Jean Batten

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Jean Gardner Batten CBE (September 15, 1909November 22, 1982) was a New Zealand aviator, born in Rotorua. Internationally, she was the most well-known New Zealander of the 1930s. In 1934 she flew solo from England to Australia. For this achievement and for subsequent record-breaking flights, she was awarded the Harmon Trophy three times from 1935 through 1937. In 1938, she was the first woman to be awarded the medal of the Federation Aeronautique Internationale, aviation's highest honor. World War II was the end of her flying adventures, and she retired from public life. She became a recluse and died alone in a Majorca, Spain hotel, from dog bite complications.

Because of her looks and perhaps her reclusive tendencies, she became known as the "Greta Garbo of the skies."

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Major Flights

  • 1934 – England - Australia (women's record) 10,500 miles in 14 days 22 hours 30 minutes, breaking Amy Johnson's record by six days.
  • 1935 – Australia - England in 17 days 15 hours. First woman to make return flight.
  • 1935 – England - Brazil: 5000 miles in 61 hours 15 minutes, setting world record for any type of aeroplane. Also fastest crossing South Atlantic Ocean, 13 1/4 hours, and first woman to make England - South America flight.
  • 1936 – England - New Zealand. World record for any type. 14,224 miles in 11 days 45 minutes total elapsed time, including 21/2 days in Sydney.

The Auckland International Airport International Terminal is named after her.

Her Aircraft: Gypsy Moths and the Percival Gull

Image:Jean Batten's Percival Gull.jpg

Jean Batten used De Havilland Gipsy Moth Biplanes for her early trips, G-AALG (originally owned by The Prince of Wales), for the England to India flight, G-AARB for England to Australia flight. These aircraft have not survived.

For her later flights, she used a purpose-built Percival Gull, with modifications for long-range flying and navigation. The Gull is still extant; it was bought by the manufacturer and flown after World War II by Percival's successor, the Hunting group. It was donated to the Shuttleworth collection which sold it to Auckland International Airport in the 1990s. After flying over Auckland in 1996, it was suspended from the roof of the terminal building, where it is still displayed.

External links

Bibliography

Mackersey, Ian, Jean Batten: The Garbo of the Skies, Warner Books, 1999, 466pp, ISBN 0751530190

Batten, Jean, Alone In The Sky, N.Z. Technical books, 1979 (an extended version of her book "My Life", originally published in 1932).ja:ジーン・バテン