Blog

Women Airforce Service Pilots: We Are All Your Daughters

Posted on by Karina

Pilots in the winter flight suits walking the runway

Photo courtesy of Texas Woman’s University

Speaker Pelosi, Leader Reid, Leader Boehner, Leader McConnell, and other Members of Congress hosted a Congressional Gold Medal ceremony today in the Capitol in honor of the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) of World War II. The Women Airforce Service Pilots were the first women in history to fly American military aircraft–flying 60,000,000 miles of operation flights on every plane the Army Air Corps flew, including the B-29, from 1942-1944.

The Speaker’s remarks:

Transcript:

It is a great honor to join the leadership of the Congress — Leader Reid and Leader McConnell, my colleague in the House, Leader Boehner, representatives of the Administration, the Secretary of the Air Force. We're honored by your presence, Tom Brokaw, the greatest chronicler of 'The Greatest Generation' to bear witness to what is happening here today. Colonel Malachowski, how proud we are of her and how eloquent she spoke of the shoulders that she is standing on. I want to pay special tribute also to the four sponsors of the legislation — Congresswoman Susan Davis and Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Senator Barbara Mikulski and Senator Kay Bailey Hutchinson. Thank you.

Another woman, a WASP, Jean Hascall Cole, a WASP from class 44-W-2 once said, ‘Once you have flown an airplane, your world is never the same again.’ Once the WASPs took to the sky, the world was never the same for many of us.

Answering our country's call, the WASPs demonstrated courage and patriotism and excellence and competence. Their bravery inspires and awes us; their success allowed the success of generations since and generations to come.

Today, the accomplishments of the WASPs will be writ large in our nation's history. But as others have said, we know that this day comes too late for some. Let us remember the WASPs who have left us before they could receive this honor.

We acknowledge that for too long the proud service of the WASPs was not recognized — in word, or in deed. As the resolution says today: 'There were no honors, no benefits, and very few thank yous.'

Barbara, not to be in a contest or anything, but in California, we have nearly 80 WASPs living there. So we have known over time the great contribution they've made. And I want to acknowledge Margaret Gee from Berkeley, an Asian American WASP, who taught us all so much. For decades, she's been teaching us — just imagine the courage, imagine the courage to leave home, to get the training and go to the air.

Today, we honor you as the heroes that you are. I hope it is some source of satisfaction to you that this is one of the largest crowds ever gathered inside the Capitol of the United States. The leaders and other guests have spoken about the statistics, the distances traveled, the cargo carried, the number of people and all the rest. But I want you to know that we had to turn hundreds of people away because we didn't have a room big enough to contain the admiration that we all have for you. Hopefully, they will see it through the media.

On behalf of the entire Congress of the United States, our leaders have spoken, but many Members of Congress are here and all of us send you our gratitude for your service, for your patriotism, and for your boundless optimism that the sky is not even the limit anymore for the women of our nation.

The patriotism of the WASPs blazed a trail — others have used the term trailblazer — for the women that came after — in flight, in the field of battle, and even in the Congress of the United States.

I've been told that there is a WASP song that was used as an encouragement during training at Sweetwater. Maybe some of you remember it, maybe you'll sing it for us, and part of it says: ‘If you have a daughter, teach her to fly.’

Women Airforce Service Pilots: we are all your daughters. You taught us how to fly. We thank you for that and for what you did in flying to make us the ‘home of the brave and the land of the free.’

Thank you.

This entry was posted in Veterans, What's Happening. Bookmark the permalink.