Table trays in the upright position.
You aren’t getting off the tarmac until that happens. Also, pay attention: There are lights down the aisle along the floor and exits above each wing. Masks will drop down in case of loss of oxygen; put yours on before assisting others. And in “Come Fly the World: The Jet-Age Story of the Women of Pan Am” by Julia Cooke, you’re in for a trip back in time.
Lynne Totten had a biology degree, but she saw the future and it wasn’t good.
It was the mid-1960s and women with a degree like hers might work as an assistant or a teacher, but never as someone in charge of a laboratory. As a voracious newspaper reader, though, Lynne eventually realized that there was "a whole world out there" that she could explore and get paid while doing it. She set aside biology and became a stewardess.
Pan Am Historical Foundation
Pan Am’s B-727 Clipper Pocahontas in Saigon, Vietnam.
Karen Walker was an experienced traveler when she signed up to work at Pan Am at the advanced age of 26, which was at the top of the age limit for stewardesses; they also had height limits and regular weigh-ins, regulation hair styles and mandatory attendance at make-up classes in stewardess school in Miami. Foremost, stewardesses at Pan Am and most other airlines then were required to be unmarried.
Hazel Bowie of Mankato, Minnesota, took advantage of new airline rules: As a Black woman, Pan Am’s reach for diversity fit her career goals. Clare Christiansen had volunteered for duty on a shuttle service to and from Vietnam that Pan Am offered through the U.S. government; such assignments were another step on a carefully planned career ladder. Torild “Tori” Werner, who grew up in Oslo, Norway, likewise set her sights on management, but first, she also volunteered for similar shuttle duty for U.S. soldiers arriving and departing from Vietnam.
And in the spring of 1975, three of these women went there one final time ...
If you separate "Come Fly the World" into two different camps – which may be difficult, since the book as a whole is pretty excellent – you’ll see that there really are two parts to it: the story of five women at Pan Am, and the story of women in the 1960s.
On one hand, Cooke tells the tales of Lynne, Karen, Clare, Tori and Hazel, why they decided to become stewardesses (a word that fits the time frame) and what their experiences were on the job. In addition to those anecdotes, most of Cooke’s subjects seized adventure and cheap off-duty travel, which also gives this book a hint of travelogue but with less romance and more practicality. Then there’s the trip back to the years 1965 to 1975: the crazy music, the wild clothes, and the lawsuits brought to give women the right to get a credit card, hold a job while married and work while pregnant.
Be aware that there’s no coffee, tea or me? in this book; instead, it’s “Mad Men” meets a glass ceiling and destroys it. So grab "Come Fly the World" and buckle in.
"Come Fly the World: The Jet-Age Story of the Women of Pan Am" by Julia Cooke. 288 pages. HMH Books. $28.
The Key West Company That Went Global
Pan American World Airways was the principal and largest international air carrier of the United States from 1927 until its collapse on Dec. 4, 1991. It was founded in 1927 as a scheduled airmail and passenger service operating between Key West, Florida, and Havana. During most of the jet era, Pan Am’s flagship terminal was at JFK Airport in New York. The company had been planning to move its headquarters to Miami in a failed effort to save itself by concentrating on service to Latin America when it was shut down. Pan Am’s Art Deco Marine Seabase at Dinner Key is now Miami City Hall. The original Key West headquarters still stands at 301 Whitehead street and is now home to First Flight Island Restaurant and Brewery.
Send your Pan Am memories to the Biscayne Times executive editor at emily@biscaynetimes.com.