词条 | Elly Beinhorn |
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| name = Elly Beinhorn | image = Bundesarchiv Bild 183-2007-1205-500, Bernd Rosemeyer, Elly Beinhorn, Ferdinand Porsche.jpg | caption = Elly Beinhorn (center) with Bernd Rosemeyer and Ferdinand Porsche | birth_date = {{Birth date|1907|5|30|df=yes}} | birth_place = Hanover, Germany | death_date = {{Death date and age|2007|11|28|1907|5|30|df=yes}} | death_place = Ottobrunn, Germany | occupation = Pilot | spouse = Bernd Rosemeyer (1909–1938) (m. 1936–1938) (his death) }} Elly Beinhorn-Rosemeyer (30 May 1907 – 28 November 2007) was a German pilot. LifeEarly lifeShe was born in Hannover, Germany on 30 May 1907.[1] In 1928, she attended a lecture by famed aviator Hermann Köhl, who had recently completed a historic East-West Atlantic crossing. This lecture is described as the spark that ignited her interest in aviation.[2][3] At just 21 years old, with funds from a small inheritance (against the wishes of her parents) she moved to Spandau in Berlin where she took flying lessons, at Berlin-Staaken airport, under the tutelage of instructor Otto Thomsen. She soon made her solo flight in a small Klemm KL-20. With her money running out, it was suggested that she give aerobatic displays on the weekends. She found this financially rewarding, but personally unsatisfying.[4][5][6][7] Long-distance flightsLong distance flying was her real passion and in 1931 she seized the opportunity to fly to Portuguese Guinea (now Guinea-Bissau) West Africa on a scientific expedition. On the return journey, engine failure resulted in a crash-landing in the Sahara. With the help of nomadic Tuareg tribesmen, Elly joined a camel caravan to Timbuktu. She subsequently returned to the crash site to recover parts of the plane.[8] Word of her plight reached the French authorities and they sent a military two-seater plane to collect her.[9][10] In April 1931, fully recovered, she was able to fly herself back to Berlin to a warm reception from the crowds.[11] Soon after this, she embarked on another flight, her Klemm monoplane developing mechanical problems near Bushire, Persia. She found Moye Stephens, another pilot, in Bushire, who helped her fix the problem on her Klemm. Stephens and travel-adventure writer Richard Halliburton were flying around the world in a Stearman C-3B biplane that they called the Flying Carpet. She accompanied them on part of their flight, including the trip to Mount Everest. She flew on to Bali - and eventually Australia. In the process, she became only the second woman to fly solo from Europe to Australia, after Amy Johnson.[12] The foreword of her book, Flying Girl (1935), was written by Richard Halliburton (whose English publisher, as hers, was Geoffrey Bles); it includes a photo of Moye Stephens repairing her plane. Barbara H. Schultz' Flying Carpets, Flying Wings - The Biography of Moye Stephens (2011) contains Stephens' own account of their meeting which was first introduced in Halliburton's bestselling The Flying Carpet (1932). Having landed in Darwin, Northern Territory of Australia, she headed down to Sydney, arriving in March 1932. Her plane was dismantled and shipped to New Zealand, then Panama where it was reassembled. There Elly resumed her flight, following the western coast of South America. She was presented with a medal in Peru. An ill-advised trip across the Andes followed. The plane was dismantled once more in Brazil and shipped to Germany. Elly arrived in Berlin in June 1932.[13] Now famous but in debt to the tune of 15,000 marks or more, she was pleasantly surprised to be awarded the Hindenburg Cup, 10,000 marks and several other monetary awards from the German aeronautical industry which enabled her to continue her career. She also continued to write articles and sell photographs of her travels to raise funds.[14][15] Free of debt, she took off for Africa using a Heinkel He 71, flying down the east coast, then back up the west coast.[16] The following year, Elly shipped the plane to Panama, then flew through Mexico and California before crossing the United States to Washington DC and Miami. Elly and the plane returned to Germany by ship, arriving in January 1935. She was now a true German heroine.[17] Bernd RosemeyerOn 29 September 1935 Elly attended the Czechoslovakian Grand Prix, held in the town of Brno in Czechoslovakia, at the invitation of Auto Union (she happened to be in the country on a lecture tour, by now a regular source of income). She congratulated the winner, Bernd Rosemeyer, who seemed smitten with her. They danced together that night and were married on 13 July 1936. A true celebrity couple – an adventurous aviator and the fearless racing driver – they were the toast of Nazi Germany. Heinrich Himmler ordered a reluctant Bernd to become a member of the SS.[18][19] They had a son, Bernd Jr., in November 1937, but just ten weeks after his birth his father was killed while attempting a speed record in his Auto Union Streamliner. As a national hero he was mourned by much of Germany. Elly received condolences from prominent Nazis, including Adolf Hitler, but requested a simple, non-political funeral ceremony. These wishes were ignored and several Nazis gave speeches at the graveside. Some accounts suggest that Elly walked off in protest at the Nazis claiming Bernd as their own and taking over what was a personal occasion.[20] Second marriage and post-war lifeIn 1941 Elly married Dr. Karl Wittman and they had a daughter, Stephanie.[21] After World War II she briefly took up gliding due to the ban on powered flight in Germany. But she soon moved to Switzerland to continue flying planes.[22] In 1979, at the age of 72, she surrendered her pilot's licence. Later years and deathIn her later years, Rosemeyer lived in Ottobrunn, Bavaria, near Munich. Her son, Dr. Bernd Rosemeyer, lives in the same area and has enjoyed a successful career as an orthopaedist.[23] He married Countess Michaela von Castell-Ruedenhausen, who died 8 August 2011, and they have two children. {{Wikinews|German pilot Elly Beinhorn dies, aged 100}}Elly Beinhorn died on 28 November 2007, at the age of 100.[24] Publications
References1. ^birthdate, location {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081119071942/http://www.fembio.org/english/biography.php/woman/print_bio/elly-beinhorn |date=19 November 2008 }} 2. ^Köhl's transatlantic crossing 3. ^lecture inspiration {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081119071942/http://www.fembio.org/english/biography.php/woman/print_bio/elly-beinhorn |date=19 November 2008 }} 4. ^learns to fly in Berlin 5. ^taught by Thomsen {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050526102635/http://soloflights.org/elly_text_e.html |date=26 May 2005 }} 6. ^Klemm KL-20 {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050526102635/http://soloflights.org/elly_text_e.html |date=26 May 2005 }} 7. ^weekend aerobatic displays {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051204090833/http://wairarapa.co.nz/times-age/weekly/2001/beinhorn.html |date=4 December 2005 }} 8. ^According to Halliburton, she met Moye in Timbuktu and he helped her to fix the plane and they flew together to meet Richard Halliburton. The Flying Carpet, Garden City: Garden City Pub. Co., 1932, pp. 255-56. He had high praise for her: "there were very few men pilots who could compare with her. That flight of hers all alone from Berlin to Timbuctoo, over a route nearly twice as long as our own, was one that demanded, for a solitary woman, extraordinary courage." p. 256. 9. ^flight to West Africa {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050526102635/http://soloflights.org/elly_text_e.html |date=26 May 2005 }} 10. ^engine failure over Sahara {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051204090833/http://wairarapa.co.nz/times-age/weekly/2001/beinhorn.html |date=4 December 2005 }} 11. ^return to Berlin {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051204090833/http://wairarapa.co.nz/times-age/weekly/2001/beinhorn.html |date=4 December 2005 }} 12. ^Bali and Oz {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051204090833/http://wairarapa.co.nz/times-age/weekly/2001/beinhorn.html |date=4 December 2005 }} 13. ^Oz to Berlin {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050526102635/http://soloflights.org/elly_text_e.html |date=26 May 2005 }} 14. ^famous but in debt, awards {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050526102635/http://soloflights.org/elly_text_e.html |date=26 May 2005 }} 15. ^articles & photos sold to raise money {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051204090833/http://wairarapa.co.nz/times-age/weekly/2001/beinhorn.html |date=4 December 2005 }} 16. ^Africa E & W {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050526102635/http://soloflights.org/elly_text_e.html |date=26 May 2005 }} 17. ^Panama to Germany {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050526102635/http://soloflights.org/elly_text_e.html |date=26 May 2005 }} 18. ^lectures as source of income 19. ^Grand Prix, Bernd, marriage, SS, reluctant Nazis 20. ^death of Bernd 21. ^second marriage, birth of Stephanie {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050526102635/http://soloflights.org/elly_text_e.html |date=26 May 2005 }} 22. ^gliders and Switzerland {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050526102635/http://soloflights.org/elly_text_e.html |date=26 May 2005 }} 23. ^lives in Ottobrunn{{dead link|date=September 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} 24. ^Elly Beinhorn gestorben External links{{Commons category}}
8 : 1907 births|2007 deaths|People from Hanover|People from the Province of Hanover|German centenarians|Officers Crosses of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany|German female aviators|Women centenarians |
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