Amy johnson flygplan
A Growing Love for Aviation
Born in in Kingston-Upon-Hull, England Amy had no obvious background in flight. Her father ran a fish import and export business and she studied Economics at Sheffield University. She moved to London and worked as a typist for a solicitors firm. In an attempt to rid herself of boredom, one day Amy hopped onto a bus to take a visit to the Stag Lane Aerodrome in North London. Captivated by watching the biplanes take of and land, Amy found herself spending more and more time there.
Johnson gained her Pilot's A licence and her Ground Engineer's C licence in , becoming the first woman in the UK to gain the engineer's licence of this type. Johnson traded in her secretarial job for a full time engineering role at the aerodrome. Her success mean that she was noticed by the Women's Engineering Society and was soon elected as a member. Across the course of her career, Johnson rose as a prominent member of the Society eventually becoming its president.
Amy's This edited article about aviation first appeared in Look and Learn issue number published on 28 August Amy Johnson When Amy Johnson decided she wanted to become the first woman to fly solo to Australia and break the record for the flight she had only clocked 93 hours flying time. And the longest flight she had ever made until that May day in when she took off from Croydon airport was the miles from London to her home in Hull. She was twenty-six years old and had just lost her job as a typist. She was bored, and flying, she decided, was the only way to excitement. Amy told her father about her plans and he agreed to give her a cheque for £ if she could not find another backer. Needless to say there were no other backers, and with her fathers £ Amy bought a Gipsy Moth which she called Jason. There were no great crowds to see the tall, slim girl off at Croydon. In the terraced houses surrounding the airport the residents went about their everyday business unaware that flying history was being made. True a handful of reporters turned up to witness Amys departure, and one of them went as far British aviator (–) This article is about the British aviator. For other uses, see Amy Johnson (disambiguation). Amy JohnsonCBE (born 1 July – disappeared 5 January ) was a pioneering English pilot who was the first woman to fly solo from London to Australia. Flying solo or with her husband, Jim Mollison, she set many long-distance records during the s. In , Katharine Hepburn's character in the rulle Christopher Strong was inspired by Johnson. She flew in the Second World War as a part of the Air frakt Auxiliary. Her aircraft crashed into the Thames Estuary: she died after bailing out. Because her body was never recovered, the precise cause of her death—drowning, hypothermia or being pulled into a warship's moving propellers, is unknown and has been a subject of discussion since the possibility of friendly fire was raised in (see below). Born in in Kingston upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire, Amy Johnson was the daughter of Amy Hodge, granddaughter of William Hodge, a Mayor of Hull, and John William Johnson whose family were fish merchants in the firm of Andrew Johnson, Knudtzon and Company. She was the eldest of three sisters, th
Amy Johnson the girl from Hull who flew from Croydon to Australia
Amy Johnson
Early life
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