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  1. Jacqueline Cochran

    Jacqueline Cochran

    American aviator and businesswoman

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  1. Jacqueline Cochran (May 11, 1906 – August 9, 1980) was an American pilot and business executive. She pioneered women's aviation as one of the most prominent racing pilots of her generation. She set numerous records and was the first woman to break the sound barrier on 18 May 1953.

  2. May 9, 2024 · Jacqueline Cochran (born May 11, 1906, Muscogee, Florida, U.S.—died August 9, 1980, Indio, California) was an American pilot who held more speed, distance, and altitude records than any other flyer during her career. In 1964 she flew an aircraft faster than any woman had before.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Oct 28, 2021 · On May 18, 1953, Jacqueline Cochran became the first woman to fly faster than the speed of sound and, at the time of her death in 1980, she held more speed, altitude, and distance records than any other male or female pilot in aviation history. Cochran was a celebrated woman pilot whose career spanned four decades from the 1930s to the 1960s.

  4. Brash, beautiful, and driven, aviatrix Jackie Cochran rose from a childhood of poverty to record-breaking heights in aviation. March 26, 2021. Top Image: Jacqueline Cochran in her WASP uniform. US Air Force photograph. Jackie Cochran was a woman of many talents, and, if one considers it a talent, getting her way may have been her strongest.

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  5. In the cockpit of Northrop’s new two-seat, twin-engine supersonic trainer, the T-38 Talon, was Jacqueline Cochran. And the 55-year-old pilot was on a mission: reclaim her status as the fastest...

    • Maggie Shipstead
  6. American Jacqueline Cochran blazed a trail in aviation and contributed to the Allied war effort. This article appears in: November 2003. By Michael D. Hull. On September 28, 1939, the day after Warsaw fell to the German Army, American aviatrix Jacqueline Cochran sat down and wrote a letter to First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt.

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  8. biographies. Jacqueline “Jackie” Cochran. Colonel. Women Airforce Service Pilots, Air Force Reserve Command. May 11, 1910 – August 9, 1980. Jackie Cochran, undated. National Archives. Col. Jackie Cochran described her life as a journey from “sawdust to stardust” in her 1954 autobiography, “The Stars at Noon.”

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