captain Bobby Moore and aviation entrepreneur Sir Freddie Laker 50 51 A mural reading QUEEN OF THE AIR which was a nickname the British press gave Johnson was painted in Cricklewood railway station to commemorate the 100 year anniversary of women obtaining the right to vote in the UK 52 St Mary s Church in Beverley East Yorkshire announced their intention of installing a stone carving of Amy Johnson as part of a programme of celebrating women in the restoration of the stonework of the medieval church in 2021 The other eight figures will include fellow engineer and WES member Hilda Lyon Mary Wollstonecraft Mary Seacole Marie Curie Rosalind Franklin Helen Sharman and Ada Lovelace 53 54 55 In popular culture editJohnson s life has been the subject of a number of treatments in film and television some more accurately biographical than others In 1942 a film of Johnson s life They Flew Alone was made by director producer Herbert Wilcox starring Anna Neagle as Johnson and Robert Newton as Mollison The movie is known in the United States as Wings and the Woman Amy 1980 was an avant garde documentary written and directed by feminist film theorist Laura Mulvey and semiologist Peter Wollen A 1984 BBC television film Amy starred Harriet Walter in the title role In the 1991 Australian television miniseries The Great Air Race aka Half a World Away based on the 1934 MacRobertson Air Race Johnson was portrayed by Caroline Goodall Johnson earned a passing mention in other works such as the 2007 British film adaption of Noel Streatfeild s 1936 novel Ballet Shoes wherein the character Petrova is inspired by Johnson in her dreams of becoming an aviator In radio the 2002 BBC Radio broadcast The Typist who Flew to Australia a play by Helen Cross presented the theme that Johnson s aviation career was prompted by years of boredom in an unsatisfying job as a typist and sexual adventures including a seven year affair with a Swiss businessman who married someone else 56 In music Johnson inspired a number of works including the song Flying Sorcery from Scottish singer songwriter Al Stewart s album Year of the Cat 1976 57 A Lone Girl Flier and Just Plain Johnnie Jack O Hagan sung by Bob Molyneux 58 and Johnnie Our Aeroplane Girl sung by Jack Lumsdaine 59 Queen of the Air 2008 by Peter Aveyard is a musical tribute to Johnson 60 Indie pop band The Lucksmiths used a clip of her Australia welcome speech as an intro to their song The Golden Age of Aviation More fictionalised portrayals include a Doctor Who Magazine comic story in 2013 titled A Wing and a Prayer in which the time travelling Doctor encounters Johnson in 1930 He tells Clara Oswald her death is a fixed point in time Clara realises what s important is that it appears Amy died They save her from drowning and then take her to the planet Cornucopia 61 The character Worrals in the series of books by Captain W E Johns was modelled on Amy Johnson 62 In 2023 screenwriter Sally Wainwright best known for Happy Valley revealed that she was interested in writing a drama about Johnson but failed to convince TV channels 63 Gallery edit source source source source source Amy Johnson discusses plans for her tour source source Amy Johnson speaks about her England Australia solo flight source source source source source Amy Johnson flying to Cape Town seeking husband s recordSee also editList of fatalities from aviation accidents List of female explorers and travelers List of people who disappeared mysteriously at seaNotes edit Her father was a partner in the Andrew Johnson Knudtzon Fish Merchants A de Havilland DH 60G Gipsy Moth G ABDV named Jason III was given to Johnson on her return to England 13 Haslemere was a small former ferry that in Royal Navy wartime service was being used as a barrage balloon ship In 1911 Hilda Hewlett became the first British woman to earn her pilot s licence 47 References edit Amy Johnson pioneering aviator PDF Hull Local Studies Library Hull City Council Retrieved 19 February 2013 a b Dunmore Spencer 2004 Undaunted Long Distance Flyers in the Golden Age of Aviation Toronto McClelland amp Stewart ISBN 0771029373 pp 194 195 The Royal Aero Club of the United Kingdom Official notices to members Flight 25 October 1929 p 1141 Retrieved 4 October 2018 a b c Aitken Kenneth July 1991 Amy Johnson The Speed Seekers Aeroplane Monthly Vol 19 no 7 Issue no 219 p 440 Amy s Yorkshire Flying Club Amy Johnson Arts Trust Retrieved 24 August 2019 Amy s Yorkshire Flying Club Yorkshire Post Retrieved 24 August 2019 Eden P E Civil Aircraft 1907 Present 2012 p 46 colour drawing ISBN 9781908696649 Marshall A C ed 1934 Newnes Golden Treasury George Newnes Ltd p 488 photo plate opposite The photograph was taken at Insein and shows how the plane was damaged in landing Captain Lester Brain beside Amy s Jason Ted Hood 1931 information from original catalogue record permanent dead link Miss Amy Johnson The Canberra Times Vol 4 no 813 Australian Capital Territory Australia 30 May 1930 p 1 Retrieved 24 May 2018 via National Library of Australia No 33611 The London Gazette Supplement 30 May 1930 p 3481 Brearley Pilot s Licences Treasures of the Battye Library State Library of Western Australia Archived from the original on 10 October 2009 Retrieved 15 July 2007 a b c d e Amy Johnson Archived 17 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Science Museum South Kensington UK 2013 De Vries G Wingfield A Pictorial History 1991 pp 79 80 with photos ISBN 0620159391 Ignasher Jim 30 December 2015 Stratford CT July 23 1933 Archived 10 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine New England Aviation History Retrieved 9 January 2016 Fly ocean crash near goal Chicago Daily Tribune 24 July 1933 Retrieved 9 January 2016 The Women Engineer vol 3 p 309 www2 theiet org Retrieved 4 March 2020 permanent dead link The Woman Engineer vol 3 pg 235 twej theiet org Retrieved 2 October 2022 The Woman Engineer vol 3 pg 397 twej theiet org Retrieved 2 October 2022 a b c The Woman Engineer Vol 5 www2 theiet org Retrieved 17 May 2020 De Vries G Wingfield A Pictorial History 1991 p 99 with photo ISBN 0620159391 a b Aviation heroine s close shave Shropshire Star 20 July 2022 p 24 Article by Toby Neal title referred to the gliding accident in Walsall in 1938 Helliwells aircraft component factory at Walsall airport Archived 28 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Black Country Bugle 25 November 2010 Retrieved 19 May 2013 Smith Constance Babington 2004 Amy Johnson Stroud Gloucestershire UK The History Press Ltd ISBN 978 0 75093 703 0 pp 312 313 a b About Amy Amy Johnson Project Archived from the original on 20 October 2018 Retrieved 25 July 2021 Air Transport Auxiliary www rafmuseum org uk Archived from the original on 21 June 2021 Retrieved 21 June 2021 Letter of Redundancy Archived from the original on 24 June 2021 ATA Letter of Promotion Archived from the original on 24 June 2021 8 Unsung Women Explorers Our Amazing Planet LiveScience com 30 April 2012 Retrieved 30 April 2012 a b Gillies Midge 2004 Amy Johnson queen of the air London Phoenix ISBN 0753817705 OCLC 56451512 a b c d Heroes Of Air Raids Civil Defence Awards Rescues In Face Of Danger The Times London Issue 48928 17 May 1941 p 2 Retrieved 27 December 2012 Luff David 2002 Amy Johnson Enigma in the Sky Airlife ISBN 9781840373196 BBC A History of the World Object Amy Johnson s Flying Bag www bbc co uk Retrieved 25 July 2021 a b Gray Alison 6 February 1999 I think I shot down Amy Johnson The Scotsman Jameson Sophie Foster Patrick 6 January 2016 Flying pioneer Amy Johnson chopped to pieces by Royal Navy ship s propeller historian says Daily Telegraph Retrieved 18 August 2016 CWGC Casualty Record Johnson Amy V Commonwealth War Graves Commission Retrieved 10 January 2016 Past Presidents Archived 29 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine Women s Engineering Society Retrieved 21 November 2010 The House Sewerby Hall Retrieved 22 June 2021 Amy Johnson Archived 15 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Hull History Centre via hullhistorycentre org uk Retrieved 14 December 2010 Aviator Amy Johnson Statue unveiled at Herne Bay BBC News 17 September 2016 Retrieved 1 October 2016 Amy Johnson statue unveiled in Hull BBC News 30 September 2016 Retrieved 1 October 2016 Pidd Helen 9 January 2017 Britain to celebrate pioneering women with three new statues The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 18 May 2019 Blue Plaque Johnson Amy 1903 1941 English Heritage Retrieved 1 October 2016 Amy Johnson Primary School Archived 4 September 2010 at the Wayback Machine lgfl net 2010 Retrieved 25 December 2010 Geograph Amy Johnson House Cherry Orchard Road www geograph org uk Retrieved 5 January 2022 Norwegian Air UK G CKHL Amy Johnson Retrieved 1 November 2017 a b Bossom Emma 3 June 2011 Carolynn McCall to speak at inaugural Amy Johnson Named Lecture Archived 23 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Royal Aeronautical Society s Amy Johnson Named Lecture via aerosocietychannel com Retrieved 9 June 2011 Full size model of Amy Johnson s Gipsy Moth on show in Hull BBC News 9 February 2017 Retrieved 12 February 2017 Amy Johnson s 114th Birthday Google Doodle Retrieved 1 July 2017 Caswell Mark 3 July 2017 Freddie Mercury unveiled as Norwegian s latest tail fin hero Business Traveller com Retrieved 5 July 2017 permanent dead link Munro Scott 30 June 2017 Freddie Mercury s image to appear on Norwegian aircraft Teamrock com Future Publishing Limited Retrieved 5 July 2017 Nathalie Raffray 29 November 2018 Cricklewood Station graced with mural of UKs first female pilot Amy Johnson from Roe Green Village Latest Kilburn and Brent News Brent amp Kilburn Times Kilburntimes co uk Archived from the original on 4 December 2018 Retrieved 3 December 2018 Yorkshire church to install stone carvings celebrating women The Guardian 21 May 2021 Retrieved 31 May 2021 Correspondent Kaya Burgess Religious Affairs Medieval church puts historic women on a pedestal The Times ISSN 0140 0460 Retrieved 31 May 2021 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Roland Deller 21 May 2021 Carvings of local heroes and global pioneers commissioned to replace damaged stonework St Mary s Church Beverley Retrieved 31 May 2021 BBC Radio 4 Extra Helen Cross The Typist Who Flew to Australia Bbc co uk 10 September 2018 Retrieved 3 December 2018 Dyer Kim 29 January 2016 Review of Flying Sorcery Archived 13 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine alstewart com Retrieved 27 October 2010 National Film and Sound Archive of Australia Songs about Amy Johnson in Our Heroes of the Air The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia Retrieved 1 January 2014 National Film and Sound Archive of Australia Songs about Amy Johnson Our Heroes of the Air Archived 31 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine National Film and Sound Archive of Australia Retrieved 18 May 2012 Queen of the Air Peter Aveyard s tribute to Amy Johnson Archived 7 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine queenoftheair co uk Retrieved 24 September 2010 Doctor who Magazine 263 doctorwhonews net 24 July 2013 Retrieved 1 January 2014 The blaggers guide to Worrals of the WAAF The Independent 28 July 2013 Archived from the original on 16 November 2016 Retrieved 15 November 2016 Sally Wainwright Happy Valley creator says TV soaps have become unbelievable BBC News 25 August 2023 Retrieved 25 August 2023 Further reading editGillies Midge Amy Johnson Queen of the Air London Phoenix Paperback 2004 ISBN 0753817705 Moolman Valerie Women Aloft The Epic of Flight Alexandria Virginia Time Life Books 1981 ISBN 0 8094 3287 0 Nesbitt Roy What did Happen to Amy Johnson Aeroplane Monthly Part 1 Vol 16 no 1 January 1988 Part 2 Vol 16 no 2 February 1988 Sugden Philip Amy s Last Flight The Fate of Amy Johnson in 1941 Beverley East Yorkshire Highgate Press 2015 ISBN 978 1 902645 62 9 Turner Mary The Women s Century A Celebration of Changing Roles 1900 2000 Kew Richmond Surrey UK The National Archives 2003 ISBN 1 903365 51 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Amy Johnson Biography of Amy Johnson by Science Museum London BBC Humber article on Johnson BBC page on Amy Johnson s death The RAF Museum Hendon includes another Johnson display RAF History page on Amy Johnson CWGC record Amy Johnson Pioneer Aviator Article by LaRue Scott In Case You ve Never Heard of Amy Johnson Experimental Aircraft Association 28 March 2017 Science Museum article on women in engineering including Amy Johnson Archived 5 December 2021 at the Wayback Machine de Havilland Gipsy Moth G AAAH Jason in display at the Science Museum in London Comet Racer G ACSP Restoration British Library The Story of My Flight Amy Johnson describes her flight to Australia in a National Sound Archive recording One minute silent film close ups of Amy Johnson speaking Pathe News Cape Town 1932 Songs inspired by and recordings of famous aviators including Charles Kingsford Smith Amy Johnson and Bert Hinkler talking about their journeys on the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia s website Our Heroes of the Air Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Amy Johnson amp oldid 1220863794, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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