Gladys Roy
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Gladys Roy | |
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![]() Roy as She Looked in 'The Fighting Ranger', 1925 | |
Born | Gladys Smith 1896 Minneapolis |
Died | Template:Death date and age Ohio |
Cause of death | Airplane accident |
Resting place | Lakewood Cemetery, Minneapolis |

Gladys Roy (1896 – August 15, 1927) was an American wing walker, barnstormer and film actress.
Early life[edit | edit source]
Gladys Smith was born in 1896, most likely in Minneapolis to Myra (née Voorhees) and Charles Byron Smith. Some sources put her date of birth at 1902 or 1904, although her gravestone states 1896.[1] She had two sisters, Viola and Grace and three brothers, Robert "Lee", Charles "Les," and Chadwick "Chad" Smith, who were also well-known pilots, flying with Northwest Airlines and all inducted into the Minnesota Aviation Hall of Fame. She married Arthur J. Roy and performed under the name Gladys Roy.[2]
Aviation career[edit | edit source]
She was a barnstormer or aerial aviation performer in the 1920s in Minnesota and California areas. She started in 1921 as a parachute jumper, later becoming a wing walker.[3] She was more famous for conducting a variety of stunts on the upper wings of a flying airplane, including playing tennis with Ivan Unger in 1925, walking blindfolded across the wings, and dancing the Charleston. She claimed to hold the world record for a low parachute jump, and completed a parachute jump from 17,000 feet.[4] She was earning $200 to $500 per performance around 1924, with her earnings dropping in 1926 to $100 a performance. In May 1926, she told the Los Angeles Times, "Of late the crowds are beginning to tire of even my most difficult stunts and so I must necessarily invent new ones, that is, I want to hold my reputation as a dare-devil. Eventually an accident will occur..."[4]
Her agent was the Western Vaudeville Managers' Association, booking her in fairs across the west of the United States. Roy did stunt work for the Lord Motor Car Company, along with exhibition work for various real estate exhibitions and auctions including John P. Mills Real estate. Roy appeared in the 1925 film, The Fighting Ranger, but was seriously injured when she was thrown from a horse during production.[3][4]
Roy died in Ohio on August 15, 1927, when she accidentally walked into a spinning propeller of a parked aircraft. She had been posing for pictures in an airplane with a local "bathing beauty" contestant. At the time of her death she had been planning a flight from New York to Rome with Lt. Delmar Snyder.[3][5]
References[edit | edit source]
External links[edit | edit source]
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- ↑ Gladys Smith Roy (1896-1927) - Find a Grave.... Retrieved 2022-12-17 from www.findagrave.com
- ↑ Star Tribune, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Tuesday, August 16, 1927
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Gladys Roy Collection 1911-1927. (16 May 2016) Retrieved from National Air and Space Museum
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 Tennis, Anyone?. (29 January 2013) Retrieved from Air & Space Magazine
- ↑ Gladys Roy. Retrieved from www.earlyaviators.com
- Pages with script errors
- Articles with short description
- Articles with hCards
- Commons category link is defined as the pagename
- 1896 births
- 1927 deaths
- Accidental deaths in Ohio
- American film actresses
- American stunt performers
- Aviators killed in aviation accidents or incidents in the United States
- Barnstormers
- Wing walkers
- Actors from Minneapolis
- 20th-century American actresses
- Victims of aviation accidents or incidents in 1927