Business Traveller (India)

VALERIAN HO

Valerian Ho tells story of the first air stewardess­es and their multifario­us duties

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is a reporter for Business Traveller Asia-Pacific, Business Traveller China and sister magazine MIX. Based in Hong Kong, he focuses on trends in aviation, hospitalit­y and lifestyle. In this issue, he talks about the first female flight attendants in the world

The position of airline cabin attendant was not a woman’s job in the early years of commercial aviation. In 1922, Britain’s Daimler Airway hired the first “cabin boys”, who served no refreshmen­ts but whose presence added a comfortabl­e formality to a flight. For a while this continued, as few people believed women were suitable for work in aviation. In 1930, however, a registered nurse named Ellen Church persuaded Steve Stimpson, manager of Boeing Air Transport (the predecesso­r to United Airlines), to hire female flight attendants, believing that a girl with training as a nurse would do a better job looking after passengers on a plane. Including Church, eight nurses were hired and the“sky girls” were paid US$125 (`8,230) a month to fly a minimum of 100 hours. Their initial flight was on a Boeing 80A from Oakland to Chicago, serving 14 passengers on a 20-hour flight. The stewardess­es had to do a host of things before, during and after the flight. Before take-off, they adjusted the clocks and altimeters in the cabin, swept the floor, dusted the windowsill­s and helped carry buckets of fuel to the plane. During the journey, they handed out chewing gum, blankets, ammonia capsules, and slippers on night flights. Other duties included making sure passengers did not consume alcohol, put their arms or head out of the aircraft, or throw anything including lit cigarettes from the windows. They even cleaned passengers’ shoes, and carried railroad timetables to assist passenger connection­s. When the flight was over, they would help push the plane into the hanger before going home. Passenger traffic surged for three months after the sky girls were introduced, with some businessme­n even making reservatio­ns to fly with specific stewardess­es. Stimpson soon hired 20 more female flight attendants, and within a year most major US airlines had also started hiring women to serve passengers on their planes. Boeing had very strict hiring policies for female cabin crew at that time. Applicants had to be under 25, no more than 5 feet 4 inches (1.6 metres) tall and weigh no more than 115 pounds (52kg). They also had to be registered nurses... and unmarried.

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 ??  ?? From top: The eight original “sky girls”; Ellen Church; Steve Stimpson and Ellen Church at a 35th anniversar­y event
From top: The eight original “sky girls”; Ellen Church; Steve Stimpson and Ellen Church at a 35th anniversar­y event
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