Shaking up a cocktail, tucking passengers into bed and calming nervous flyers: Fascinating vintage photos reveal life in the sky for the first air hostesses of the 1930's
- December 11th, 2015
The
first flight attendant in the world was a man by the name of Heinrich
Kubis, who worked on board a passenger zeppelin in 1912.
It
was before planes were big enough to carry stewards on board and before
the first commercial flights went into operation. Initially, Kubis
worked on his own on a passenger airship named Schwaben but later, he
went on to lead a team of stewards.
Just
18 years later, in 1930, the first female flight attendant, Ellen
Church, made her inaugural flight on a Boeing Air Transport flight.
At the time, it was unheard of to have women in the air, let alone working on board a plane.
But
Church, who was a licensed pilot and trained nurse, was determined to
prove that women could be in the air, too. In fact, she was hired
because it was believed that having a nurse on board could calm nervous
fliers and she helped to recruit other attendants.
Now, 85 years after the inaugural flight, MailOnline Travel looks at photographs from the first decade of air hostesses.
1930: The 25-year-old registered nurse Ellen Church (pictured) from Iowa welcomes a traveller at the door of a Boeing 80 A.
The idea of recruiting female flight attendants, particularly nurses,
goes back to the operations manager of Boeing Air Transport who stressed
that they would have a calming effect on passengers
1930:
Some of the first stewardesses for United Airlines, known as
'skygirls', standing next to a Boeing tri-motored plane. They were
recruited with the help of the first ever air stewardess, Ellen Church.
Their inaugural flight on May 15, 1930, was from San Francisco to
Cheyenne, Wyoming, and from Cheyenne to Chicago
1931:
An airline stewardess, photographed around 1931, serving drinks on
board a flight as the passengers sit back to enjoy the journey
1934: United Airlines stewardess assists Mayor James Curley (pictured) of Boston. He went on to become the governor of Massachusettes
1934:
A Swissair stewardess standing in front of a Curtiss T-32 Condor
airliner at Tempelhof Airport in Berlin, 1934. The Condor was first
European airliner to have a stewardess
1934:
Paddy Naismith, a pilot and motor racer, is in uniform for her job as
airhostess for the British Air Navigation Company on March 24
1935: The interior of an United Airlines Boeing airplane (above). It's one of the earlier commercial planes when the aisles are
still extremely narrow and seats only a handful of passengers
1935:
United Airline Stewardess Agnes Hurt sitting outside the entrance of
one of their planes wearing the conservative uniform of the time
1935:
An American Airlines stewardess checks on a passenger. They were on
board a sleeper plane where the bunk bed came down over the seat below,
allowing passengers to fully recline
1935:
KLM air hostess Miss van Leeuwen pictured around 1935, with Commander
Duimelaar, a veteran pilot, at the entrance to a KLM plane
1936:
Air hostess Daphne Kearley of Golders Green is serving up cocktails to
the crew of the luxury air service from Croydon to Paris, operated by
Air Dispatch. The plane was a 160 mph six seater Air Speed Envoy
1937: A Trans World Airlines (TWA) stewardess poised and ready to tick off the passenger names outside the entrance of a plane (above)
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