Joan Lyle Collection

Joan Lyle in cockpit
Joan Lyle poses in the cockpit of a plane at Avenger Field, Sweetwater, Texas, in 1944.
Joan Lyle on plane
Joan Lyle stands on the wing of a plane at Avenger Field, Sweetwater, Texas, in 1944. She wears a WASP flight suit and B-6 leather jacket.
Oral history interview with Joan Lyle
Primarily documents Joan Lyle's service in the WASP [Women Airforce Service Pilots] during WWII and her subsequent work as a pilot. Lyle briefly discusses her childhood spent in Minneapolis, Minnesota. She discusses taking flight lessons without her father's approval and forming the Minneapolis Flying Club to buy a plane. She also describes her work as a substitute flight instructor at Wold-Chamberlain Field, applying for and attending air traffic control school in Chicago, and working as an ATC in Cincinnati. " Lyle talks about her struggle to join the WASP due to previous injuries from a car accident and recalls traveling to Washington to meet with Jacqueline Cochran. Of her training at Avenger Field, Sweetwater, Texas, she discusses: wearing old men's uniforms; her graduation ceremony with General Hap Arnold and Jacqueline Cochran; daily activities; completing primary, basic, and advanced flight training; her favorite plane, the North American AT-6 Texan. She also discusses her work towing targets for gunnery students at Gowen Field in Idaho and the male pilots' response to WASPs. Other topics include her serious accident involving an idling plane propeller, the medical attention she received, leaving the WASP while recovering, and the disbanding of the WASP. " Lyle also discusses working at her family's flight school in Pembina, North Dakota, following her discharge. She recalls a trip to California that led her to move to the state so she could fly year-round. She discusses working for Santa Monica Airport as an instructor and working as a private pilot for a Chicago business man. Other topics include her courtship with her husband George Lyle, her reasons ending her flying career after her marriage, the song Zoot Suits and Parachutes, and the ability of WASPs to join the U.S. Air Force.
Portrait of Joan Lyle
Portrait of Joan Lyle taken in September, 1943. Lyle wears a WASP flight helmet and leather jacket.