Willa Beatrice Brown and Chicago's Aviation Legacy

Theresa L. Kraus
{"title":"Willa Beatrice Brown and Chicago's Aviation Legacy","authors":"Theresa L. Kraus","doi":"10.5406/23283335.116.2.3.03","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"WHEN HISTORIANS AND BIOGRAPHERS WRITE ABOUT CHICAGO AVIATOR WILLA BROWN, they generally recount tales of her role as one of the first licensed female Black pilots in the United States and her indefatigable efforts to open military aviation to Black pilots. They often overlook, however, her personal struggles to obtain a pilot license in a White, male-dominated aviation community, and incorrectly identify her as being the first Black female to earn a federal pilot's license. Most rarely examine her inspiration and motivation for fighting established norms and advocating for the acceptance of Black pilots into the aviation community at large.1 Why, for example, did moving to Chicago and meeting the city's pioneering Black aviators result in a career change from teacher to aviator? What in her background drove her passion to become a spokesperson and lobbyist for change? In an age of racial injustice, segregation, and denied opportunities in many professions, Willa Brown's indomitable spirit and her extraordinary courage helped prove both Black men and women had the right stuff to take to the air.The well-educated Brown simply refused to take no for an answer. Outspoken and fighting for what she believed was right, she was one of a handful of Black women who made a difference for their sex and race in the early twentieth century. As one writer explained, Black women like Brown “didn't care what people thought of them, they didn't let racism stop them, they didn't let the threat of violence, didn't let social structures, stop them.”2 They did not give up in their fight for equality.Willa Brown's early life helped define the woman she would become later in life—educated, driven, and an advocate for equal rights. She was born on January 22, 1906, in Glasgow, Kentucky, the second child and only daughter of Hallie May Carpenter Brown, a Native American, and Eric Brown, an African American.3 In 1915, Eric and Hallie moved Willa, her four brothers, and a nephew from their farm in Kentucky first to Indianapolis, Indiana. The couple subsequently had a fifth son. As the only girl in a household of boys, she certainly learned early how to defend herself and speak up for what she wanted.Like many of their generation, the Brown's had joined the migration north in search of better employment and educational opportunities for their children, and to escape Kentucky's Jim Crow laws. In Indianapolis, Eric Brown worked as a laborer for the Citizens Gas Company. In Indianapolis, however, the Browns found little relief from discrimination, where schools and businesses were also largely segregated and the African American community remained small. The city proved fairly inhospitable to Black migrants. The Black population was isolated socially and economically, jobs were hard to find, and increasing Ku Klux Klan activity, especially in the political arena, made it difficult for Black residents to succeed.4 In fact, one historian described Indianapolis as having “the unenviable distinction of being one of the most racist cities in America.”5In 1919, the family moved to Terre Haute, Indiana. The situation in Terre Haute was not much better, and the Brown's found little relief from the racism they faced in Indianapolis. In the early part of the twentieth century, Terre Haute had a population of 58,157, with only 2,593 Black residents. By 1920, the city's total population increased to 66,083, with 3,646 Black residents.6 As in Indianapolis, the Black population remained largely segregated from their White counterparts, and professional, white-collar jobs largely out of their reach.Eric Brown found work in a creosote factory, a low-paying and often dangerous job. Willa's older brother also found factory work to help support the family. Willa attended Wiley High School, a desegregated high school in south Terre Haute. She, however, was just one of under fifteen African Americans at Wiley, most of them male and who garnered some acceptance because of their athletic abilities.7 Playing on the school's athletic teams did not protect them fully from racism. In 1923, for example, the year Willa graduated, Terre Haute's all-White Garfield High School refused to play football games with Wiley if Black players suited up for the game.8 While in school, Brown worked part-time as a domestic—one of the few occupations open to Black women.Determined to advance her education, after high school, Brown enrolled at the Indiana State Normal School in Terre Haute, renamed Indiana State Teachers College in 1929, and later Indiana State University. The college had open acceptance and did not segregate the classrooms and library. The school did enforce segregation at its eateries, housing, meeting spaces, and social activities.9 Black enrollment remained fairly small, with no more than forty Black students during the 1920s in a student population of over 550. Brown majored in business and minored in French. She also joined the Black sorority Alpha Kappa Alpha and continued to work part-time as a domestic to pay for college expenses.Prior to graduating, she accepted a job teaching at the segregated Roosevelt Annex in Gary, Indiana. The school, originally built as an elementary school, began teaching secondary courses in 1925. It graduated its first high school class in 1930.10 Brown taught typewriting and stenography at the school. She sponsored the writing club and served as the faculty advisor for the school's newspaper.11 During her summer school breaks, she returned to college in Terre Haute to finish her undergraduate degree, which she received in 1931.12She had not been teaching long when racial tensions in Gary erupted. In September 1927, 1,500 White students at Emerson High School as well as others at area schools refused to attend classes after eighteen Black students transferred to Emerson, which already had six African-American pupils. The students returned to classes when the school board agreed to transfer the Black students to a temporary building within ninety days.13 This event, as well as her earlier experiences, no doubt, helped instill in Brown the need to provide equal opportunity and access for all.Brown's first husband, Wilbur J. Hardaway, also fueled her desire to promote equal rights. While working in Gary, Brown met Hardaway, the first, and only Black alderman in the city. He represented the city's Fifth Ward on the city council.14 He was an active member of the local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). He had graduated from Tuskegee Institute and had served as one of Gary's first Black firefighters. Brown and Hardaway married on November 24, 1929, in the city's Colored Methodist Episcopal Church.The marriage did not last long. Brown filed for divorce in 1931. She learned early she was not cut out to be the stereotypical middle-class Black wife. Rather than keeping house and actively supporting her husband's political career, the strong-willed Brown preferred a career outside of the home. As she later explained, “I wasn't cut out to be a housewife and he [Hardaway] quickly discovered that.”15 The couple had no children. The divorce proceedings garnered public attention when Hardaway filed a counter complaint alleging Brown had “improper relations with one of her former pupils.” At the trial, both provided evidence to the judge and Hardaway withdrew his complaint at the recommendation of the court, which granted the divorce. Hardaway married Erma Whitler-Lowndes, a divorcee with two grown children in 1933.16Newly divorced and looking for greater employment opportunities, Brown moved to Chicago during the summer of 1932. Chicago was the largest city in the Midwest and boasted a population of approximately three million, 230,000 of those African Americans. Chicago, like Terre Haute, remained largely segregated, with most African Americans residing in Chicago's South Side, widely known as the “Black Belt” or “Bronzeville.” Racism was rampant, as were calls from Black organizations, such as the NAACP and the National Urban League, for racial justice. By the early 1930s, Civil Rights was emerging as a national issue and the Black press, especially the Chicago Defender, a Black newspaper with a national audience, played a critical role in the nascent movement.17Chicago had also become a mecca for Black Americans looking for a better life. By the time Brown arrived, Chicago's Black Renaissance was underway. Black women played an important role in that movement as well as the civil rights movement, supporting Black arts and literature, promoting Black education and history, striving to ensure fair housing and employment, and working as activists to end segregation.18 As one historian explained, “Chicago's women reformers were among the nation's most organized and sophisticated, with leaders establishing settlement houses, orphanages, and the nation's first juvenile court.”19 It would not be long before Willa Brown crafted a role for herself in this social movement.For a Black woman during the depression, Brown surprisingly had no trouble finding work in her new city. She applied for a teaching job with the Chicago Board of Education, which placed her on its waiting list.20 While waiting for a teaching position, she secured work as a cashier at Walgreen's and then in a number of administrative positions in the private and federal sectors. She became the first Black employee of the Social Security Board's (later became the Social Security Agency and then Administration) Chicago office in 1937, having transferred from the US Immigration and Naturalization Service. She subsequently found work as a laboratory technician and private secretary to Dr. Julian Lewis, an associate professor of pathology at the University of Chicago—the first Black physician to hold such an appointment at a US medical school.21In 1934, while working at Walgreen's, Brown met John C. Robinson, a pilot and mechanic. (Robinson gained international recognition when he served as the commander of the Imperial Ethiopian Air Force in 1935–1936 during Ethiopia's war with Italy.) Brown had always admired Bessie Coleman, and Robinson convinced her to take flying lessons, something easier for a Black female to do in Chicago as opposed to other parts of the country. In the 1930s, Chicago had become the center of Black aviation in the country and home to a number of influential Black pilots. The Chicago Defender closely followed the exploits of these male and female pilots and promoted their stories as part of its larger crusade for racial justice.Robinson introduced Brown to his friend Cornelius Coffey, another Black pilot advocating flight training for Blacks. Both Robinson and Coffey had graduated from the Curtiss-Wright Aeronautical University as airplane mechanics.22 It, however, took a threatened lawsuit to get the school to allow them to take classes.23 The two friends subsequently worked with the school to train Black students. The University refused to integrate Black and White students, but told Robinson and Coffey if they enrolled twenty-five Black students, the school would educate them as a separate class. In 1932, the first all-Black class entered the school with Robinson and Coffey teaching the class. Willa Brown passed the aviation ground course at the school in 1935.Coffey and Robinson originally flew out of Akers Airport, one of the few airports in the Chicago area that allowed Black pilots. When that airport closed, they had difficulty finding an airfield that would accept them. In 1931, Robinson, Coffey, and other local Black pilots had established the Challenger Air Pilots Association (CAPA), a Black flying club in Chicago, to encourage members of their race to take up flying. After Akers Airport closed, the association bought a tract of land in Robbins, Illinois, and built an airport. When a thunderstorm destroyed their hangar and damaged aircraft, the association moved to Harlem Airport in Oak Lawn, Illinois, at the invitation of its White manager, William Schumacher. Schumacher told them, “I'm going to put you at the end of the field to save you from having any trouble with the other [White] guys.”24 The CAPA rented one part of the airport, while a group of White fliers opened a school and flying club at the other end. Even though the Black and White pilots had different hangers, they shared Harlem's four sod runways.Willa Brown joined the CAPA and began taking flying lessons from William Schumacher's brother Fred in 1934. However, an auto accident on May 13, 1934, seemed to put an end to her nascent flying career. A friend, John B. McClellan Jr., was driving her back to Chicago from Terre Haute when the accident occurred. McClellan died in the accident and Brown was seriously injured. She was hospitalized with a broken arm, several broken ribs, and a fractured vertebra. Still determined to fly, after recovering from her injuries, she resumed flying lessons. She received her student pilot's license on March 6, 1935 (#43814).25 Her CAPA colleague and friend, Janet Harmon Waterford, had received her student license on November 9, 1933, making her the first Black woman to receive a federal pilot's license.After receiving her student license, Brown pursued an advanced license. She took flying lessons from Cornelius Coffey in 1937 and 1938 and received her solo license on April 20, 1938.26 Two months later, on June 22, Brown received a private pilot's license, which allowed her to carry nonpaying passengers in her plane.27The Pittsburgh Courier, a Black-run newspaper, printed news of her accomplishment: “Miss Willa B. Brown . . . received a private pilot's license in flying. She is understood to be the first colored aviatrix to receive this license. There were 14 others [in her class], all white men . . . Brown passed her examination with the highest mark, 96, of the entire class.” The article continued: “Although only 40 hours are required for a private police license, Miss Brown had almost a hundred to her credit before taking the test.” Brown, however, hoped to expand her credentials by earning another license. As Brown remarked in the article, “I shall work next fall towards getting a limited commercial license. . . . That will permit me to take up passengers for pay.”28 The paper, like many other Black newspapers across the United States, received news and information from Claude Barnett's Associated Negro Press (ANP), an organization founded in Chicago in 1919 to supply news, opinions, feature articles, and reviews to Black newspapers. The ANP kept its subscribers constantly updated on Brown's activities.Relishing the notoriety, Brown wrote a letter to the editor of the newspaper, saying, “When I whipped my airplane through the designated spins, spirals, figure eights, verticals, and passed the written test last month to get a private pilot's license, I was overcome with joy to have accomplished my desire; but there also came a deep satisfaction to know that our newspapers and magazines showed such courtesy as to carry articles and pictures concerning this event.”29 Hoping to clarify her place in history, after receiving her license, Brown sent a telegram to the Bureau of Air Commerce asking if “there are any other colored women holding pilot licenses,” other than those held by Dorothy Darby, Lola Jones, and herself. The bureau, which had not yet recorded her private pilot's license, responded that she and Jones had solo licenses and Dorothy Darby had an amateur license.30True to her word, Brown applied for her limited commercial pilot's license. In October 1938, she took the necessary written exam for that rating. She failed the airplanes and theory of flight, meteorology, and navigation sections of the exam; the Civil Aeronautics Authority, which replaced the Bureau of Air Commerce in 1938, required a grade of no lower than 70 on each section to pass. She later retook the written exams and passed, though she did not achieve passing scores on her October 26 and December 15, 1938, flight tests. However, when she retook the flight test on June 16, 1939, she passed it. Her examiner wrote that despite her visual issues, “her flight test in general was still better than fair.” Her medical examiner found her vision needed correction, so she now had to wear corrective lenses when piloting an aircraft. She received her limited commercial license in August 1939.31 On June 11, 1940, she received her federal ground instructor rating, which permitted her to teach ground school courses.32 Brown was one of a slowly growing cadre of licensed Black pilots, albeit mostly men, in the country. By January 1939, the number of licensed Black pilots in the country numbered 125: four commercial, four limited commercial, twenty-three private, twelve solo, and eighty-two student.33New federal rules for pilot's licenses issued in 1941 by the Civil Aeronautics Authority's successor agency the Civil Aeronautics Administration (CAA) meant all solo certificates would expire on May 1, 1941, and limited commercial certificates on May 1, 1942. With the limited commercial rating being abolished, on April 28, 1941, Brown applied for her commercial airmen's certificate. She took the required written exams, but did not receive passing grades on the navigation, engine, and weather sections of the exam. She did not retake the exam, and she reverted back to a private pilot's license.34Brown's flying exploits made her a celebrity in Chicago's Black community where even the gossip pages carried stories of her professional and private activities. One such column described her as “good looking,” and someone who “admittedly likes to flirt.” It also noted that she was a “woman who swears occasionally, plays cards once a week, likes to sip cocktails at the bar, and simply craves gospel music. . . . [O]nce in an airplane, though, Miss Brown is in her glory.”35African American artist Charles H. Alston added to Brown's growing celebrity. Hired by the Office of War Information and Public Information during World War II, he created cartoons and posters designed to mobilize the Black community to join in the American war effort. Black newspapers across the country featured Alston's images. Willa Brown became one of his subjects.36Willa Brown so loved aviation and she wanted to share her enthusiasm with others. However, Black pilots often faced acute racism when trying to get a license. Most of the White Civil Aviation Administration personnel who administered flight tests refused to test and/or pass Black pilots. In addition, because of the limited number of aviation facilities available to Black pilots, their ranks grew slowly in the 1930s in Chicago and elsewhere. In 1935, the United States only had forty-seven federally licensed Black pilots. That number included four limited commercial pilots, two transport pilots, nine private pilots, four amateur pilots, one solo pilot, and twenty-seven student pilots.37To help increase those numbers, Brown volunteered to serve as the publicist for the CAPA. She wanted to use her position to introduce the Black community to the thrills of flying. To do so, however, she needed to achieve some serious marketing successes for the association's activities. Through such efforts, Brown, described as “veritable inexhaustible dynamo of energy” who worked “indefatigably to enlist members and create interest where there was none,” succeeded in getting more African Americans interested in flying.38The Chicago Defender carefully followed the exploits of the country's Black pilots. Robert S. Abbott founded the paper in 1905 and used it to attack racial inequities. One of the first mentions of Brown in the paper came in the early 1930s when she worked for the Social Security office,39 and the paper continued to follow her aviation and political career for decades thereafter. Brown would soon partner with Abbott and the paper's city editor, Enoch P. Waters, to promote Black aviation.In 1936, Brown confidently walked into the Chicago Defender newsroom wearing her flying attire—white jodhpurs, jacket, and boots—and announced, “I want to speak to Mr. Enoch Waters.”40 She needed the paper to provide publicity for an upcoming CAPA-sponsored air show. At the time, Waters explained, other than John Robinson and Hubert Julian, he had no idea there was a group of Black aviators in Chicago. “Fascinated by both her [Brown] and the idea of Negro aviators,” Waters recounted, I decided to follow up on the story myself. I didn't realize, at the time, how deeply involved I would become in aviation.”41Approximately three hundred people showed up to watch the pilots, and as a reward for his help, Brown took Waters up in her plane. According to Waters, “It was a thrilling experience, and the maneuvers, figure eights, flip-overs and stalls, were exhilarating, though momentarily frightening. I wasn't convinced of her competence until we landed smoothly.”42 Waters, like Abbott, became a lifelong supporter of Brown's efforts to desegregate the military and increase aviation opportunities for underprivileged Blacks in the Chicago area.In 1937, Cornelius Coffey opened the Coffey School of Aeronautics at Harlem airport to train both Black and White students for careers in aviation.43 Brown, who operated the lunch room at the airport and had graduated with a master's degree in business from Northwestern University in 1937, became Coffey's business partner and later his wife. The vivacious and outgoing Brown and the introvert Coffey married on July 8, 1939.44 They shared a common goal of teaching Blacks, both men and women, to fly, and to fight for Black pilots to be integrated into military units. Coffey, according to Waters “was a quiet retiring man of few words. He was completely devoted to aviation and was content being an unnoticed instructor because it allowed him to spend his days at the airport.” Brown's enthusiasm for aviation, on the other hand, “was contagious. . . . [S]he wanted to spend all of her time flying around the country,” convincing others to take up flying.45Brown not only helped run the Coffey school but also continued her public outreach efforts for the school and the CAPA. Because of such efforts, in 1938, Chicago's Black aviators, many from Coffey's school, made history when they competed with White pilots at a local air show—the first time in US history that Black and White aviators competed against one another. With Brown and the Defender publicizing the event, thirty thousand people, including five thousand Black spectators, came together at Harlem airport to watch the meet. Chauncey Spencer, a member of the CAPA, took first place in the parachute jumping competition. Another association member, Charles Johnson, earned second place in the precision flying category. Other members, such as Brown, Lola Jones, Albert Cosby, Herman Ray, Cornelius Coffey, Fred Huchinson, and Dale White, also competed.46The opportunity to compete against White pilots was not enough to satisfy Brown and her peers. Prohibited from joining the all-White Chicago Girls Flying Club and the local chapter of the Ninety-Nines, Brown and the other Black female pilots at Harlem airport established the Chicago Girls Flight Club. Original members included Lille Berras, Delores Jackson, Lola Jones, Doris Murphy, and Janet Harmon Waterford.47The group's members also worked to help broaden the scope of the CAPA. Brown, in particular, helped transform the CAPA into the National Negro Airmen Association of America on August 16, 1937.48 For its members, some of the key factors in establishing the organization centered on the need to encourage more Blacks to seek careers in aviation and to lobby for the inclusion of Black pilots in the military. The organization soon renamed itself National Airmen's Association of America (NAAA) at the recommendation of Claude Barnett, the influential founder and director of the ANP.49The NAAA incorporated in the state of Illinois in 1939. Approximately two thousand chapters soon sprang up around the country. Dr. Albert Porter Davis, a physician and Black pilot from Kansas, initially served as the first president of the national association. Other pioneering African American aviators who helped established the organization included Cornelius Coffey, Harold Hurd, Grover Nash, Marie St. Clair, Chauncey Spencer, Janet Waterford, and Dale White. Cornelius Coffey served as vice president, with Brown as its secretary.50 Brown soon became president of the Chicago group.51In the late 1930s, with war brewing in Europe, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Congress, and the military began preparing for the United States’ eventual entry into the war. Aircraft production became a national priority, as did increasing the number of pilots. On June 27, 1939, President Roosevelt signed the Civilian Pilot Training Act into law. The law authorized the CAA to train civilian pilots through educational institutions. Representative Everett M. Dirksen (R-IL) inserted a provision into the act that stated, “None of the benefits of training or programs shall be denied on account of race, creed, or color.”Instruction for Black students began in 1939 at six schools: the West Virginia State College for Negroes; Howard University in Washington, DC; Tuskegee Institute in Alabama; Hampton Institute in Virginia; Delaware State College for Colored Students; and North Carolina Agricultural and Technical College. Although training, for the most part, remained segregated, some northern colleges did accept Black students into their programs. Because of the success rate of its primary instruction, the CAA approved Tuskegee for secondary instruction.52The Civilian Pilot Training Program (CPTP) legislation also mandated that at least 5 percent (later 7 percent) of the trainees be non-college students. For these programs, the CAA required one instructor per fifty students. At the end of a twelve-week ground school course, ten students from each class would be selected competitively to go into flight training. Only one woman could be among the ten selectees.53 The CAA required a “responsible civic body” conduct the ground school and a “nearby commercial flying school” provide the flight program for non-collegiate students. The NAAA applied to the CAA to run such a program. It planned to work through the Coffey School of Aeronautics to provide the flight training.Willa Brown worked tirelessly to get the NAAA accepted into the program. Her efforts succeeded, and in the fall of 1939, the CAA notified the organization of its selection as one of the non-collegiate training providers. Time magazine noted the award of the contract in its September 25, 1939, edition: “One civilian flier who was highly pleased by C.A.A.’s (Civil Aeronautics Authority) announcement was a cream and coffee-skinned Negress of 29. There is small chance that Willa Beatrice Brown will ever fly for the Army or Navy, but as Secretary of the National (Negro) Airmen's Association and one of the few Negro aviatrixes holding a limited commercial license, she has labored mightily to whip up interest in flying among Negroes, [and to] get them a share in C.A.A.’s training program.”54The Pittsburgh Courier reported: “Announcement of the selection of Harlem Airport marked another successful step for the integration of Negro citizens into government-sponsored aviation expansion programs.”55 Edgar G. Brown (no relation to Willa Brown), president of the United Government Employees organization, an organization of mostly Black federal employees, said of the selection, “For the first time in the history of aviation, equal opportunities have been guaranteed colored youth in all sections of the country without resort to Supreme Court action.”56 Although the number of Illinois CPTP participants, both collegiate and noncollegiate, in the program expanded throughout 1939–1940, the Coffey school remained the only noncollegiate training program that taught Black students in the state.57Public reaction to the inclusion of Blacks in the training program ran the gamut from acute prejudice to wholesale acceptance. Some lauded the CAA's actions, especially the Black press. The New York Age, for example, called the inclusion of Blacks in pilot training “a victory in the long fight for equalization of opportunity for Negros in the trenches, on the sea and in the air in time of war and peace.”58 Some, however, expressed anger and hostility. After the Des Moines Register ran an article on the training program, for example, a White pilot sent a blistering letter to the editor. He wrote, in part, “Of all the races represented [in aviation] the Negro made the worst pilot and, of course, the [most] dangerous one. Why? Because he is mentally incompetent and notoriously lacking in that one vital element—judgment.”59 Such prejudice proved hard to overcome, but Willa Brown and other Black aviators in Chicago set out to prove such bigots wrong.For the CPTP program, Coffey and Brown's school provided flight training, while the NAAA arranged for ground instructors. Willa Brown served as the local coordinator of the NAAA's CPTP program, and, once she received her ground instructor rating, also taught ground school classes to adult students at night using a classroom at Wendell Phillips High School on Chicago's South Side. In addition, she was the only Black airplane mechanic instructor in the CPTP program.60 The NAAA received two hundred and fifty applications for its initial CPTP training class.61 Classes began on January 15, 1940.62The US Army provided the Coffey school one hundred thousand dollars worth of equipment for its training program. The equipment included a Boeing P-36 bomber and such items as a cylinder and crankshaft assembly, gas tanks, and motors. Ground school classes included instruction in meteorology, civil air regulations, theory of airplane flight, aircraft engine","PeriodicalId":17416,"journal":{"name":"Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society (1998-)","volume":"53 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society (1998-)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5406/23283335.116.2.3.03","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

WHEN HISTORIANS AND BIOGRAPHERS WRITE ABOUT CHICAGO AVIATOR WILLA BROWN, they generally recount tales of her role as one of the first licensed female Black pilots in the United States and her indefatigable efforts to open military aviation to Black pilots. They often overlook, however, her personal struggles to obtain a pilot license in a White, male-dominated aviation community, and incorrectly identify her as being the first Black female to earn a federal pilot's license. Most rarely examine her inspiration and motivation for fighting established norms and advocating for the acceptance of Black pilots into the aviation community at large.1 Why, for example, did moving to Chicago and meeting the city's pioneering Black aviators result in a career change from teacher to aviator? What in her background drove her passion to become a spokesperson and lobbyist for change? In an age of racial injustice, segregation, and denied opportunities in many professions, Willa Brown's indomitable spirit and her extraordinary courage helped prove both Black men and women had the right stuff to take to the air.The well-educated Brown simply refused to take no for an answer. Outspoken and fighting for what she believed was right, she was one of a handful of Black women who made a difference for their sex and race in the early twentieth century. As one writer explained, Black women like Brown “didn't care what people thought of them, they didn't let racism stop them, they didn't let the threat of violence, didn't let social structures, stop them.”2 They did not give up in their fight for equality.Willa Brown's early life helped define the woman she would become later in life—educated, driven, and an advocate for equal rights. She was born on January 22, 1906, in Glasgow, Kentucky, the second child and only daughter of Hallie May Carpenter Brown, a Native American, and Eric Brown, an African American.3 In 1915, Eric and Hallie moved Willa, her four brothers, and a nephew from their farm in Kentucky first to Indianapolis, Indiana. The couple subsequently had a fifth son. As the only girl in a household of boys, she certainly learned early how to defend herself and speak up for what she wanted.Like many of their generation, the Brown's had joined the migration north in search of better employment and educational opportunities for their children, and to escape Kentucky's Jim Crow laws. In Indianapolis, Eric Brown worked as a laborer for the Citizens Gas Company. In Indianapolis, however, the Browns found little relief from discrimination, where schools and businesses were also largely segregated and the African American community remained small. The city proved fairly inhospitable to Black migrants. The Black population was isolated socially and economically, jobs were hard to find, and increasing Ku Klux Klan activity, especially in the political arena, made it difficult for Black residents to succeed.4 In fact, one historian described Indianapolis as having “the unenviable distinction of being one of the most racist cities in America.”5In 1919, the family moved to Terre Haute, Indiana. The situation in Terre Haute was not much better, and the Brown's found little relief from the racism they faced in Indianapolis. In the early part of the twentieth century, Terre Haute had a population of 58,157, with only 2,593 Black residents. By 1920, the city's total population increased to 66,083, with 3,646 Black residents.6 As in Indianapolis, the Black population remained largely segregated from their White counterparts, and professional, white-collar jobs largely out of their reach.Eric Brown found work in a creosote factory, a low-paying and often dangerous job. Willa's older brother also found factory work to help support the family. Willa attended Wiley High School, a desegregated high school in south Terre Haute. She, however, was just one of under fifteen African Americans at Wiley, most of them male and who garnered some acceptance because of their athletic abilities.7 Playing on the school's athletic teams did not protect them fully from racism. In 1923, for example, the year Willa graduated, Terre Haute's all-White Garfield High School refused to play football games with Wiley if Black players suited up for the game.8 While in school, Brown worked part-time as a domestic—one of the few occupations open to Black women.Determined to advance her education, after high school, Brown enrolled at the Indiana State Normal School in Terre Haute, renamed Indiana State Teachers College in 1929, and later Indiana State University. The college had open acceptance and did not segregate the classrooms and library. The school did enforce segregation at its eateries, housing, meeting spaces, and social activities.9 Black enrollment remained fairly small, with no more than forty Black students during the 1920s in a student population of over 550. Brown majored in business and minored in French. She also joined the Black sorority Alpha Kappa Alpha and continued to work part-time as a domestic to pay for college expenses.Prior to graduating, she accepted a job teaching at the segregated Roosevelt Annex in Gary, Indiana. The school, originally built as an elementary school, began teaching secondary courses in 1925. It graduated its first high school class in 1930.10 Brown taught typewriting and stenography at the school. She sponsored the writing club and served as the faculty advisor for the school's newspaper.11 During her summer school breaks, she returned to college in Terre Haute to finish her undergraduate degree, which she received in 1931.12She had not been teaching long when racial tensions in Gary erupted. In September 1927, 1,500 White students at Emerson High School as well as others at area schools refused to attend classes after eighteen Black students transferred to Emerson, which already had six African-American pupils. The students returned to classes when the school board agreed to transfer the Black students to a temporary building within ninety days.13 This event, as well as her earlier experiences, no doubt, helped instill in Brown the need to provide equal opportunity and access for all.Brown's first husband, Wilbur J. Hardaway, also fueled her desire to promote equal rights. While working in Gary, Brown met Hardaway, the first, and only Black alderman in the city. He represented the city's Fifth Ward on the city council.14 He was an active member of the local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). He had graduated from Tuskegee Institute and had served as one of Gary's first Black firefighters. Brown and Hardaway married on November 24, 1929, in the city's Colored Methodist Episcopal Church.The marriage did not last long. Brown filed for divorce in 1931. She learned early she was not cut out to be the stereotypical middle-class Black wife. Rather than keeping house and actively supporting her husband's political career, the strong-willed Brown preferred a career outside of the home. As she later explained, “I wasn't cut out to be a housewife and he [Hardaway] quickly discovered that.”15 The couple had no children. The divorce proceedings garnered public attention when Hardaway filed a counter complaint alleging Brown had “improper relations with one of her former pupils.” At the trial, both provided evidence to the judge and Hardaway withdrew his complaint at the recommendation of the court, which granted the divorce. Hardaway married Erma Whitler-Lowndes, a divorcee with two grown children in 1933.16Newly divorced and looking for greater employment opportunities, Brown moved to Chicago during the summer of 1932. Chicago was the largest city in the Midwest and boasted a population of approximately three million, 230,000 of those African Americans. Chicago, like Terre Haute, remained largely segregated, with most African Americans residing in Chicago's South Side, widely known as the “Black Belt” or “Bronzeville.” Racism was rampant, as were calls from Black organizations, such as the NAACP and the National Urban League, for racial justice. By the early 1930s, Civil Rights was emerging as a national issue and the Black press, especially the Chicago Defender, a Black newspaper with a national audience, played a critical role in the nascent movement.17Chicago had also become a mecca for Black Americans looking for a better life. By the time Brown arrived, Chicago's Black Renaissance was underway. Black women played an important role in that movement as well as the civil rights movement, supporting Black arts and literature, promoting Black education and history, striving to ensure fair housing and employment, and working as activists to end segregation.18 As one historian explained, “Chicago's women reformers were among the nation's most organized and sophisticated, with leaders establishing settlement houses, orphanages, and the nation's first juvenile court.”19 It would not be long before Willa Brown crafted a role for herself in this social movement.For a Black woman during the depression, Brown surprisingly had no trouble finding work in her new city. She applied for a teaching job with the Chicago Board of Education, which placed her on its waiting list.20 While waiting for a teaching position, she secured work as a cashier at Walgreen's and then in a number of administrative positions in the private and federal sectors. She became the first Black employee of the Social Security Board's (later became the Social Security Agency and then Administration) Chicago office in 1937, having transferred from the US Immigration and Naturalization Service. She subsequently found work as a laboratory technician and private secretary to Dr. Julian Lewis, an associate professor of pathology at the University of Chicago—the first Black physician to hold such an appointment at a US medical school.21In 1934, while working at Walgreen's, Brown met John C. Robinson, a pilot and mechanic. (Robinson gained international recognition when he served as the commander of the Imperial Ethiopian Air Force in 1935–1936 during Ethiopia's war with Italy.) Brown had always admired Bessie Coleman, and Robinson convinced her to take flying lessons, something easier for a Black female to do in Chicago as opposed to other parts of the country. In the 1930s, Chicago had become the center of Black aviation in the country and home to a number of influential Black pilots. The Chicago Defender closely followed the exploits of these male and female pilots and promoted their stories as part of its larger crusade for racial justice.Robinson introduced Brown to his friend Cornelius Coffey, another Black pilot advocating flight training for Blacks. Both Robinson and Coffey had graduated from the Curtiss-Wright Aeronautical University as airplane mechanics.22 It, however, took a threatened lawsuit to get the school to allow them to take classes.23 The two friends subsequently worked with the school to train Black students. The University refused to integrate Black and White students, but told Robinson and Coffey if they enrolled twenty-five Black students, the school would educate them as a separate class. In 1932, the first all-Black class entered the school with Robinson and Coffey teaching the class. Willa Brown passed the aviation ground course at the school in 1935.Coffey and Robinson originally flew out of Akers Airport, one of the few airports in the Chicago area that allowed Black pilots. When that airport closed, they had difficulty finding an airfield that would accept them. In 1931, Robinson, Coffey, and other local Black pilots had established the Challenger Air Pilots Association (CAPA), a Black flying club in Chicago, to encourage members of their race to take up flying. After Akers Airport closed, the association bought a tract of land in Robbins, Illinois, and built an airport. When a thunderstorm destroyed their hangar and damaged aircraft, the association moved to Harlem Airport in Oak Lawn, Illinois, at the invitation of its White manager, William Schumacher. Schumacher told them, “I'm going to put you at the end of the field to save you from having any trouble with the other [White] guys.”24 The CAPA rented one part of the airport, while a group of White fliers opened a school and flying club at the other end. Even though the Black and White pilots had different hangers, they shared Harlem's four sod runways.Willa Brown joined the CAPA and began taking flying lessons from William Schumacher's brother Fred in 1934. However, an auto accident on May 13, 1934, seemed to put an end to her nascent flying career. A friend, John B. McClellan Jr., was driving her back to Chicago from Terre Haute when the accident occurred. McClellan died in the accident and Brown was seriously injured. She was hospitalized with a broken arm, several broken ribs, and a fractured vertebra. Still determined to fly, after recovering from her injuries, she resumed flying lessons. She received her student pilot's license on March 6, 1935 (#43814).25 Her CAPA colleague and friend, Janet Harmon Waterford, had received her student license on November 9, 1933, making her the first Black woman to receive a federal pilot's license.After receiving her student license, Brown pursued an advanced license. She took flying lessons from Cornelius Coffey in 1937 and 1938 and received her solo license on April 20, 1938.26 Two months later, on June 22, Brown received a private pilot's license, which allowed her to carry nonpaying passengers in her plane.27The Pittsburgh Courier, a Black-run newspaper, printed news of her accomplishment: “Miss Willa B. Brown . . . received a private pilot's license in flying. She is understood to be the first colored aviatrix to receive this license. There were 14 others [in her class], all white men . . . Brown passed her examination with the highest mark, 96, of the entire class.” The article continued: “Although only 40 hours are required for a private police license, Miss Brown had almost a hundred to her credit before taking the test.” Brown, however, hoped to expand her credentials by earning another license. As Brown remarked in the article, “I shall work next fall towards getting a limited commercial license. . . . That will permit me to take up passengers for pay.”28 The paper, like many other Black newspapers across the United States, received news and information from Claude Barnett's Associated Negro Press (ANP), an organization founded in Chicago in 1919 to supply news, opinions, feature articles, and reviews to Black newspapers. The ANP kept its subscribers constantly updated on Brown's activities.Relishing the notoriety, Brown wrote a letter to the editor of the newspaper, saying, “When I whipped my airplane through the designated spins, spirals, figure eights, verticals, and passed the written test last month to get a private pilot's license, I was overcome with joy to have accomplished my desire; but there also came a deep satisfaction to know that our newspapers and magazines showed such courtesy as to carry articles and pictures concerning this event.”29 Hoping to clarify her place in history, after receiving her license, Brown sent a telegram to the Bureau of Air Commerce asking if “there are any other colored women holding pilot licenses,” other than those held by Dorothy Darby, Lola Jones, and herself. The bureau, which had not yet recorded her private pilot's license, responded that she and Jones had solo licenses and Dorothy Darby had an amateur license.30True to her word, Brown applied for her limited commercial pilot's license. In October 1938, she took the necessary written exam for that rating. She failed the airplanes and theory of flight, meteorology, and navigation sections of the exam; the Civil Aeronautics Authority, which replaced the Bureau of Air Commerce in 1938, required a grade of no lower than 70 on each section to pass. She later retook the written exams and passed, though she did not achieve passing scores on her October 26 and December 15, 1938, flight tests. However, when she retook the flight test on June 16, 1939, she passed it. Her examiner wrote that despite her visual issues, “her flight test in general was still better than fair.” Her medical examiner found her vision needed correction, so she now had to wear corrective lenses when piloting an aircraft. She received her limited commercial license in August 1939.31 On June 11, 1940, she received her federal ground instructor rating, which permitted her to teach ground school courses.32 Brown was one of a slowly growing cadre of licensed Black pilots, albeit mostly men, in the country. By January 1939, the number of licensed Black pilots in the country numbered 125: four commercial, four limited commercial, twenty-three private, twelve solo, and eighty-two student.33New federal rules for pilot's licenses issued in 1941 by the Civil Aeronautics Authority's successor agency the Civil Aeronautics Administration (CAA) meant all solo certificates would expire on May 1, 1941, and limited commercial certificates on May 1, 1942. With the limited commercial rating being abolished, on April 28, 1941, Brown applied for her commercial airmen's certificate. She took the required written exams, but did not receive passing grades on the navigation, engine, and weather sections of the exam. She did not retake the exam, and she reverted back to a private pilot's license.34Brown's flying exploits made her a celebrity in Chicago's Black community where even the gossip pages carried stories of her professional and private activities. One such column described her as “good looking,” and someone who “admittedly likes to flirt.” It also noted that she was a “woman who swears occasionally, plays cards once a week, likes to sip cocktails at the bar, and simply craves gospel music. . . . [O]nce in an airplane, though, Miss Brown is in her glory.”35African American artist Charles H. Alston added to Brown's growing celebrity. Hired by the Office of War Information and Public Information during World War II, he created cartoons and posters designed to mobilize the Black community to join in the American war effort. Black newspapers across the country featured Alston's images. Willa Brown became one of his subjects.36Willa Brown so loved aviation and she wanted to share her enthusiasm with others. However, Black pilots often faced acute racism when trying to get a license. Most of the White Civil Aviation Administration personnel who administered flight tests refused to test and/or pass Black pilots. In addition, because of the limited number of aviation facilities available to Black pilots, their ranks grew slowly in the 1930s in Chicago and elsewhere. In 1935, the United States only had forty-seven federally licensed Black pilots. That number included four limited commercial pilots, two transport pilots, nine private pilots, four amateur pilots, one solo pilot, and twenty-seven student pilots.37To help increase those numbers, Brown volunteered to serve as the publicist for the CAPA. She wanted to use her position to introduce the Black community to the thrills of flying. To do so, however, she needed to achieve some serious marketing successes for the association's activities. Through such efforts, Brown, described as “veritable inexhaustible dynamo of energy” who worked “indefatigably to enlist members and create interest where there was none,” succeeded in getting more African Americans interested in flying.38The Chicago Defender carefully followed the exploits of the country's Black pilots. Robert S. Abbott founded the paper in 1905 and used it to attack racial inequities. One of the first mentions of Brown in the paper came in the early 1930s when she worked for the Social Security office,39 and the paper continued to follow her aviation and political career for decades thereafter. Brown would soon partner with Abbott and the paper's city editor, Enoch P. Waters, to promote Black aviation.In 1936, Brown confidently walked into the Chicago Defender newsroom wearing her flying attire—white jodhpurs, jacket, and boots—and announced, “I want to speak to Mr. Enoch Waters.”40 She needed the paper to provide publicity for an upcoming CAPA-sponsored air show. At the time, Waters explained, other than John Robinson and Hubert Julian, he had no idea there was a group of Black aviators in Chicago. “Fascinated by both her [Brown] and the idea of Negro aviators,” Waters recounted, I decided to follow up on the story myself. I didn't realize, at the time, how deeply involved I would become in aviation.”41Approximately three hundred people showed up to watch the pilots, and as a reward for his help, Brown took Waters up in her plane. According to Waters, “It was a thrilling experience, and the maneuvers, figure eights, flip-overs and stalls, were exhilarating, though momentarily frightening. I wasn't convinced of her competence until we landed smoothly.”42 Waters, like Abbott, became a lifelong supporter of Brown's efforts to desegregate the military and increase aviation opportunities for underprivileged Blacks in the Chicago area.In 1937, Cornelius Coffey opened the Coffey School of Aeronautics at Harlem airport to train both Black and White students for careers in aviation.43 Brown, who operated the lunch room at the airport and had graduated with a master's degree in business from Northwestern University in 1937, became Coffey's business partner and later his wife. The vivacious and outgoing Brown and the introvert Coffey married on July 8, 1939.44 They shared a common goal of teaching Blacks, both men and women, to fly, and to fight for Black pilots to be integrated into military units. Coffey, according to Waters “was a quiet retiring man of few words. He was completely devoted to aviation and was content being an unnoticed instructor because it allowed him to spend his days at the airport.” Brown's enthusiasm for aviation, on the other hand, “was contagious. . . . [S]he wanted to spend all of her time flying around the country,” convincing others to take up flying.45Brown not only helped run the Coffey school but also continued her public outreach efforts for the school and the CAPA. Because of such efforts, in 1938, Chicago's Black aviators, many from Coffey's school, made history when they competed with White pilots at a local air show—the first time in US history that Black and White aviators competed against one another. With Brown and the Defender publicizing the event, thirty thousand people, including five thousand Black spectators, came together at Harlem airport to watch the meet. Chauncey Spencer, a member of the CAPA, took first place in the parachute jumping competition. Another association member, Charles Johnson, earned second place in the precision flying category. Other members, such as Brown, Lola Jones, Albert Cosby, Herman Ray, Cornelius Coffey, Fred Huchinson, and Dale White, also competed.46The opportunity to compete against White pilots was not enough to satisfy Brown and her peers. Prohibited from joining the all-White Chicago Girls Flying Club and the local chapter of the Ninety-Nines, Brown and the other Black female pilots at Harlem airport established the Chicago Girls Flight Club. Original members included Lille Berras, Delores Jackson, Lola Jones, Doris Murphy, and Janet Harmon Waterford.47The group's members also worked to help broaden the scope of the CAPA. Brown, in particular, helped transform the CAPA into the National Negro Airmen Association of America on August 16, 1937.48 For its members, some of the key factors in establishing the organization centered on the need to encourage more Blacks to seek careers in aviation and to lobby for the inclusion of Black pilots in the military. The organization soon renamed itself National Airmen's Association of America (NAAA) at the recommendation of Claude Barnett, the influential founder and director of the ANP.49The NAAA incorporated in the state of Illinois in 1939. Approximately two thousand chapters soon sprang up around the country. Dr. Albert Porter Davis, a physician and Black pilot from Kansas, initially served as the first president of the national association. Other pioneering African American aviators who helped established the organization included Cornelius Coffey, Harold Hurd, Grover Nash, Marie St. Clair, Chauncey Spencer, Janet Waterford, and Dale White. Cornelius Coffey served as vice president, with Brown as its secretary.50 Brown soon became president of the Chicago group.51In the late 1930s, with war brewing in Europe, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Congress, and the military began preparing for the United States’ eventual entry into the war. Aircraft production became a national priority, as did increasing the number of pilots. On June 27, 1939, President Roosevelt signed the Civilian Pilot Training Act into law. The law authorized the CAA to train civilian pilots through educational institutions. Representative Everett M. Dirksen (R-IL) inserted a provision into the act that stated, “None of the benefits of training or programs shall be denied on account of race, creed, or color.”Instruction for Black students began in 1939 at six schools: the West Virginia State College for Negroes; Howard University in Washington, DC; Tuskegee Institute in Alabama; Hampton Institute in Virginia; Delaware State College for Colored Students; and North Carolina Agricultural and Technical College. Although training, for the most part, remained segregated, some northern colleges did accept Black students into their programs. Because of the success rate of its primary instruction, the CAA approved Tuskegee for secondary instruction.52The Civilian Pilot Training Program (CPTP) legislation also mandated that at least 5 percent (later 7 percent) of the trainees be non-college students. For these programs, the CAA required one instructor per fifty students. At the end of a twelve-week ground school course, ten students from each class would be selected competitively to go into flight training. Only one woman could be among the ten selectees.53 The CAA required a “responsible civic body” conduct the ground school and a “nearby commercial flying school” provide the flight program for non-collegiate students. The NAAA applied to the CAA to run such a program. It planned to work through the Coffey School of Aeronautics to provide the flight training.Willa Brown worked tirelessly to get the NAAA accepted into the program. Her efforts succeeded, and in the fall of 1939, the CAA notified the organization of its selection as one of the non-collegiate training providers. Time magazine noted the award of the contract in its September 25, 1939, edition: “One civilian flier who was highly pleased by C.A.A.’s (Civil Aeronautics Authority) announcement was a cream and coffee-skinned Negress of 29. There is small chance that Willa Beatrice Brown will ever fly for the Army or Navy, but as Secretary of the National (Negro) Airmen's Association and one of the few Negro aviatrixes holding a limited commercial license, she has labored mightily to whip up interest in flying among Negroes, [and to] get them a share in C.A.A.’s training program.”54The Pittsburgh Courier reported: “Announcement of the selection of Harlem Airport marked another successful step for the integration of Negro citizens into government-sponsored aviation expansion programs.”55 Edgar G. Brown (no relation to Willa Brown), president of the United Government Employees organization, an organization of mostly Black federal employees, said of the selection, “For the first time in the history of aviation, equal opportunities have been guaranteed colored youth in all sections of the country without resort to Supreme Court action.”56 Although the number of Illinois CPTP participants, both collegiate and noncollegiate, in the program expanded throughout 1939–1940, the Coffey school remained the only noncollegiate training program that taught Black students in the state.57Public reaction to the inclusion of Blacks in the training program ran the gamut from acute prejudice to wholesale acceptance. Some lauded the CAA's actions, especially the Black press. The New York Age, for example, called the inclusion of Blacks in pilot training “a victory in the long fight for equalization of opportunity for Negros in the trenches, on the sea and in the air in time of war and peace.”58 Some, however, expressed anger and hostility. After the Des Moines Register ran an article on the training program, for example, a White pilot sent a blistering letter to the editor. He wrote, in part, “Of all the races represented [in aviation] the Negro made the worst pilot and, of course, the [most] dangerous one. Why? Because he is mentally incompetent and notoriously lacking in that one vital element—judgment.”59 Such prejudice proved hard to overcome, but Willa Brown and other Black aviators in Chicago set out to prove such bigots wrong.For the CPTP program, Coffey and Brown's school provided flight training, while the NAAA arranged for ground instructors. Willa Brown served as the local coordinator of the NAAA's CPTP program, and, once she received her ground instructor rating, also taught ground school classes to adult students at night using a classroom at Wendell Phillips High School on Chicago's South Side. In addition, she was the only Black airplane mechanic instructor in the CPTP program.60 The NAAA received two hundred and fifty applications for its initial CPTP training class.61 Classes began on January 15, 1940.62The US Army provided the Coffey school one hundred thousand dollars worth of equipment for its training program. The equipment included a Boeing P-36 bomber and such items as a cylinder and crankshaft assembly, gas tanks, and motors. Ground school classes included instruction in meteorology, civil air regulations, theory of airplane flight, aircraft engine
威拉·比阿特丽斯·布朗和芝加哥的航空遗产
当历史学家和传记作家写到芝加哥飞行员威拉·布朗时,他们通常会讲述她作为美国第一批获得执照的黑人女飞行员之一的角色,以及她为向黑人飞行员开放军用航空而做出的不懈努力。然而,他们往往忽视了她在白人男性主导的航空界获得飞行员执照的个人挣扎,并错误地认为她是第一位获得联邦飞行员执照的黑人女性。大多数人很少审视她的灵感和动机,她反对既定的规范,倡导接受黑人飞行员进入航空界例如,为什么搬到芝加哥并与该市的黑人先驱飞行员会面导致了从教师到飞行员的职业转变?她的背景是什么促使她热衷于成为变革的代言人和说客?在那个种族不平等、种族隔离、许多职业机会被剥夺的年代,威拉·布朗不屈不挠的精神和非凡的勇气证明了黑人男女都有能力登上天空。受过良好教育的布朗拒绝接受否定的回答。她直言不讳,为自己认为正确的事情而奋斗,是20世纪初为数不多的改变性别和种族的黑人女性之一。正如一位作家所解释的那样,像布朗这样的黑人女性“不在乎人们对她们的看法,她们不让种族主义阻止她们,不让暴力威胁阻止她们,不让社会结构阻止她们。他们没有放弃争取平等的斗争。威拉·布朗的早年生活帮助定义了她后来的生活,她受过教育,有进取心,是一名平等权利的倡导者。她于1906年1月22日出生在肯塔基州的格拉斯哥,是印第安人哈莉·梅·卡彭特·布朗和非裔美国人埃里克·布朗的第二个孩子,也是唯一的女儿。1915年,埃里克和哈莉首先将威拉,她的四个兄弟和一个侄子从肯塔基州的农场搬到了印第安纳州的印第安纳波利斯。这对夫妇随后又有了第五个儿子。作为一个男孩家庭中唯一的女孩,她当然很早就学会了如何保护自己,为自己想要的东西大声疾呼。像他们这一代的许多人一样,布朗一家加入了向北移民的行列,为他们的孩子寻找更好的就业和教育机会,并逃避肯塔基州的吉姆·克劳法。在印第安纳波利斯,埃里克·布朗是公民天然气公司的一名工人。然而,在印第安纳波利斯,布朗一家并没有从歧视中解脱出来,那里的学校和企业也在很大程度上实行种族隔离,非裔美国人社区仍然很小。这个城市对黑人移民相当不友好。黑人在社会和经济上被孤立,工作很难找到,三k党的活动越来越多,尤其是在政治舞台上,使得黑人居民很难取得成功事实上,一位历史学家将印第安纳波利斯描述为“美国种族主义最严重的城市之一,这一点令人羡慕。”1919年,他们全家搬到了印第安纳州的特雷霍特。特雷霍特的情况也好不到哪里去,布朗一家在印第安纳波利斯面临的种族歧视也没有得到多少缓解。在20世纪早期,特雷霍特有58157人口,其中只有2593名黑人居民。到1920年,该市总人口增加到66,083人,其中黑人居民3,646人就像在印第安纳波利斯一样,黑人在很大程度上仍然与白人隔离,专业白领工作基本上是他们无法企及的。埃里克·布朗(Eric Brown)在一家杂酚油工厂找到了工作,这是一份工资低而且往往很危险的工作。威拉的哥哥也在工厂找了份工作来补贴家用。威拉上的是威利高中,这是一所位于特雷霍特南部的废除种族隔离的高中。然而,她只是威利学校不到15名非裔美国人中的一员,他们大多数是男性,因为他们的运动能力而获得了一些认可参加学校的运动队并不能完全保护他们免受种族歧视。例如,1923年,威拉毕业的那一年,特雷霍特的全白人加菲尔德高中拒绝和威利一起参加橄榄球比赛,如果黑人球员穿上比赛服的话在学校期间,布朗兼职做家务——这是为数不多的对黑人妇女开放的职业之一。高中毕业后,布朗决心继续深造,进入位于特雷霍特的印第安纳州立师范学校就读,1929年更名为印第安纳州立师范学院,后来又更名为印第安纳州立大学。这所学院开放招生,并没有将教室和图书馆隔离开来。学校确实在餐厅、宿舍、会议场所和社会活动中实行种族隔离黑人入学人数仍然相当少,20世纪20年代,在550多名学生中,黑人学生不超过40人。布朗主修商务,辅修法语。 她还加入了黑人姐妹会Alpha Kappa Alpha,并继续做兼职家政以支付大学费用。毕业前,她接受了一份在印第安纳州加里市实行种族隔离的罗斯福附属学校教书的工作。这所学校最初是一所小学,1925年开始教授中学课程。1930年,该校第一批高中毕业生毕业。布朗在该校教授打字和速记。她赞助了写作俱乐部,并担任校报的指导老师在暑假期间,她回到特雷霍特的大学完成她的本科学位,她于1931年获得学士学位。她教书不久,加里的种族紧张局势爆发了。1927年9月,在18名黑人学生转到已经有6名非洲裔学生的爱默生高中后,爱默生高中的1500名白人学生和其他地区学校的学生拒绝上课。当学校董事会同意在90天内将黑人学生转移到临时建筑后,学生们又回到了教室毫无疑问,这次事件以及她之前的经历,帮助布朗认识到为所有人提供平等机会和机会的必要性。布朗的第一任丈夫威尔伯·j·哈达威(Wilbur J. Hardaway)也激发了她促进平等权利的愿望。在加里市工作期间,布朗遇到了该市第一位也是唯一一位黑人市议员哈达威。他在市议会中代表该市第五区他是全国有色人种协进会(NAACP)当地分会的积极成员。他毕业于塔斯基吉学院,是加里最早的黑人消防员之一。布朗和哈达威于1929年11月24日在该市的有色卫理公会教堂结婚。这段婚姻没有维持多久。布朗于1931年提出离婚。她很早就知道自己不是那种典型的中产阶级黑人妻子。意志坚强的布朗不愿打理家务,也不愿积极支持丈夫的政治生涯,她更喜欢在家庭之外从事职业。正如她后来解释的那样,“我不是做家庭主妇的料,他(哈达威)很快就发现了这一点。这对夫妇没有孩子。当哈达威提出反诉,指控布朗“与她以前的一名学生有不正当关系”时,离婚诉讼引起了公众的关注。在审判中,双方都向法官提供了证据,哈达威在法院的建议下撤回了他的申诉,法院批准了离婚。1933年,哈达威与厄玛·惠特勒-朗兹结婚。厄玛离过婚,育有两个成年子女。芝加哥是中西部最大的城市,人口约300万,其中23万是非裔美国人。芝加哥和特雷霍特一样,在很大程度上仍然实行种族隔离,大多数非洲裔美国人居住在芝加哥南区,那里被称为“黑带”或“布朗兹维尔”。种族主义猖獗,全国有色人种协进会(NAACP)和全国城市联盟(National Urban League)等黑人组织呼吁种族正义。到20世纪30年代初,民权运动已成为一个全国性的问题,黑人媒体,尤其是拥有全国读者的黑人报纸《芝加哥捍卫者》(Chicago Defender),在这场新生的运动中发挥了关键作用。芝加哥也成为美国黑人寻求更好生活的圣地。布朗到达芝加哥时,芝加哥的黑人文艺复兴运动正在进行中。黑人妇女在黑人运动和民权运动中发挥了重要作用,她们支持黑人艺术和文学,促进黑人教育和历史,努力确保公平的住房和就业,并作为积极分子结束种族隔离正如一位历史学家所解释的那样,“芝加哥的女性改革者是全国最有组织、最成熟的改革者之一,她们的领导人建立了安置所、孤儿院和全国第一个少年法庭。”不久,威拉·布朗就在这场社会运动中确立了自己的角色。作为一名大萧条时期的黑人女性,布朗出人意料地在新城市毫不费力地找到了工作。她向芝加哥教育委员会申请了一份教师工作,该委员会把她列入了候补名单在等待教师职位期间,她在沃尔格林(Walgreen’s)找到了一份收银员的工作,然后在私营和联邦部门担任了许多行政职务。1937年,她从美国移民归化局转到芝加哥,成为社会保障局(后来成为社会保障局和行政管理局)办公室的第一位黑人雇员。随后,她找到了一份实验室技术员和芝加哥大学病理学副教授朱利安·刘易斯博士的私人秘书的工作,他是第一位在美国医学院担任此类职位的黑人医生。 1934年,布朗在沃尔格林公司工作时,遇到了飞行员兼机械师约翰·c·罗宾逊。(1935年至1936年,在埃塞俄比亚与意大利的战争期间,罗宾逊担任埃塞俄比亚帝国空军司令,从而获得了国际认可。)布朗一直很欣赏贝茜·科尔曼,罗宾逊说服她去上飞行课,这是黑人女性在芝加哥比在美国其他地方容易做的事。在20世纪30年代,芝加哥已经成为全国黑人航空的中心,也是许多有影响力的黑人飞行员的家园。《芝加哥捍卫者报》密切关注这些男女飞行员的事迹,并将他们的故事宣传为更大的种族正义运动的一部分。罗宾逊把布朗介绍给他的朋友科尼利厄斯·科菲,另一位主张为黑人进行飞行训练的黑人飞行员。罗宾逊和科菲都毕业于柯蒂斯-赖特航空大学,主修飞机机械师然而,他们以诉讼相威胁才让学校允许他们上课这两位朋友随后与学校合作培训黑人学生。大学拒绝让黑人和白人学生融合,但告诉罗宾逊和科菲,如果他们招收了25名黑人学生,学校将把他们作为一个单独的班级来教育。1932年,第一个全黑人班级进入学校,由罗宾逊和科菲教授。威拉·布朗于1935年通过了该校的航空地面课程。科菲和罗宾逊最初从埃克斯机场起飞,这是芝加哥地区为数不多的允许黑人飞行员飞行的机场之一。机场关闭后,他们很难找到一个能接纳他们的机场。1931年,罗宾逊、科菲和其他当地黑人飞行员在芝加哥成立了“挑战者飞行员协会”(CAPA),这是一个黑人飞行俱乐部,旨在鼓励他们种族的成员学习飞行。埃克斯机场关闭后,该协会在伊利诺斯州罗宾斯买了一块地,建了一个机场。当一场雷雨摧毁了他们的机库并损坏了飞机时,该协会在其白人经理威廉·舒马赫的邀请下搬到了伊利诺斯州奥克朗的哈莱姆机场。舒马赫告诉他们:“我要把你们放在赛道的最后,这样你们就不会和其他(白人)车手发生任何麻烦。CAPA租用了机场的一部分,而一群白人飞行员在机场的另一端开办了一所学校和飞行俱乐部。尽管黑人和白人飞行员有不同的衣架,但他们共用哈莱姆的四条草皮跑道。威拉·布朗于1934年加入美国空军航空队,并开始跟随威廉·舒马赫的兄弟弗雷德学习飞行。然而,1934年5月13日的一场车祸似乎结束了她刚刚开始的飞行生涯。事故发生时,她的朋友小约翰·b·麦克莱伦(John B. McClellan Jr.)正开车送她从特雷霍特(Terre Haute)回芝加哥。麦克莱伦在事故中死亡,布朗受重伤。她因手臂骨折、几根肋骨骨折和椎骨骨折而住院。在伤愈后,她仍然决心要飞行,继续上飞行课。1935年3月6日,她获得了学生飞行员执照(#43814)她的同事和朋友珍妮特·哈蒙·沃特福德在1933年11月9日获得了学生执照,这使她成为第一位获得联邦飞行员执照的黑人女性。在获得学生执照后,布朗继续攻读高级执照。1937年和1938年,她从科尼利厄斯·科菲(Cornelius Coffey)那里学习飞行,并于1938年4月20日获得了她的单飞执照。两个月后,6月22日,布朗获得了私人飞行员执照,允许她在飞机上搭载免费乘客。黑人经营的报纸《匹兹堡信使报》登载了她的成就:“薇拉·b·布朗小姐……获得私人飞行执照。她被认为是第一个获得这个执照的有色飞行员。(她班上)还有14个人,都是白人……布朗以全班96分的最高分通过了考试。文章继续写道:“虽然获得私人警察执照只需要40个小时,但布朗小姐在参加考试之前已经有将近100个小时的学分了。”然而,布朗希望通过获得另一个执照来扩大她的资历。正如Brown在文章中所说,“我将在明年秋天努力获得有限的商业许可证. . . .这样我就可以有偿载客了。《纽约时报》和美国其他许多黑人报纸一样,从克劳德·巴内特的黑人联合通讯社(ANP)那里获得新闻和信息。ANP是1919年在芝加哥成立的一个组织,为黑人报纸提供新闻、观点、专题文章和评论。ANP不断向其订阅者更新布朗的活动。 布朗乐在其中,他给该报的编辑写了一封信,信中写道:“当我驾驶飞机完成指定的旋转、螺旋、8字形和垂直飞行,并于上个月通过笔试获得私人飞行员执照时,我欣喜若狂,因为我实现了自己的愿望;但是,当我们的报纸和杂志如此礼貌地刊登有关这一事件的文章和图片时,我们也感到深深的满足。为了澄清自己在历史上的地位,在拿到执照后,布朗给航空商务局发了一封电报,询问除了多萝西·达比、罗拉·琼斯和她自己以外,“是否还有其他有色人种女性持有飞行员执照”。该局还没有记录她的私人飞行员执照,但回应说,她和琼斯有个人执照,多萝西·达比有业余执照。布朗信守诺言,申请了有限的商业飞行员执照。1938年10月,她参加了必要的笔试。她没有通过飞机、飞行理论、气象学和航海部分的考试;民用航空局(Civil Aeronautics Authority)于1938年取代了航空商务局(Bureau of Air Commerce),要求每个部分的分数不低于70分才能通过考试。后来,她重新参加了笔试并通过了考试,尽管她在1938年10月26日和12月15日的飞行测试中没有取得及格分数。然而,当她在1939年6月16日重新参加飞行测试时,她通过了。她的主考官写道,尽管她的视力有问题,但“她的飞行测试总体上还是不错的。”她的法医发现她的视力需要矫正,所以她现在驾驶飞机时必须戴矫正眼镜。她于1939年8月获得有限商业执照。1940年6月11日,她获得联邦地面教官等级,这使她能够教授地面学校的课程布朗是这个国家缓慢增长的持牌黑人飞行员队伍中的一员,尽管他们大多是男性。到1939年1月,全国有执照的黑人飞行员达到125人:4名商业飞行员,4名有限商业飞行员,23名私人飞行员,12名单飞飞行员和82名学生飞行员。1941年由民用航空局的后继机构民用航空局(Civil Aeronautics Administration, CAA)颁布的新的联邦飞行员执照规则意味着所有的个人执照将在1941年5月1日失效,有限的商业执照将在1942年5月1日失效。随着有限商业等级被废除,1941年4月28日,布朗申请了她的商业飞行员证书。她参加了规定的笔试,但在导航、引擎和天气部分的考试中没有获得及格分数。她没有重新参加考试,而是恢复了私人飞行员执照。布朗的飞行壮举使她成为芝加哥黑人社区的名人,甚至连八卦版面都刊登了她的职业和私人活动。其中一个专栏称她“长得漂亮”,而且“无可否认喜欢调情”。它还指出,她是一个“偶尔咒骂,每周打一次牌,喜欢在酒吧喝鸡尾酒,只是渴望福音音乐. . . .的女人。不过,一旦上了飞机,布朗小姐就得意洋洋了。非裔美国艺术家查尔斯·h·奥尔斯顿(Charles H. Alston)为布朗日益增长的名气增添了光彩。第二次世界大战期间,他受雇于战争信息和公共信息办公室,创作了旨在动员黑人社区加入美国战争努力的漫画和海报。全国的黑人报纸都刊登了阿尔斯通的照片。威拉·布朗成了他的臣民之一。威拉·布朗非常热爱航空,她想与他人分享她的热情。然而,黑人飞行员在申请执照时经常面临严重的种族歧视。大多数负责飞行测试的白人民航局人员拒绝测试和/或通过黑人飞行员的考试。此外,由于可供黑人飞行员使用的航空设施数量有限,他们的队伍在20世纪30年代在芝加哥和其他地方增长缓慢。1935年,美国只有47名获得联邦政府许可的黑人飞行员。这个数字包括4名有限的商业飞行员,2名运输飞行员,9名私人飞行员,4名业余飞行员,1名单独飞行员和27名学生飞行员。37为了帮助增加这些数字,布朗自愿担任CAPA的公关。她想利用自己的地位向黑人社区介绍飞行的刺激。然而,要做到这一点,她需要为协会的活动取得一些重大的营销成功。通过这些努力,布朗成功地让更多的非裔美国人对飞行产生了兴趣,他被描述为“名副其实的取之不尽、用之不竭的能量发电机”,“不知疲倦地招募成员,在没有人感兴趣的地方创造兴趣”。《芝加哥捍卫者报》仔细地报道了这个国家黑人飞行员的功绩。罗伯特·S。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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