Bill’s blog archive: Daily Posts

Cornelia Clark Fort and fellow female pilots
Cornelia Clark Fort and fellow female pilots
Cornelia Clark Fort and fellow female pilots
Cornelia Clark Fort and fellow female pilots
Cornelia Clark Fort and fellow female pilots

Women in WWII: Cornelia Clark Fort

In the course of researching the World War 2 military casualties buried at Mount Olivet Cemetery in Fort Worth, TX, I came across the name of Cornelia Clark Fort, who is buried in a cemetery by the same name in Nashville, TN.

Cornelia’s headstone reads, “Killed in service to her country.” It’s an interesting and meaningful inscription, since women were not allowed to enlist as flyers in the military. And although women were extremely influential in the war effort, and some even died in the line of duty, women civilian flyers like Cornelia weren’t allowed to be counted among the official military war dead. Thus, there is no official military file on her service.

Nonetheless, her story is well worth telling, and every student of WW2 should know about Cornelia.

Cornelia Clark Fort was a civilian flight instructor (also unusual for the time) working in Hawaii, and was in the air when Japan bombed Pearl Harbor. She was one of the few Americans to witness the bombing from the air. With an advanced student at the controls (it was his last scheduled flight before he received his pilot’s license), the pair saw that a plane was on a collision course, flying straight toward them. At the last moment, Cornelia Fort pulled the controls of the plane from her student and narrowly avoided the collision. Only then did she see the rising sun insignia on the wing and realize that it was a Japanese war plane. The next thing she witnessed was bombers flying in, smoke billowing toward the sky, and the explosions in the harbor below her. As she landed her plane at John Rodgers civilian airport, she was pursued and strafed by a Japanese Zero. She and her student ran for cover and survived. The airport manager was killed; two other planes carrying students and her fellow instructors did not return that morning.

Far from being cowed after this experience, Cornelia quickly volunteered for service in the Women’s Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron (precursor to WASP), becoming the WAFS second member, and their first fatality.

On March 21, 1943, she was ferrying a BT-13 (a single-engine bomber-trainer) from Midland, Texas, to Dallas when she collided in mid-air with another BT-13, piloted by Flight Officer Frank E. Stamme, Jr. Cornelia’s plane went out of control, and it hit the ground almost vertically. Stamme was able to land his crippled plane, but Cornelia, whose left wing was struck in the collision, was killed in the crash.

Cornelia Clark’s crash on March 21, 1943 was one of seven fatal crashes incurred by the Air Corps on this date.

American actress Jeff Donnell played Cornelia Fort in the popular 1970 film, Tora! Tora! Tora!, billed at the time as, “The most spectacular film ever made.” Photos of Cornelia Fort, some of her fellow WAFS, and a photo of her grave stone are included in the gallery for this post, with gratitude for her brave service and sacrifice.

This version corrects the type of aircraft Cornelia was flying when she was struck by FO Frank Stamme, Jr.’s plane. Cornelia was flying a single-engine BT-13, with fixed landing gear (not a twin-engine).  Thanks to astute reader Chaplain Pastor Jeff who corrected the aircraft details. Please see additional details about this tragic incident in the comments below.

  1. Chaplain Pastor JeffChaplain Pastor Jeff08-19-2015

    Corrections please. The BT-13 was a single engine trainer with a fixed landing gear. The male pilot is responsible for killing Miss Fort. He was showing off and struck her canopy with his landing gear. She went straight into the ground from 8,000 feet. Cornie was talked into flying formation with a group of men. Something she was not supposed to do as a ferry pilot. This needless accident cost her life.

    • Bill BeigelBill Beigel09-02-2015

      Hi Jeff:

      Thanks for your astute viewing of this post. We are making the necessary corrections.

      Best regards, Bill

    • Ed BurmanEd Burman03-22-2018

      Where did Chaplain Pastor Jeff get his details on the mid-air collision?

      • Bill BeigelBill Beigel03-22-2018

        Hi Ed: I don’t know. I expect that perhaps he was able to talk to some witnesses or perhaps the officers that prepared the crash report. I do have that crash report in my archives.
        Best regards, Bill

  2. Steve CliftSteve Clift03-21-2018

    Sir, what happened to F/o Stamme? Was he disciplined?
    Thanks
    Steve Clift

    • Bill BeigelBill Beigel03-22-2018

      Hi Steve: the files is silent on the fate of F/O Stamm. I do know that he survived the War. Best, Bill

  3. S SS S03-21-2020

    She received veteran status in 1977 retroactively, so she was not a civilian.

  4. Starr Ann RockhillStarr Ann Rockhill11-12-2020

    Interesting….very hard to know the ‘who hit who’…..Fort had enough flying time to be a instructor, I know nothing about the other pilot. If Pastor Jeff had information on her being talked into a situation, I would love to know if reliable. Regardless, so many losses in so many ways….
    My take is the WAFS/WASPS deserve a bit more of history’s ‘time in the books’.
    Many thanks for the commentary,
    Starr