Nadine Ramsey WASP WWII
Nadine Ramsey WASP WWII

Foil: 60 Panel: 1 Column: 1 Line: 41

Wall of Honor Level:
Air and Space Friend

Honored by:
Raquel Ramsey

Taking Flight
The Nadine Ramsey Story

Raquel Ramsey and Tricia Aurand

Foreword by Maj. Gen. Jeannie M. Leavitt, USAF

In October 1944, Nadine Ramsey was thirty-three and flying the cutting-edge P-51 Mustang to New Jersey, its last stop before heading to the war in Europe. The irrepressible young woman from Wichita hand long been determined to fly, and the gathering storm clouds of World War II had provided an unexpected opportunity. "Taking Flight" is the inspiring story of a girl from Depression-era Kansas who overcame tremendous challenges and defied convention to become an elite pilot - one of the few American women to fly fighter aircraft during World War II.

"Taking Flight" follows Nadine as she became one of 1,102 women to join the Women's Airforce Service Pilots and one of only 303 WASPs to take to the skies in military cockpits, transporting aircraft to bases across the nation for use in the theaters of war. This book marks her milestones: the first Kansas woman to earn a commercial pilot license; among the earliest women to fly the US Air Mail; one of only 26 WASPs who flew the Lockheed P-38 Lighting, a fighter aircraft - and the first woman to own one; the only woman in the country to instruct male pilots to fly fighter planes after the war. Disbanded in late 1944 to make way for male pilots and barred from piloting for commercial airlines, the WASPs spent the next three decades fighting to win veteran status.

Wall of Honor profiles are provided by the honoree or the donor who added their name to the Wall of Honor. The Museum cannot validate all facts contained in the profiles.

Foil: 60

Foil Image Coming Soon

All foil images coming soon.View other foils on our Wall of Honor Flickr Gallery