Flying 2,000 feet over San Francisco on a spring day in 1935, Lee Ya-Ching was enjoying her first aerobatic lesson in an open-cockpit trainer. As her instructor started a series of loops, wing-overs, and barrel rolls, Lee’s safety belt suddenly detached—and she found herself sliding out of the airplane. She later recounted in a radio interview, “I was too stupefied to act for a few seconds. Then, in a flash, I remembered all I had been told and pulled the ripcord. I made a perfect three-point landing—right in the middle of San Francisco Bay. But I treaded water, grunting and blowing like a porpoise, until a friendly launch came along and I was lifted aboard.”
Aviation wasn’t the obvious career choice for the charismatic Lee, who as a teenager had been one of China’s top silent film actresses. She starred in eight films, and fans bought anything bearing her image, from movie magazines to notepaper. Then, at age 16, she headed to England to continue her education.
It was watching an airshow in Paris that set Lee’s life on a new course; she determined to become China’s first female aviator. She told radio host Fred Reed in 1943, “When I was a tiny girl, I often listened to fairy tales at my grandmother’s knee. One of them was told to me often, and it impressed me greatly. It was the legend of a kind lady who flew through the clouds, helping the poor and the unfortunate, and it impressed me very much. I was back in China in 1931 after schooling in Europe, and I saw how ruthlessly Japan started her pattern of aggression. Then and there, I decided to do my bit for China…and began studying the fascinating art of flying. I knew even then that someday I would be able to help my homeland with this knowledge of aviation.”
More than any other figure—man or woman—Lee did exactly that, demonstrating her passion for flight throughout China at a time when her countrywomen weren’t even allowed to drive cars. In the decade before World War II, if you had asked anyone in China to name just one pilot, the answer you probably would have gotten would have been Lee Ya-Ching.
She earned her pilot’s license in 1933, in Geneva, after a memorable flight in a small, shaky airplane, possibly a Caudron. (“The pilot flew the trembling craft over the Alps and I had horrible visions of landing unceremoniously on Mont Blanc.”) By early 1935 she had relocated to Oakland, California, for advanced training at the Boeing School of Aeronautics. There, Lee flew Stinson and Stearman trainers, and a Ford Tri-motor transport. Her unpublished autobiography, dictated at the tender age of 27 to ghostwriter Elsie McCormick Dunn (and now in the National Air and Space Museum archives), summarized the period: “She struggles with intricate subjects—meteorology, mechanics, navigation, etc; doffs silk gowns for greasy overalls; gets up at 6 a.m. instead of noon to attend classes.” In a 1943 radio interview, Lee recalled: “The engine of a plane became as familiar to me as the palm of my hand. Yes, I got very greasy and dirty, and often I was disgusted at the drudgery connected with absorbing American aeronautic training. But now I am eternally grateful that I stuck to it and passed these courses. American aviation is rightly the envy of the world.”
Lee returned to Shanghai in late 1935, U.S. private pilot’s license in hand, eager to use her fame to promote civil aviation. But while the Shanghai Flying Club (part of the China Aviation League) embraced Lee, the Chinese government wasn’t inclined to grant a license to a woman. After intense lobbying, Lee was finally evaluated by a member of the Chinese air force and given a government pilot’s license—along with a special assignment. She flew 30,000 miles throughout China, evaluating airdromes and air routes in the interests of civil aviation. Once the task was complete, she helped organize China’s first civilian flying school, serving as the school’s sole female instructor. In honor of Chiang Kai-shek’s 50th birthday celebration in 1937, she performed an aerobatic routine—the first ever by a Chinese woman in her own country—before 150,000 spectators.
Lee continued to score more aviation firsts. Patti Gully’s book Sisters of Heaven notes that Lee planned to write a book on China’s civil air routes, and embarked on a fact-finding tour in a Junkers Ju 52. After being approached by the Southwestern Aviation Corporation, a government-owned airline flying between China and Europe, Lee did a stint as a transport pilot. On July 7, 1937, the Sino-Japanese War broke out. Lee offered her services as a combat pilot. When refused, she asked permission to fly as a ferry pilot or a courier. Both suggestions were rejected. Lee was grounded for the duration of the war, when all civilian flying was prohibited.
Intensely disappointed, she established a Red Cross hospital, using her own money. Lee recounted in a radio interview, “When war broke out, I helped to established refugee camps and an emergency hospital for our wounded soldiers. The Japanese put a price on my head. I heard about it and managed to escape from Shanghai several days after the Japanese occupied that city. I came to know the full fury of the war that the Japanese had inflicted on my people when I traveled between Canton and Hong Kong along a railroad line that was continually bombed. In 1938 I decided I could best serve my country by helping to enlist the aid of Americans in our cause.”


Comments
This was a very interesting article for me as I was not aware of this ladies reputation as an early Pilot. I would enjoy reading more of her story and what eventually happened to her. Having been a crop duster myself back in the late 1940's it would be interesting who's plane that was that she flew. Thank you for this information. GB
Posted by Gordon Bastien on July 24,2008 | 08:40PM
Is Ms. Lee still alive?
Posted by Jerry Anderson on July 24,2008 | 10:59PM
Interesting reading about Lee Ya-Ching (China's first lady of flight) and Feng Ru (the Father of Chinese Aviation). My great-uncle, Tom Gunn, was the first Chinese American Aviator and has a very small exhibit at the Smithsonian's Air and Space Museum in Washington,D.C., although the information given there, on him, is very limited and outdated. Throughout the years, we have been able to find more information on him which would probably be significant in updating this information on his historical exhibit at the Smithsonian. I also visited the Wright Bros. Museum for the first time, last year (2007), and there was no information about my uncle. If you know who I could contact, at both museums, I would appreciate this. History is very exciting and to have a relative, as my uncle, be a part of it, and having information on him to show the world, is a humbling and honorable experience for my family.
Posted by Pam Carleton on August 16,2008 | 01:31PM
Out of curiosity, did Lee Ya Ching embraced a favorite plane that she normally flies and if she has christened any of her aircrafts with a specific name...Thank you..Joseph Chong
Posted by Joseph Chong on October 17,2008 | 04:57AM
Lee Ya Ching's personal memoirs, photos, and collections are now available at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington , DC through the kindness and generousity of her son Pax Cheng, Weatherford, Tx, her daughter Molan Wolfson, Arlington, VA, and her daughter in California who remains anonymous.
Posted by Susan Cheng on July 25,2009 | 08:40AM
In 1934 a Miss Lee underwent flight training at the Loyang Flying School run by the Italian Air Mission in China. Could this brilliant female cadet have been the famous Chinese aviatrix Lee ya-ching getting her Chinese military pilot license under the patronage of the National Chinese governement? Are her dates of birth and death known? best regards Giancarlo Garello, Venice, Italy
Posted by Garello, Giancarlo on October 19,2009 | 03:10AM