MARKING THE WAY
by Ellen Nobles-Harris
99NEWS Magazine
March/April 2002
Next time you go flying, look down at the
airport and the surrounding buildings. You may notice markings
pointing to the airport and will probably see the airport name
painted on the field.
This program of identifying airports to
pilots was started as the National Air Marking Program. This
program was the first U.S. government program conceived, planned
and directed by a woman with an all-woman staff. The program
was a part of the Bureau of Air Commerce.
In 1933, Phoebe F. Omlie was appointed
Special Assistant for Air Intelligence of the National Advisory
Committee for Aeronautics - NACA (forerunner of the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration - NASA.) The following year
Phoebe convinced the chief of the Airport Marking and Mapping
Section of the Bureau of Air Commerce to institute a program
where each state would participate and better identify its towns
and cities from the air.
Under the program, a state was divided
into sections of 20 square miles. Where possible, a marker with
the name of the nearest town was painted on the roof of the most
prominent building at each 15-mile interval. If the towns were
far apart, white painted ground markers, such as rocks and bricks,
were used.
At the time that the program was established,
few pilots were flying on established airways or had the benefit
of radios. With the aid of markers, even the most inexperienced
pilots could determine where they were.
The program was funded as a system of state
grants from the Works Progress Administration. Not only was this
the first appropriation of funds specifically set up to aid private
pilots, but it was also hoped that the program would provide
jobs for the unemployed and would establish valuable permanent
airway aids.
By the middle of 1936, 30 states were actively
involved in the program, with approvals given for 16,000 markers
at a cost of about one million dollars.
In 1935, Phoebe chose five leading women
pilots as field representatives for the program; Louise Thaden,
Helen Richey, Blanche Noyes, Nancy Harkness and Helen McCloskey.
At the time, these women were very well known in aviation.
Phoebe continued as head of the program
until it was well on its way to being a success. She then returned
to her duties at NACA.
But then came the war. After the bombing
at Pearl Harbor in 1941, the U.S. Government determined that
marked airports along the east and we st
coast were obvious targets for enemy identification and attack.
Consequently, Blanche Noyes, who had set about the work of marking
some 13,000 sites, went about the work of blacking out those
very markings she and her team of women pilots had diligently
created.
In a Christian Science Monitor magazine
article in 1943, Blanche remarked, "Once in a while I
get a little jittery wondering if some particularly zealous airplane
spotter might mistake me for an enemy ship and shoot me down
and ask questions later, for of course I'm flying constantly
over restricted areas. Too, one small mistake in my clearance
papers might cause me to make a `sudden' landing, for if is my
experience that the Ground Observers Corps is certainly doing
a crack job as far as aircraft spotting is concerned!"
After World War II, Blanche Noyes was in
charge of the air marking division of the Civil Aeronautics Administration.
Blanche believed that it was critical to not only replace the
airport markings that were removed during the war for security
reasons, but also to add even more navigational aids. And thus
the work began all over again.
Today, Ninety-Nines carry on the tradition
and fulfill the need for airmarkings by volunteering their time
to paint the airport names, compass rose symbols and other identifications
on airports. Some of the letters in the airport name can be 50
feet tall. And, Ninety-Nines airmark airports based on need,
which many times takes them far from their local areas. When
Ninety-Nine members in Alaska did airmarkings last year, some
members traveled up to 300 air miles to meet at the designated
airport.
Funding for the airmarking program no longer
comes from the national government. After Blanche Noyes's husband
was killed in the crash of his Beachcraft Staggerwing, Blanche
devoted her energies to the Air Marking Program as a way of overcoming
her grief. She became one of its most ardent supporters, so much
so that when the federal funds for the program ran out, she flew
all over the country to gain financial support from local chambers
of commerce and civic groups.
Our chapters are still doing this. For
example, the Anchorage (Alaska) Municipal Airport Advisory Commission
asked the Alaska Chapter to mark a reporting point. A bright
yellow theater which had been a reporting point for years was
converted to a school and painted gray, making it a tough one
to spot. With support from the FAA and local aviation businesses,
they were able to educate the school district on why they wanted
to paint a name on the roof. They had to work with the contractor
who had installed a new roof so that the warranty would not be
voided. The paint recommended cost $1,600. The paint was funded
by Merrill Field businesses. This effort received some wonderful
coverage from two local TV stations.
And the airmarking efforts of The Ninety-Nines
involves more than putting names on rooftops. For example:
- The Women With Wings Chapter refurbished
the tetrahedron at Portage County Airport, Ravenna, Ohio. They
found someone to rivet patches over badly corroded holes, straightened
the metal, repainted and installed new light bulbs. The tetrahedron
is now highly visible.
- The Livermore Valley Chapter, in California,
painted a compass rose and made and donated a "Welcome to
Livermore" sign that is mounted on the terminal building
facing the runway
- The Michigan Chapter had a Rock (Not Loud
Music) Party at the Sandusky Airport. Members and several local
farmers brought rocks the size of 8 1/2 by 11 inch paper to the
airport. They used the rocks to spell the airport name in 20
foot high letters in the grass at the approach end of the runway.
Would you believe that it takes 33 rocks just to make the "S"?
- The Idaho Chapter has adopted a small,
unpaved airport. They marked the runway ends and 500 and 1,000
foot increments along the runway with white boulders. They periodically
fill in gopher holes and mend the fences broken by wildlife.
- The Colorado Chapter painted the numbers
and aiming points on a new 7,000 foot runway.
- Many chapters have painted compass roses
at airports to be used for swinging airplane compasses.
Since The Ninety-Nines is a charitable
organization, we normally ask the airport or local or state government
to supply the paint. Some airport businesses will also supply
the paint. Normally the chapter will provide rollers and tools
and the women and men to do the marking and painting.
Indiana 99s have been active in airmarking
for more than 40 years, reported Anne Black. "As you well
know, we are always subject to many diverse factors/conditions
on when, where and how we got the jobs done. However, we have
recorded one or two years in which we painted or re-painted some
50 air markers each year; these being the rooftop markers originally
authorized by the FAA."
Anne related that after the war, in the
early 50's, The Indiana Chapter set about trying to re-paint
as many of the old rooftop air markers as possible, which had
been screened out for national security reasons. "As expected,
this proved to be a huge undertaking, requiring money and supplies
plus a lot of volunteer help from everywhere. We held numerous
"Penny-a-Pound" airlifts and other money-making projects
over the state to build up an airmarking fund of sizable proportions.
We have made airmarking loans to other chapters and used the
interest from the fund for many years to keep our own airmarking
program going full swing."
"Our airmarking projects were enthusiastically
carried out between 1970 to 1985 but have gradually tapered off
since that time," she commented. Since 1985, the Indiana
99s have primarily painted C.R. and C.T.A.F ground markers on
airport ramps and taxiways.
So the next time you're flying, look down
and imagine flying your biplane over those small towns in the
late 1930s and how comforting it must have been to see that runway
with your destination's name clearly painted on it. For that
you could thank early members of The Ninety-Nines for leading
the way in the airmarking efforts of the 20th century.
If you would like further information on
airmarking, please contact our Airmarking
Chairman.
You can see by the pictures that a compass
rose is huge and requires coordinated team work. A compass rose
usually requires two days to lay out the pattern and paint it.
Here are some airmarkings that
that we've done:
Oregon Pines 99s
Michigan
99s
Colorado 99s
Three
Rivers 99s
Please send information and pictures
about your airmarking to webmaster@ninety-nines.org
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