Celebrating the Women Who Came Before Us

On Memorial Day, we pause to honor the women who flew before us—the Women Airforce Service Pilots of World War II, whose courage cleared a runway for every Modern Rosie in our hangar.

Our team designed special WASP Memorial Day flags and began a new commitment: to seek out the resting places of our sister WASPs and honor them in person, grave by grave, name by name. As we BUILD, FIX, and FLY airplanes, we carry these women with us. Their sacrifice is not a footnote in our history.

On the flag is our Pilot in Command’s artwork, a mixed media piece titled “Women Airforce Service Pilots of World War II (WASPs)” where 100+ photographs of women aviators layered with hundreds of Women in Our Armed Services and Jacqueline Cochran stamps, painted from the iconic image of Frances Green, Margaret “Peg” Kirchner, Ann Waldner, and Blanche Osborn as they were stepping away from their B-17, Pistol Packin’ Mammas

This year, Auntie Bonnie—our resident librarian, historian, and storyteller—brought their legacy to life for our builders, sharing stories behind the painting and reminding us that the freedom to BUILD, FLY, and FIX airplanes did not appear by accident.

These women ferried every type of military aircraft, towed targets under live fire, trained pilots, and logged more than 60 million miles. They did this in oversized zoot suits, with minimal recognition, often at great personal risk—some carrying a pistol on board, prepared to destroy the top-secret Norden bombsight if needed. 

Thirty-eight never came home.

Beth White

Education Possibilitarian, Artist, Writer, Doula, Mentor, Aviatrix, Breast Cancer Survivor, Pilot-in-Command at Habitat for Aviation


In the spring of 2022, Beth White emerged from a 10-month battle with breast cancer with an idea: to create an apprenticeship program at Franklin County State Airport where youth work alongside adult mentors servicing conventional and electric aircraft. A pilot and airplane mechanic apprentice herself, and with family roots in the trades, Habitat for Aviation provides an taxilane for world learning opportunities for youth and adults who love to work with their hands to enter the FAA’s apprenticeship certification track. Each day she puts systems in place that make real John Dewey’s philosophy that we “learn best what we live” – a deep throughline from her time at Antioch University New England and as Regional Director for Big Picture Learning. Each learning experience is grounded in relationships, relevance, and practice. In October, 2023, Habitat for Aviation launched its Women Build Planes program, where an all-female team of Modern Day Rosies is building an airplane at Franklin County Airport, in northwestern Vermont, to show folks everywhere that despite the fact that only 2.6% of airplane mechanics are female, women BUILD, FLY, and FIX airplanes.

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