Josephine Wood Wallingford

Excerpted from an article written by Dr. Jacque Boyd published in the
November/December 2004 99 NEWS Magazine

 

Josephine Wood, born March 28, 1912, passed away in Vernon, Texas on September 11, 2004. The Ninety-Nines possesses very little information about her. The 1979 History of The Ninety-Nines has this information under a photo of her and her sister with their flight instructor:

“Josephine Wood Wallingford left, (license #9129) and her sister, Frances, both formerly of Vernon, TX, with their instructor, Burdette Fuller, during training at Jim Granger’s operation Clover Field, Santa Monica. One of the early-day sister-flying teams, Ninety-Nines Charter Member Josephine now lives in the Dallas area.”

From the 1996 Ninety-Nines History book comes this information: “Josephine Wallingford Wood, a charter member and a native of Oklahoma, CA flying an OX5 Swallow. In 1931 she received her limited commercial rating.” Neither of these paragraphs tells much about Wood. When she died, her son contacted Headquarters. I was given his phone number and called to see what information I could find to add to this article. That hour spent on the phone was beyond enjoyable, cathartic and served as confirmation of what I believed to be the central common characteristics that define our Charter Members.

Bill gave me insight into a phenomenally good and talented woman who, as he put it, simply got caught in the cracks of the time. She learned to fly in 1929 and stopped flying in the early 1930s due to the monetary constraints produced by the Depression. She never flew again and very rarely discussed her flying, even with her only son. She was married to Fred Wallingford and had her only son in 1937. She and Wallingford divorced, and she didn’t speak of him again. He was killed in the early 1940s in an airplane crash in California.

Bill fondly related a story about what he referred to as her private pilot’s check ride: Her check pilot strapped her into her parachute and sent her off for her solo flight. She taxied out but found that with the parachute she couldn’t reach the rudder pedals, so she took the chute off and continued her flight without it. When she came back in and landed, she took some extra time at the end of the runway to put her chute back on before she met with her instructor. When she taxied back to her instructor he asked why she had taken so long at the end of the runway. Her reply was that she was “just overcome with the moment.” He simply looked at her and said that must just happen with women.

The Depression made times tough for single women, particularly for divorced women. Josephine, or Jodie, as she was called, made a simple but difficult decision. She stopped flying and went home to take care of her mother and alcoholic sister. Her son said she never complained but did what it was she knew she had to do. Eventually her mother and sister passed away, and by that time she was at a stage in life where she just didn’t feel that flying again was an option. Bill said, “She squared her shoulders and went down the road.” She didn’t torture herself about the decision or her past, and as Bill put it, “Sometimes hard times make a good person.”

Bill will be taking a trip to Ninety-Nines Headquarters in Oklahoma City to visit the Museum of Women Pilots. He believes The Ninety-Nines set the stage that helped give women independence. He sounded wistful as he spoke about the trip. His mother rarely spoke about her flying life, and he knew it would be a bittersweet visit. He was going to visit this place and see his mother as “the pilot that would have been.”

 

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