Mary Riddle
Mary Riddle, also known as Kus-de-cha or Kingfisher,[1] (April 22, 1902 – October 25, 1981) was the second Native American woman to earn a pilot's license[2][3] Bessie Coleman was the first to earn a license.[4][5] Soon after earning her pilot's license she also earned her commercial license.[6] Early lifeRiddle was a member of the Clatsop Tribe in Oregon[2] and the Quinault Indian Nation in Washington.[7] She was born on April 22, 1902 in Bruceport, Washington to parents Albert "Doc" Riddell and Elizabeth Salikike.[8] Elizabeth Salikike's family name was also spelled as Salikie and Silackie in various sources.[9] Riddle said that her grandmother gave her the name Kus-de-cha, meaning 'kingfisher', after noting that her cries sounded like a kingfisher's call.[10] Anthropologist Llyn de Danaan states that the word 'kus-de-cha' does not appear in the Chinook, Clatsop, or Lower Chehalis languages.[11] However, 'kuśdecá' is listed as the Dakota word for kingfisher in the book An English and Dakota Vocabulary.[12] Riddle had two brothers, Thomas and Valentine.[8] After their mother's death in 1905, Riddle and her brothers were placed in the Chemawa Indian School in Salem, Oregon.[8] In 1911, Riddle was transferred to the Sisters of the Valley Academy in Beaverton, Oregon. Riddle's father died in 1912.[8] Riddle's interest in aviation began when she first saw an airplane while on a trip home from the Sisters of the Valley Academy.[13] When Riddle was seventeen, she saw a woman fatally crash an airplane.[14] The incident made her determined to prove women could fly well.[14] Aviation careerPilotRiddle saved money for two years[15] to attend the Rankin Flying School in Portland, run by noted aviator Tex Rankin.[16] Rankin, who also taught Chinese-American pilot Leah Hing, was interested in creating "a 'rainbow', all-female stunt team," but Riddle declined to participate, and the idea fizzled out.[17] She flew solo for the first time on May 10, 1930.[15] "I wasn't scared," said Riddle one month later. "On that first trip alone I just missed the weight of the instructor in the plane."[15] She featured in an airshow at the 1930 Portland Rose Festival, riding up to her plane on horseback and in "full tribal costume".[18] Riddle was one of three female pilots in the show: the others were Dorothy Hester and Edith Foltz.[19] In August of that year, she made plans to fly to Washington, D.C., with "beaded gifts from Indian tribes of the Northwest", to be delivered to for "President Hoover and others".[20] Riddle earned a limited commercial pilot's license in 1933.[21] In June 1934, she was featured on the 99's magazine, The 99er.[22] An all-around athlete, she enjoyed swimming, riding, "golf, tennis, and ice skating."[23] ParachutistRiddle later went to the Spartan School in Tulsa to learn parachute jumping.[24] Though the school was all-male at the time, Riddle convinced them to admit her and graduated with honors.[24] By 1937 she was performing as a parachutist[25] while touring the United States on The Voice of Washington, advertised as the largest tri-motored plane in the world,[26] on which she also served as chief stewardess.[1] Press described her as quiet and charming.[23] Riddle did forty parachute jumps.[16] In 1937, she almost died when her parachute, which had not opened correctly, became tangled with her legs.[26] The next year, a back injury caused her to quit parachuting.[10] Aircraft InspectorWorld War II restrictions on civilian aircraft forced Riddle to give up flying.[10] She began working with aluminum sheet metal as part of the U.S. Air Force's Civil Service, reasoning, "I just had to be near airplanes- even if I could not fly them."[10] She was recruited by the government to inspect civilian aircraft and work as an aircraft maintenance advisor.[16] Riddle recalled, "I was a sort of guinea pig, really, on account of being the only woman, but I got along fine."[27] Later lifeAfter the war, Riddle became a receptionist at the Gibbs and Hill firm in New York City, but continued to fly on occasion and to visit the Northwest.[27] See alsoReferences
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