Vi Cowden to speak at annual Women’s Clubs convention
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Jennifer K Mahal
Violet “Vi” Thurn Cowden remembers attending a recent Women’s Club
meeting and thinking “I haven’t done anything yet.” After all, here were
doctors and lawyers and teachers. Women who worked and fought for social
justice, while raising children. Amazing women.
But Cowden, who will speak Friday at the 98th annual California
Federation of Women’s Clubs convention in Costa Mesa, is an amazing woman
herself. A woman who flew a military aircraft in service of her country
during World War II. One of only 1,099 females to be part of the Women
Airforce Service Pilots, or WASPs.
“I’m really excited about her speaking,” said Mary Ann Villegas, coast
district vice president for the state. “Women in my generation, we
remember World War II very vividly. So it was very appropriate as far as
we were concerned, because I had no idea. I didn’t know about them.”
Cowden, a Huntington Beach resident, was a 26-year-old, first-grade
teacher in Spearfish, S.D., when she received a telegram from famed
aviator Jacqueline Cochran asking her to try for the newly formed WASP
program.
“I think Jackie Cochran checked all of the people who had their
private pilot’s licenses,” Cowden said.
Around 25,000 women applied for the program, which was designed to
free male pilots for service overseas. Only 1,830 were accepted into
training (1,074 would graduate the program, 25 had joined an earlier
version). Cowden was in California, visiting her sister, when she found
out she had been accepted into class No. 43-4. There were three classes
ahead of her.
She took her physical in Long Beach and shipped out by train to
Sweetwater, Texas.
“My instructors in Sweetwater were expecting to teach male pilots and
in came a group of women,” said the 84-year-old grandmother of three. “I
think that their adjustment was that they had to teach women to fly when
they expected [us] to be in the kitchen -- I think it was easier for us
to accept than it was for them.”
She flew a PT-19 primary trainer and then trained to fly pursuit
planes, the lean fighters of World War II.
“I would say there is no comparison [between] flying private and
flying the Army way, the military way, because you are flying
sophisticated airplanes,” Cowden said.
After training, Cowden was stationed at Love Field in Dallas, Texas,
as part of Air Transport Command.
“My mission was to pick up planes at the factory and take them to
training fields and points of demarcation on the East or West Coast,”
Cowden said.
She would also fly planes from Great Plains, N.Y. to Montana. Cowden
flew 19 types of aircrafts, but her favorite was the P-51 Mustang.
“It was the fastest plane made at the time,” she said.
She estimates that if she were to add up all of the mileage from her
flights, she would have flown around the world 55 times.
When the WASPs were disbanded in 1944, the aviators were given no
veterans benefits or status, even though 38 women had died in service to
their country.
“The sad part was that there was no one to fly the airplanes at home,”
Cowden said. “B-17 and B-24 pilots weren’t qualified to fly pursuit
planes.”
At the time, there were no commercial pilot jobs available for women,
so Cowden headed back to California, where she started a ceramics
business.
The history of the WASPs was forgotten by most until 1977, when a
movement was started to give the women veteran status.
A mother by then, Cowden was working at the teacher resource center in
Huntington Beach when she got a red alert petition, asking WASPs to
contact their representatives in Congress.
“I thought that being a veteran would not make any difference, because
for 30 years, I hadn’t been,” Cowden said.
A bill was passed and 35 years after disbanding, WASPs were recognized
for their war effort.
Cowden was at a 1977 conference in Cleveland, Ohio, watching an air
show when the importance of what had happened hit her. Two small planes
flew smoke rings around the airport, and then the Golden Knights, the
Army’s parachute team, jumped through the rings.
“The last one had a flag, and they played an Air Corps song,” Cowden
said. “And I thought, ‘You know what? I’m a veteran.’ It did make a
difference. It was like we had arrived.”
The California Federation of Women’s Clubs plans to make a donation to
the WASP archive at Texas Woman’s University to help preserve the history
of WASPs for all time.
“Our history is valuable as an inspiration that women can do anything
that men can do,” Cowden said.
FYI
What: Violet “Vi” Cowden speaks at the 98th annual California
Federation of Women’s Clubs convention
When: 7 p.m. Friday
Where: Hilton, 3050 Bristol St., Costa Mesa
Cost: Free. Speech is part of the regular meeting.
Call: (714) 540-7000
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