Dorothy Olsen Explained

Dorothy Olsen
Birth Name:Dorothy Eleanor Kocher
Birth Date:10 July 1916
Birth Place:Woodburn, Oregon, U.S.
Death Place:University Place, Washington, U.S.
Known For:Member of Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP)

Dorothy Eleanor Olsen (; July 10, 1916 – July 23, 2019) was an American aircraft pilot and member of the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs) during World War II. She grew up on her family's farm in Woodburn, Oregon, developing an interest in aviation from a young age. She earned her private pilot certificate in 1939, when it was unusual for women to be pilots.

In 1943, Olsen joined the newly formed WASPs as a civil service employee. After training in Texas, she was assigned to the Sixth Ferrying Group in Long Beach, California, where she worked ferrying new aircraft from the factories where they were built to U.S. airbases. She flew more than 20 types of military airplanes, including high-performance fighters such as the P-51 Mustang and the twin-engine P-38 Lightning, which she favored over larger aircraft such as bombers; she was particularly fond of the P-51.

After the war, Olsen retired from flying and moved to the state of Washington, where she married, raised a family, and lived for the rest of her life. In 2009, she was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal honoring her service during the war. Olsen died in 2019 aged 103.

Early life

Dorothy Eleanor Olsen was born in Woodburn, near Portland, Oregon, on July 10, 1916, to Ralph and Frances (Zimmering) Kocher, and grew up on the family's small farm.[1] At the age of eight, she decided she wanted to fly airplanes after reading The Red Knight of Germany, Floyd Gibbons's biography of World War I flying ace Manfred von Richthofen. Olsen's introduction to flight was when she took a biplane ride at a state fair, which inspired her to take flying lessons;[2] [3] the cost of the flight reportedly exhausted her entire savings.[4] In 2011, she told the Chinook Observer:[5]

After leaving high school, Olsen worked briefly as a dance instructor. She earned her private pilot's license in 1939,[6] taking her checkride in a 40hp Taylorcraft. Reportedly one of only three women in the Portland area to have a private pilot's license at the time, Olsen flew with the Woodburn Flying Club (she recalled being the only woman among nineteen men), and with the Civil Air Patrol in Portland and The Dalles.[7]

WASPs

In September 1942, the Women's Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron was formed, led by Nancy Harkness Love. The squadron recruited women who already held commercial pilot licenses with an average of 1,100 hours flying experience, to ferry military aircraft without the need for any additional training. In the same month, the Women's Flying Training Detachment was created under the leadership of Jacqueline Cochran. This group took less experienced women pilots and provided them with additional training to fly military aircraft, comparable to the Army Air Forces Training Command's cadet curriculum. In the summer of 1943, these two units were merged to form the Woman Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs). WASPs took non-combat flying jobs as civil service employees, including flight instruction, towing gliders and gunnery practice targets, performing engineering test flights, and aircraft ferrying.[8] [9]

Olsen joined the WASPs in 1943. A small woman, 5feet tall, Olsen embarked on a weight-gaining regimen based on bananas and malted milk to make the 100lb required minimum. There were more than 25,000 applicants to the program, of whom fewer than 1,900 were accepted and 1,074 graduated; Olsen was one of 152 students in class 43–4. Her training began in February 1943, at Houston Municipal Field (renamed William P. Hobby Airport in 1967) where half of her class was stationed; the other half reported to Avenger Field in Sweetwater, Texas.[10] Applicants had to pay their own travel expenses to get to the training camps, as well covering lodging expenses and purchasing dress uniforms. The initial training was in the Fairchild PT-19, progressing to the Vultee BT-13, the North American AT-6, and finally to the twin-engine Beechcraft AT-11.

Olsen initially hated her training, but she stayed with the program to avoid the embarrassment of dropping out. In a 2010 interview, she recollected crowded housing, insects, and poor weather that made the conditions "pretty primitive". She encountered difficulties when her fiancé died of spinal meningitis; taking time off to attend his funeral put her behind the rest of her class. Despite being sick with a cold on her return, she passed a checkride that included aerobatic maneuvers, allowing her to stay with her class although she struggled to catch up. She graduated on August 7, 1943,[11] and was assigned to the Sixth Ferrying Group in Long Beach, California.[12] She later said:

Olsen credited Jacqueline Cochran, the director of the WASP, with providing an opportunity to keep women pilots flying during World War II. Olsen flew 61 missions for the U.S. Army Air Corps, delivering brand new planes with less than a half hour of flight time on them from the factory. She was one of only 12 women certified for night flight. A typical assignment for Olsen was to ferry a P-38 or P-51 from Long Beach to Newark, New Jersey, then get a military transport flight to Niagara Falls, New York, where she would pick up a Bell P-63 for delivery to Great Falls, Montana, and then return to Long Beach for another trip. These were all single-seat fighters, with the P-38 being twin engine, the P-51 and P-63 single engine.[13] [14] [15]

Olsen took a pair of good shoes with her on ferry flights so she could go on dancing dates with men at her destination before having to take off on her next flight. She often left her name and address in the cockpits of planes she had ferried, to be found later by the combat pilots, a practice shared by other WASPs. Two such combat pilots sent replies. One, a lieutenant, wrote "I thought I'd write a few lines to let you know that despite the fact that a woman once flew it, the ship performs perfectly and is apparently without flaws of any kind". WASPs were not considered military personnel; Olsen is listed in the Sixth Ferrying Group yearbook with the title of "Civilian Pilot". When the WASP program ended in 1944, the pilots were discharged at their home bases but with no transportation allowance to get back home. WASPs were retroactively granted veteran status as part of the GI Bill Improvement Act of 1977.[16]

According to Olsen, she flew more than 20 different models of military aircraft, both Army and Navy types.[17] Her favorite was the P-51. Debbie Jennings, a historian with the Seattle Museum of Flight,[18] said Olsen disliked flying bombers because in the single-seat fighters, "she was by herself and could do whatever she wanted". Jennings mentioned that Olsen enjoyed scaring farmers on their tractors by flying close to them and "would do the same at railroad stations just because". For these actions, she was reprimanded by her superiors. According to her son, "She felt bombers were like driving buses". Her daughter noted that Olsen felt the P-38 was "an old woman's plane", which "anybody could fly", but a pilot had to "stay on top of" the P-51.

After the war

After the war, Kocher married Harold W. Olsen of the Washington State Police Department, and they moved to University Place, Washington. The couple had a daughter, Julie (Stranburg), and a son, Kim; after raising them, she ran antique shops. Nerve damage from a dental procedure left her deaf for many years, but at the age of 80 she received cochlear implants that restored her hearing.

Olsen never flew commercially after the war, and never flew at all after having children. She is quoted as saying, "Why would I want to fly a Cessna when I've flown a P-51?" In 2009, Olsen (along with her fellow WASPs) was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal to commemorate her service.[19] In 2015, she was honored with a flyover of Seattle's Boeing Field by vintage aircraft for her 99th birthday.[20] In 2016, Olsen celebrated her 100th birthday at Joint Base Lewis–McChord. Also in attendance were fellow WASPs Alta Thomas, Betty Dybbro, and Mary Jean Sturdevant.[21]

Olsen died on July 23, 2019, at her home in University Place, Washington, aged 103. She was given military honors at her funeral. Olsen was one of the last 38 WASPs still alive. Her husband Harold died in 2006.

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Roberts . Sam . August 9, 2019 . Dorothy Olsen, a Pioneering Pilot in World War II, Dies at 103 . subscription . August 10, 2019 . . en-US . 0362-4331 . August 10, 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190810014944/https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/09/us/dorothy-olsen-dead.html . live .
  2. News: Langer . Emily . August 5, 2019 . Dorothy Olsen, Daring Aviatrix with the WASPs During World War II, Dies at 103 . subscription . August 7, 2019 . . 2641-9599 . August 7, 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190807021730/https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/obituaries/dorothy-olsen-daring-aviatrix-with-the-wasps-during-world-war-ii-dies-at-103/2019/08/05/37a81640-b790-11e9-b3b4-2bb69e8c4e39_story.html . live .
  3. News: Bonnet . Siandhara . July 30, 2019 . University Place Woman Who Was a Daredevil Flier with WASPs During WWII Dies at 103 . subscription . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20210614230524/https://www.thenewstribune.com/news/local/article233173076.html . June 14, 2021 . August 7, 2019 . . Tacoma, Washington . 1073-5860.
  4. News: Bartley . Nancy . January 22, 2010 . Pioneering Women Pilots of WWII Get a Belated Honor . . 2642-7192.
  5. News: Heimbigner . Kevin . May 2, 2011 . Congressional Medal Winner Still Flying High at 94 . live . August 7, 2019 . . 0739-9200 . August 7, 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190807205121/https://www.chinookobserver.com/news/congressional-medal-winner-still-flying-high-at/article_de8e7c3a-cb00-574f-8a5d-754c45bf75b0.html .
  6. Olsen . Dorothy Kocher . WWWO 66 Dorothy Kocher Olsen . video . January 21, 2024 . Bristol Productions . February 8, 2022 . The Voices of WWII (oral histories) . YouTube.
  7. News: September 16, 1944 . Serving Uncle Sam . August 8, 2019 . . 3 . Salem, Oregon . . January 22, 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240122185627/https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-capital-journal-capital-journal-ser/43931335/ . live .
  8. Web site: Flying for Freedom: The Story of the Women Air Force Service Pilots . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20101226112912/http://www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-070323-027.pdf . December 26, 2010 . March 5, 2024 . National Museum of the United States Air Force.
  9. Web site: Collins . Shannon . March 2, 2016 . WASPs Were Pioneers for Female Pilots of Today, Tomorrow . March 4, 2024 . U.S. Department of Defense . en-US.
  10. Web site: McGuire . Daniel J. . William P. Hobby Airport . January 26, 2024 . East Texas History . en-US.
  11. Book: Rickman, Sarah Byrn . WASP of the Ferry Command: Women Pilots, Uncommon Deeds . . 2016 . 9781574416374 . xv,99,102–103 . en . August 7, 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240122185734/https://books.google.com/books?id=gnrDCwAAQBAJ&pg=102#v=onepage&q&f=false . January 22, 2024 . live . Google Books.
  12. Book: Sixth Ferrying Group Yearbook Long Beach . Army Navy Publishing Company, Baton Rouge, Louisiana . 1944 . 75 . Internet Archive.
  13. Book: Bishop, Chris . The Encyclopedia of Weapons of World War II . 2002 . Sterling Publishing Company, Inc. . 978-1-58663-762-0 . 279 . en . Google Books.
  14. Book: Flight Handbook: USAF Series F-51D Aircraft . January 20, 1954 . North American Aviation . 1 . Internet Archive.
  15. Web site: Bell P-63 Kingcobra . January 30, 2024 . National Museum of the United States Air Force.
  16. Web site: November 23, 1977 . GI Bill Improvement Act Of 1977: Title IV – Women's Air Forces Service Pilots . August 9, 2019 . . August 9, 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190809180148/https://www.ssa.gov/OP_Home/comp2/F095-202.html . live .
  17. News: Wilson . Maggie . July 10, 2016 . Former Fighter Pilot, Dorothy Olsen, Honored in Washington on 100th Birthday . January 21, 2024 . . August 7, 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190807214645/https://www.kiro7.com/news/local/female-fighter-pilot-honored-on-100th-birthday/394361176 . live .
  18. News: Grivas . Erica Browne . September 28, 2022 . This 100-year-old Pioneer is WA's Last Surviving Female WWII-era Pilot . . 2642-7192 . January 21, 2024 . November 29, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221129002539/https://www.seattletimes.com/life/this-100-year-old-pioneer-is-was-last-surviving-female-wwii-era-pilot/ . live .
  19. Book: Congressional Record of the 111th congress, first session . June 16, 2009 . . 15514 . en . August 7, 2019 . January 22, 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240122185625/https://books.google.com/books?id=-yjtXz8vO6gC&pg=PA15514#v=onepage&q&f=false . live .
  20. News: Robinson . Kathryn . July 12, 2015 . WWII Fighter Plane Pilot Honored on Her 99th Birthday . August 15, 2019 . . Seattle, Washington . August 19, 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190819103539/https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/wwii-fighter-plane-pilot-honored-her-99th-birthday-n390831 . live .
  21. Web site: Shipley . Staff Sgt Naomi . July 12, 2016 . Women Airforce Service Pilot Celebrates 100th Birthday at JBLM . August 7, 2019 . Team McChord . en-US . August 7, 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190807210348/https://www.mcchord.af.mil/News/Article-Display/Article/835370/women-airforce-service-pilot-celebrates-100th-birthday-at-jblm/ . live .