Gráinne Cronin
Gráinne Cronin (born about 1953) was the first woman to become a pilot for Aer Lingus and the first woman pilot commercially employed in Ireland.[1][2]
Life[edit | edit source]
Born to pilot captain Felim Cronin in Ennis, County Clare, Cronin's sister Caroline is also a commercial pilot. Her husband is also a pilot and her daughters Alana and Louisa Johnston both hold private pilot licenses, and Louisa has a commercial license.[3] She learned to fly while she was at university in her father's Piper Cub. Rather than teach her to fly, her father asked his first officer Neil Johnston. Johnston taught her to fly and later married Cronin. She lives in Malahide, Ireland.[4][5][6]
Career[edit | edit source]
Cronin was hired as a pilot by Aer Lingus in 1977. When she first joined in 1975, at the age of 22, it was as a flight attendant. But by the time she was 24, she had gone for flight training in Oxford. Her first flight was in January 1978. Initially working as a co-pilot, in 1988 she became the airline's first female captain. She retired on 25 May 2010. SAS were the first European airline to hire a woman pilot and Aer Lingus was the second. Within the next two years they had hired another two women. Though it seems to have taken a long time to get to this point, British Airways didn't hire their first woman pilots for about another 6 years.[3][4][7]
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ First female Aer Lingus pilot retires. Retrieved from link
- ↑
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Permission to land first woman Aer Lingus pilot retires. (26 May 2010) Retrieved from link
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Touchdown after years of landmarks in the air. (5 June 2010) Retrieved from link
- ↑ 1988 Archives. Retrieved from link
- ↑ Flashback 1988: First all-female crew leaves Dublin. Retrieved from link
- ↑ History-making pilot disembarks. Retrieved from link