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Tale-draggers: First Female U.S. Air Traffic Controller |
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Mary Chance VanScyoc is still enthusiastic about all things in aviation, pictured here in front of the
Virgin Atlantic Globalflyer in Salina, Kansas.
The following article includes excerpts from her autobiography, A Lifetime of Chances by Mary Chance VanScyoc, and used with permission. Copies of this book are available at the Kansas Aviation Museum, having been donated by VanScyoc as a fundraising opportunity for the museum. VanScyoc is a regular volunteer tour guide at the museum. ~editor, Maribeth C. Yarnell. |
Mary Chance VanScyoc
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Mary Chance VanScyoc was the first female civilian air traffic controller in the United States, according to Andrew Pitas, historian with the Air Traffic Controllers Association. Air traffic control was very much in its infancy when Mary started in June, 1942. The Air Traffic Control Center in Denver, Colorado had just opened in March with 12 controllers, a chief, a senior controller (who was the trainer) and a secretary. Traffic was controlled only on the "airways", sometimes referred to as the "Highways of the Skies."
There were only two sectors or A-Boards where the controllers would keep track of all planes operating on flight plans. Today in Longmont (formerly Denver), there are about 50 sectors with their own radar screens, headsets and computers. The centers were renamed Air Route Traffic Control Centers (ARTCC) when they started controlling planes on and off the airways. Planes are handed off from one sector to another as they progress across the region. It was not necessary to have a radio to fly into any field in the tower region during that time period. Light-guns beamed either red or green signals to the aircraft. According to Mary, they had a few other combination signals that could be used for emergencies. Red meant to stop and green meant cleared to taxi if on the ground. In the air, red meant to make another pattern and try again. Green was "cleared to land." [The same signal-recognition is required today for aircraft whose radios are inoperative - and a skilled that must be validated by every new pilot, even in 2003.
Mary Chance VanScyoc still climbs the steep angled stairway leading to the old Municipal Airport tower. The building is now on the register of historic places, and is home to the Kansas Aviation Museum. She is a charter member of the Kansas Aviation Museum who has volunteered for special events, worked tirelessly in support of the museum's historical
archives, and delights in sharing her aviation experiences and history. |
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Prairie Runways, The History of Wichita's Original Municipal Airport by Susan Thompson, published by Air Capital Press, subsidiary of the Kansas Aviation Museum. The art deco administration and terminal building still stands today, adjacent to McConnell Air Force Base, at Wichita. Dedicated in 1935, the historical aerodrome played a pivotal role in the emergence of airmail service, passenger air travel and aviation manufacturing in the Great Plains. |
| Enjoy an Illustrated Article by enthusiasts David Dewhirst and Maribeth Yarnell for more details and great photos of the Aerodrome Building. |
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