Las Vegas Review-Journal

Hero pilot hailed for roles in landing, military

Shults was among first female fighter pilots in U.S. Navy

- By Jim Vertuno and Emily Schmall

BOERNE, Texas — The Southwest Airlines pilot being lauded as a hero in a harrowing landing after a passenger was partially blown out of the jet’s fuselage is also being hailed for her pioneering role in a career where she has been one of the few women at the controls.

Tammie Jo Shults, one of the first female fighter pilots in the U.S. Navy, was the captain and piloting the Dallas-bound Flight 1380 when it made an emergency landing Tuesday in Philadelph­ia, according to her husband, Dean Shults.

One of the engines on the Boeing 737 exploded while the plane was traveling 500 mph at 30,000 feet. Shrapnel hit the plane, and passengers said they had to rescue a woman being blown out of a damaged window. The woman later died of blunt force trauma to her head, neck and torso.

Shults calmly relayed details about the crisis to air traffic controller­s, and passengers commended her handling of the situation.

Friends at Shults’ church in Boerne, Texas, said Wednesday they were not surprised after listening to the recording and reading media reports about her actions.

“Everybody is talking about Tammie Jo and how cool and calm she was in a crisis, and that’s just Tammie Jo,” Rachel Russo said. “That’s how she’s wired.”

Shults was commission­ed into the Navy in 1985 and reached the rank of lieutenant commander, said Commander Ron Flanders, the spokesman for Naval Air Forces in San Diego.

Women aviators were excluded from combat missions until the month after Shults got off active duty in March 1993, but Flanders said Shults flew during Operation Desert Storm trainings as an aggressor enemy pilot.

“While we at that time had an exclusion, she was in fact helping male pilots hone their skills,” Flanders said.

Veteran Navy combat aviator Linda Maloney said that she and Shults were among a small group of women who worked to see the combat exclusion rule repealed.

“Obviously it was frustratin­g,” said Maloney, who became among the first women to join a combat military flying squadron. “We go through the same training that the guys do, and our hope was the Navy would allow us to fly in combat at some point.”

Shults was featured in Maloney’s book “Military Fly Moms,” along with the stories of 69 other women U.S. military veterans.

Russo and Staci Thompson, who has known Shults for about 20 years and was nanny to her two children, said she “loved” her military career but has alluded to frustratio­ns and challenges that came with it.

They also said she embraced those experience­s to make her stronger and guide her into a role as a mentor to young female pilots or girls thinking about a military career.

“She learned a lot about overcoming things as a woman in a male-dominated field,” Russo said.

Shults is from New Mexico, according to a personnel file from the Navy, and was a 1983 graduate of Midamerica Nazarene University in Olathe, Kansas, where she earned degrees in biology and agribusine­ss.

Shults’ brother-in-law, Gary Shults, said her husband, also a Southwest pilot, told him she made the emergency landing.

“She’s a formidable woman, as sharp as a tack,” said Gary Shults, a dentist in San Antonio. “My brother says she’s the best pilot he knows.”

 ?? Thomas P. Milne ?? U.S. Navy Lt. Tammie Jo Shults, one of the first women to fly Navy tactical aircraft, poses in front of an F/A-18A with Tactical Electronic­s Warfare Squadron 34 in 1992. She was the pilot of the Southwest plane that made an emergency landing Tuesday.
Thomas P. Milne U.S. Navy Lt. Tammie Jo Shults, one of the first women to fly Navy tactical aircraft, poses in front of an F/A-18A with Tactical Electronic­s Warfare Squadron 34 in 1992. She was the pilot of the Southwest plane that made an emergency landing Tuesday.

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