Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram
Pioneering pilots revisit high-flying WWII Days
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Three Maine veterans of the Women Airforce Service Pilots program meet for the first time
By KELLEY BOUCHARD, Staff Writer August 19, 2009


Gregory Rec/Staff Photographer
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Gregory Rec/Staff Photographer
Edith Beal, Phyllis Paradis and Betty Brown, who served with the Women Airforce Service Pilots during World War II, gather at Beal’s Bridgton home Tuesday.
Courtesy Phyllis Paradis
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Courtesy Phyllis Paradis
Phyllis Paradis, in the cockpit as a WASP in 1944, tested every function of newly repaired cargo planes, including cutting one engine to see how the other would work in an emergency.
Betty Brown is shown in 1944.
Phyllis Paradis is shown in 1944.
Edith Beal is seen in 1944.

 

 

BRIDGTON — They made history when they flew planes with the Women Airforce Service Pilots during World War II.

On Tuesday, three Maine women made history again when they met for the first time to reminisce about their experiences as fearless patriots and unintentional trailblazers.

Phyllis Paradis, 90, of Bass Harbor and Betty Brown, 86, of Skowhegan gathered for lunch at the home of Edith Beal, 93, on Sandy Cove Road near Long Lake.

They are among the more than 1,000 women who served in the WASP program, flying noncombat military missions stateside so male pilots could serve overseas. About 300 WASPs are living today, and Paradis, Brown and Beal are believed to be the only ones living in Maine.

"Our job was to take the place of the fellas," said Brown, who only recently gave up her pilot`s license.

Paradis, a test pilot, flew utility cargo planes after they were repaired. Brown and Beal flew advanced trainer planes that hauled midair targets a mere 75 feet to the rear, giving bomber pilots something to shoot at.

"It was live ammunition," Beal said, unfazed. "You were just doing your job."

For decades, the WASP program's contribution to the war effort went largely unrecognized. In 1979, the secretary of the Air Force granted military recognition and veteran status to the pilots. In July, President Obama signed a bill that awarded the Congressional Gold Medal to the women.

Tuesday's meeting was arranged by David Harville, 59, a retired history teacher who lives in Skowhegan and taught at Nokomis Regional High School in Newport. Harville met Brown at their local recreation center and decided to organize the luncheon. The three women jumped at the chance.

Paradis left Mount Desert Island at 5 a.m. Tuesday to drive to Skowhegan and meet Brown and Harville. He drove Paradis and Brown to Beal's home. When they arrived, the three women embraced and immediately started talking and swapping photographs. Harville watched with pride and wonder from across the room.

"There aren't many of these gals around anymore," Harville said. "To get them in one room today the past just comes alive."

As they shared memories, the three women proved themselves to be atypical great-grandmothers. They chatted excitedly about twin engines and retractable landing gear, rattlesnakes hiding in cockpits and tough GIs turning weak as soon as they were airborne.

"They'd all get sick," said Paradis, whose name was Phyllis Johnson when she was a WASP.

The WASP operated as civilian support to the Army Air Force from September 1942 through December 1944. In that period, about 25,000 women applied, 1,830 were accepted and 1,074 graduated from its seven-month training program, according to a WASP pamphlet. Thirty-eight died while in service.

Paradis, who grew up in Saylesville, R.I., entered the force in 1943, when she was 25. Before volunteering for the program, she had a state government job setting up a computer system.

Beal, formerly Edith Smith, grew up in rural Deansboro, N.Y. She was 27 and working as a teacher when she entered the program in January 1944.

Brown, formerly Betty Overman, grew up in Detroit. She also entered in January 1944, leaving behind an office job at a General Motors diesel engine plant.

At 20, Brown was actually too young to be accepted to the program, so she found a typewriter at the GM plant that had the same style as her birth certificate and altered her birth date to make herself 21. She worried that her trick would get her in trouble, but the age limit soon dropped to 20.

All three women were pilots before they became WASPs, and all three trained for the program at Avenger Field in Sweetwater, Texas. They stayed in military-style barracks that offered few comforts. Twelve women shared a bathroom that had one mirror, for instance.

When they graduated and got their wings, fellow...


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