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Jackie Moggridge
Jackie Moggridge.jpg
Born
Dolores Theresa Sorour

1 March 1922
Pretoria, South Africa
Died 7 January 2004(2004-01-07) (aged 81)
Known for First woman airline captain

Jackie Moggridge (born Dolores Theresa Sorour; 1 March 1922 – 7 January 2004) was a pioneering pilot,the first woman to do a parachute jump in South Africa and the first woman airline captain of scheduled passenger services.

Early life

Born Dolores Theresa Sorour in Pretoria, South Africa, she decided to call herself Jackie after her sports heroine Jackie Rissik. She learned to fly and got her ‘A’ flying licence, starting to fly aged fifteen. She became the first woman to do a parachute jump in South Africa aged seventeen. She moved to the United Kingdom in 1938 with the intention of getting her ‘B’ flying licence with the Aeronautical College, Witney, Oxford.

Second World War service

Like many women interested in flying for the war effort, she joined the Women's Auxiliary Air Force until she could join the Air Transport Auxiliary (ATA). Initially she was based in Rye at a radar station. She was recruited to the ATA by the Women's Commandant, Pauline Gower in July 1940. Moggridge was the youngest of the female pilots at the time. She flew more than 1,500 aircraft of 83 different types.

Jackie Moggridge was awarded the King's Commendation for Valuable Services in the air in 1945.

Post-war

Dolores Theresa "Jackie" Sorour married army Lieut. Colonel and engineer, Reginald Moggridge, in Taunton, Somerset in 1945, with whom she had two daughters. She was involved with the local amateur dramatics societies but still wanted to fly.

In 1949 she was commissioned into the Women's RAF Volunteer Reserve (WRAFVR), as a Pilot Officer, and qualified for her RAF wings in 1953, the second of the first five women to gain their RAF wings. As a result of her involvement in both amateur dramatics and the RAF Reserve, Moggridge was interviewed in 1950 by Richard Dimbleby for his radio show Down Your Way.

Moggridge went on to gain her commercial pilot's licence in the 1950s, and ferried Spitfires from Cyprus to Rangoon, to the Indian Air Force and to Burma, before looking for more flying opportunities. In 1957 she worked for LEC Refrigeration, co-piloting demonstration versions of their fridges to South Africa for potential customers to view, a trip of 15,000 miles.

In 1958 she applied to be a pilot with Channel Airways based at Southend Airport, neglecting to mention she was a woman. She got an interview and managed, using her impressive flying record, to get the job. She became the first British woman Airline Captain to fly passengers on scheduled flights. Over time, she worked the Isle of Wight, Jersey and Guernsey routes.

Awards and legacy

For her war-service, the recently married First Officer Moggridge was awarded the King's Commendation for Valuable Service in the Air, in addition to campaign medals. In 1953 she was awarded the Coronation medal, not a universal issue at the time, and therefore a further recognition of merit.

Moggridge was awarded the Jean Lennox Bird Trophy by the British Women Pilots’ Association in 1959, for furthering the cause of women in aviation, she accepted the award saying "I long for a time when being a woman Captain would be commonplace".

She created the Jackie Moggridge Cup, which is awarded to a British woman pilot for achieving excellent qualifications. In addition to the BWPA Jackie Moggridge Cup, a new trophy to be awarded annually in her memory to inspire girls to fly, was introduced in 2021. The RAF Jackie Moggridge Spitfire Award was presented by HRH Princess Anne at Cranwell College to an Engineer or Aircrew Graduate who has shown outstanding potential.

Jackie Moggridge wrote a book about her experiences, originally published in 1957 as ', now republished as Spitfire Girl – My Life in the Sky by Jackie Moggridge publisher Head of Zeus with added personal photographs from the 1930s to 2000.

Her daughter Candy Adkins does talks in schools and societies on Jackie Moggridge's life during WW2 and beyond to ensure pioneering women who were air brushed out of the history books are not forgotten, and to inspiring girls into aviation.

First five women to gain RAF wings in early 1950s

Jean Bird, Benedetta Willis, Jackie Moggridge, Freydis Leaf and Joan Hughes were the first five women to be awarded their wings. The next didn't gain RAF wings until Julie Ann Gibson 1991.

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