Thursday, April 25, 2024

Two Black Women Pilots (Stephanie Johnson & Dawn Cook) Make History for Delta Airlines

*The nature of history is that it’s being made every single day, 24/7, but of course most times we’re completely oblivious to all it because it’s just plain ol’ impossible to be aware of the entirety of it.

That’s why we want to make sure you know about what went down on Sunday, February 26, 2017. On that day, pilots Dawn Cook and Stephanie Johnson made history for Delta Air Lines. Specifically, Capt. Stephanie Johnson and First Officer Dawn Cook were totally in charge of an Airbus A320 flying from Detroit to Las Vegas.

Another way of looking at it is that Cook and Johnson became the first African American women to make up the cockpit crew on one of Delta’s “mainline” flights.

Upon arrival in Las Vegas, as the pilots of Flight 555, Cook posted a photo of the two of them on Facebook to commemorate the occasion (see above).

Interestingly, we recently posted a story on Stephanie Johnson for securing a Delta milestone by becoming the airline’s first African-American female captain.

Johnson says she was drawn to flying at an early age.

“There were no pilots in my life growing up, and I think I’m the first person in my family to graduate from college,” Johnson said via a Q&A on Delta’s website in February. “But for as long as I can remember, I have been fascinated with airplanes and would think, ‘What a great thing it would be to know how to fly.’ “

stephanie johnson and dawn cook1
Captain Stephanie Johnson & First Officer Dawn Cook

A high school physics teacher encouraged Johnson to follow up on that interest, and she eventually learned to fly while studying at Kent State University in Ohio.

“After building flight time as an instructor, I was hired by a commuter carrier, where I was able to earn enough good flight experience to apply for a job at Northwest Airlines, and I was hired as their first African-American female pilot in 1997,” she said.

When asked how she felt about breaking barriers – first at Northwest and then at Delta – Johnson responded:

“I feel a great sense of responsibility to be a positive role model. There are so few women in this profession and too many women who still don’t think of it as a career option. When I was hired by Northwest Airlines, there were 12 African-American women airline pilots in the country at the major airlines, and I knew all of their names.”

“Today is very different, and though there are still people to inform, I am so thankful that the word is out,” she added. “This is a great career – it’s worth the hard work.”

source: USA Today via MSN News

 

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