Ann Shaw Carter (December 5, 1922 – September 26, 2005) was an American pilot who was the first female commercial helicopter pilot and the second woman to fly a helicopter, after the German pilot, Hanna Reitsch.
Carter was born in Brooklyn, N.Y., on December 5, 1922, and moved to Fairfield, Connecticut, as a child.[1] During World War II, she studied aircraft building in Bridgeport, Connecticut. She then got a job with Chance-Vought as a factory riveter, assembling F4U Corsair aircraft, to finance flying lessons.[1][2] She joined the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) in 1944, training in Texas, and was a member of the last graduating set before the program was discontinued that year.[1][2][3]
After the end of the war, she was the first American woman to learn to pilot a helicopter, receiving her commercial helicopter license on June 12, 1947, more than nine years after Hannah Reitsch's demonstration flight in February 1938.[3][4] She became a pilot with the Metropolitan Aviation Corporation, piloting New York City sightseeing trips and charter flights.[1][2][5] She is documented as the world's first female commercial helicopter pilot.[1][2][3][5][6] She flew Bell Helicopters, including a Bell 47B.[2][6] In 1955, she was one of the six founding members of the Whirly-Girls, which dubbed her "Whirly Girl #2";[5][7] she was one of several society members to meet President John F. Kennedy in a visit to the White House in 1961.[8] One of the helicopters that she flew was preserved by the American Helicopter Museum in West Chester, Pennsylvania.[9] Her aviation career was cut short by polio towards the end of the 1950s.[1][2]
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