Elizabeth "Bessie" Coleman, 1892-1926        born: Atlanta, Texas

Bessie, also known affectionately as Queen Bess, was the world’s first licensed
black aviator. She was the first African-American woman to fly an airplane. Born in
Texas, Bessie moved to Chicago to earn money to learn to fly. There she met and
came to revere Robert Abbott, publisher of the Chicago Defender, the African-
American newspaper that would play a prominent role in the lives of other aspiring
black aviators.
After learning that France was enlightened in matters of race and gender, Bessie
learned the French language, moved to France, and received flight training from
the famed flight school established in 1910 by the Caudron brothers. In 1921,
two years before Amelia Earhart earned her pilot’s license, Bessie became the first
African-American woman to earn the international pilot's license.
She returned to Chicago, saying, “I decided blacks should not experience the
difficulties I had faced, so I decided to open a flying school and teach other black
women to fly.”
To finance her flight school, she turned to lecturing across America and to
barnstorming, a popular entertainment in which pilots performed aerial stunts. In
1926, while practicing for an air show in Florida, Bessie’s plane malfunctioned,
and she fell from the open cockpit to her death, unable to fulfill her dream of a
flight school.
Bessie is honored in the "American Blacks in Aviation" exhibit at the Smithsonian
Institution's National Air and Space Museum, Washington, DC.
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