Eagle Biography
Jessie Woods
As a 19-year-old college student in 1928, Jessie Schultz had no idea she would contribute
to the Golden Age of Aviation during the years between the two World Wars. A Kansan, she
grew up in Washington State and enjoyed music and gymnastics. On summer break in Ulysses,
Kansas, she met Jimmie Woods and he introduced her to aviation. She soon eloped with him
and literally flew off into the clouds--she never looked back! Jimmie Woods was a
barnstormer, a daredevil who earned his keep entertaining a nation in love with aviation.
He, like most other flying gypsies, taught himself how to fly and worked on his own
well-worn airplane.
It mattered little that he had no place to call home, or that there
was often not enough money for food--flying was his life! Jessie Woods was soon swept up
by aviation. Her husband taught her to fly--she took to the task with great joy and
enthusiasm. When the Woods started the Flying Aces Air Circus, Jimmie coaxed his young
wife onto the wing of his Swallow biplane; hit by the wind blast, she almost fell off the
wing on her first try and Jimmie failed to compensate for the extra drag and almost lost
control. The circus survived most of the Great Depression, finally closing in 1938. Jessie
Woods had been an integral part of every airshow. Aviation was changing; the era of
Lindbergh, Earhart, intrepid airmail pilots, barnstormers and wing-walkers gave way to
Civil Aeronautics Authority bureaucrats and trans-continental airliners.
As World War II
loomed on the horizon, the Woods got a chance to operate a pilot training program in Rock
Hill, South Carolina, but Jimmie came down with a mysterious illness; Jessie Woods became
the family mainstay. She taught the ground school, instructed in the air, and ran the
business. She still found time to be a key organizer in the Ninety Nines, an international
organization of women pilots, and also joined the Civil Air Patrol. After World War II she
left aviation, ran a small business in South Carolina, and cared for Jimmie until he died
in 1959. Soon, she packed two bags and returned to Washington. Working for the state, she
began flying for pleasure in 1961.
In 1967 Jessie Woods was named Washington's Pilot of
the Year. Flying actively until 1974, she received many honors including induction into
the OX-5 Aviation Pioneers Hall of Fame. She was featured in Barnstormer and Speed King, a
book in the Epic of Flight series, and has appeared on the Johnny Carson Show, That's
Incredible, and Late Night with David Letterman. In 1991 Jessie Woods went wing-walking
again at the annual Sun 'N Fun airshow in Lakeland, Florida. At the age of 82, she proved
once again that the woman who had dared to become America's first topless wing-walker
still had spunk!
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| Honored as an Eagle In: |
| 1994
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When Jessie Schultz married Jimmie Woods in 1929, she not only got a husband she also found a career! Featured in the Flying Aces Air Circus, she wing-walked, hung from rope ladders, and parachuted to entertain thousands of people for nearly 10 years. The Flying Aces made money and helped to popularize aviation. They also demonstrated, tested, and perfected the latest planes of America's struggling aircraft companies such as Cessna, Beech, and Stearman and helped aviation move forward. America's World War II flyers owed these free-wheeling pilots a thank-you!
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