Everything about Neta Snook totally explained
Anita "Neta" Snook Southern (
14 February 1896-
23 March 1991), was a pioneer
aviator who achieved a long list of firsts. She was the first woman aviator in Iowa, first woman student accepted at the Curtiss Flying School in Virginia, first woman "
aviatrix" to run her own aviation business and first woman to run a commercial airfield. Yet "Snookie", as her friends called her, was fated to be remembered for her relationship to
Amelia Earhart. Her autobiography
I Taught Amelia to Fly aptly captures the essence of her fame, she was forever linked to the Earhart mystique as her first instructor.
Early life
Neta Snook was born on
14 February 1896 in
Mount Carroll, Illinois. She was interested in machinery, at an early age spurred by her father's automobiles. At the age of four, she'd sit on her father's lap and help him steer his
Stanley Steamer up and down the hills of their small Illinois town. As she grew older, he taught her the inner workings of cars. After the family moved to
Ames, Iowa in 1915, Snook attended Iowa State College (now
Iowa State University), taking extra courses in mechanical drawing, combustion engines and farm machinery repair. With the excitement engendered by the first machines in the air, she read all she could about aeroplanes (as they were called then) and wanted to learn to fly.
Flying
During her sophomore year at college, Snook applied to the Atlantic Coast Aeronautical Station, the
Curtiss-Wright Aviation School, in
Newport News,
Virginia, and was denied admittance with the application stamped: "No females allowed." The following year, reading an advertisement for the Davenport Flying School in Iowa, brought her back home where she became one of the first female student pilots. After a major crash in which the school's president was killed, the school closed and "Curly," as she'd been dubbed by fellow students, went looking for another flight training school. In 1917, Snook eventually gained entry into the
Curtiss-Wright Aviation School and put in many hours in the air until civilian flights in the United States were banned for the duration of
World War I. Briefly, in 1918, she worked for the
British Air Ministry in
Elmira, New York as an expeditor putting her mechanical skills to good use, inspecting and testing aircraft parts and engines on their way to combat in Europe.
After purchasing a wrecked Canuck, a Canadian version of a
Curtiss JN-4 Jenny, Snook had it shipped back to Ames, Iowa, and spent two years rebuilding the plane in her parents' backyard. In 1920, Snook soloed in her rebuilt Canuck, flying from a nearby pasture and received her pilot's license and, shortly after, entry into the
Aero Club of America and the
Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI).
Barnstorming throughout the Midwest in her Canuck, she made a living furtively hauling sightseers and "passengers" although her licence didn't allow it. With the onset of a bitter Iowa winter, Snook decided to head out to California where she could fly year-round. She disassembled the Canuck for shipping and ended up in balmy Los Angeles.
In 1920, Snook approached
"Bert" Kinner for a job as an instructor in his newly constructed airport,
Kinner Field in Los Angeles, which offered aerial advertising (towing banners and flying billboards) and flight instruction. Bringing with her a background in mechanics made her an invaluable assist to Kinner. After a brief trial period, she became the first woman to run a commercial airfield.
Amelia Earhart
In 1921, Amelia Earhart, along with her father, walked onto the airfield and asked Neta, "I want to fly. Will you teach me?" The agreement struck between Amelia and her parents was that only a woman pilot would teach her to fly. "For $1 in
Liberty bonds per minute in the air, Neta Snook taught Amelia Earhart to fly, but above that, they became friends." The first five hours in the air were paid for by Earhart but the next 15 were entirely unpaid as Snook took her new pilot up in the Kinner Airster that Amelia had purchased.
At first her pupil wasn't the best flyer. Earhart stalled the Airster while trying to clear a grove of eucalyptus trees on takeoff. Snook thought to herself, "Perhaps I'd misjudged her abilities." However their friendship held sway and this first crash was soon forgotten. They flew together for over a year. Snook became close with the entire Earhart family and often spent time at the family home.
Later years
Neta Snook became the first woman to enter a "men's" air race at the Los Angeles Speedway in February 1921, finishing fifth and telling the media, "I'm going to fly as cleverly, as audaciously, as thrillingly as any man aviator in the world."
At the age of 25, she married Bill Southern in 1922, became pregnant and gave up flying, selling her business. Not much was heard about Neta Snook Southern in the years following her retirement but after Earhart disappeared during her famous flight in 1937, Snook began lecturing and speaking about her career in aviation and, later, wrote her autobiography,
I Taught Amelia To Fly. Neta flew for the first time in decades, when she was invited to pilot a replica of
Charles Lindbergh's
Spirit of St. Louis in 1977. In 1981, she was acknowledged as the oldest woman pilot in the United States. Neta died at age 95 on
23 March 1991 at her ranch home in California. One year after her death, Neta Snook Southern was inducted into the Iowa Aviation Hall of Fame.
Legacy
In 1917, "few women took to the clouds during that time, but the ones who did became famous for their courage and contributions to mankind's experience of flight."
Further Information
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