Bessie Coleman

@African American Women, Career and Life

Bessie Coleman was an American civil aviator who became the first female African-American pilot with a flight license

Jan 26, 1892

Plane CrashFloridaTexasAmericanMiscellaneousAviatorsAquarius Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: January 26, 1892
  • Died on: April 30, 1926
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: African American Men, African American Women, Miscellaneous, Aviators
  • City/State: Florida, Texas
  • Siblings: Elois Coleman Patterson, Georgia Coleman, John Coleman, Nilus Coleman, Walter Coleman
  • Cause of death: Plane Crash

Bessie Coleman born at

Jacksonville, Florida, United States

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Birth Place

On December 30, 1916, Bessie Coleman reportedly got married to Claude Glenn, who was a friend of her bother and was 14 years older than her. However, they soon separated, and she and her family never publicly acknowledged the relationship.

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Personal Life

She died on April 30, 1926, in a plane crash while testing out her new Jenny aircraft during preparation for an exhibition for May Day celebrations. Coleman, who was in the second seat looking over the cockpit to prepare for the next day's show, was thrown out of the plane after pilot William D. Wills lost control of it.

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Personal Life

In 1995, the U.S. Postal Service issued a 32-cent stamp to honor her memory. In 2006, she was inducted into the National Aviation Hall of Fame.

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Personal Life

Bessie Coleman was born on January 26, 1892, in Atlanta, Texas, to George and Susan Coleman, who worked as sharecroppers. Her father was of Native American and African-American descent, while her mother was African-American.

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Childhood & Early Life

The family moved to Waxahachie, Texas, when she was only two years old. At the age of six, she attended a far-away, one-room school in Waxahachie, walking four miles daily. Coleman was brilliant in mathematics, and successfully completed eight grades in that school.

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Childhood & Early Life

In 1901, her father proposed to move back to Native Indian territory in Oklahoma to escape racial discrimination in Texas, but her mother decided to stay behind. To support the family, her mother started working as a cotton picker and a laundress. Bessie’s two brothers started working as day laborers, while she took care of her two younger sisters.

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Childhood & Early Life

When she was 12, she received a scholarship from Missionary Baptist Church School in Texas. She funded her studies in the Oklahoma Colored Agricultural and Normal University (now Langston University) by working as a laundress. However, she only had enough money for one semester, following which she returned home.

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Childhood & Early Life

After returning to Waxahachie, Bessie Coleman continued to work as a laundress until 1915, after which she moved to Chicago to live with her older brother Walter. She found a job as a manicurist at the White Sox Barber Shop, and soon moved to her own place.

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Career

While working as a manicurist, she heard stories about World War I from pilots returning from war. Coleman, who aspired to "amount to something" since she was kid, decided that she would become a pilot. However, she soon learnt that there were no flight schools in the United States that would admit a black woman.

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Career

She had developed a friendship with Robert S. Abbott, founder and publisher of the 'Chicago Defender'. He informed her that French were world leaders in aviation and would admit people from any race. She took up another job at a chili parlor to raise funds and also learnt French at the Berlitz school in Chicago.

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Career

On November 20, 1920, she left for Paris, funded by Abbott and Jesse Binga, a realtor and a banker. She learned to fly in a Nieuport 82 biplane and obtained her 'Fédération Aéronautique Internationale' license on June 15, 1921, from Caudron Brothers' School of Aviation in Le Crotoy.

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Career

After training in Europe for couple more months, she returned to the US in September 1921. She immediately gained the attention of newspapers, all eager to tell her extraordinary story. However, she also realized that to earn a living as a pilot, she has to become a barnstormer.

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Career

Bessie Coleman considered it a responsibility to inspire African-American to become pilots and attended a number of events to tell her story to raise interest about aviation in black people. She spent a lot of time speaking at schools, theaters, and churches around the country, displaying clips of her aerial stunts.

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Major Works