When Men Were Too Scared to Fly the B-29, Two Women Were Brought In to Do the Job

Photo Credit: 1. Bettmann / Getty Images 2. U.S. Air Force / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain
Photo Credit: 1. Bettmann / Getty Images 2. U.S. Air Force / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain

Leading up to the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Paul Tibbets was tasked with training a group of pilots to operate the new Boeing B-29 Superfortress. However, a significant hurdle arose: these pilots were hesitant to fly the bomber due to its size and relatively limited testing compared to other aircraft used during World War II.

Confronted with a group unwilling to fly the unfamiliar aircraft, Tibbets realized that their reluctance was not an option. In a strategic move, he devised a plan to train two female pilots to conduct flight demonstrations for their male counterparts. This approach proved highly effective in dispelling the pilots’ concerns and encouraging their participation.

Problems with the B-29’s engines

Military portrait of Paul Tibbets
Paul Tibbets, 1960. (Photo Credit: US Air Force / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain)

After serving in both the European and Pacific Theaters, Paul Tibbets received orders to return to the US in 1943 to contribute to the development of the B-29 Superfortress. Following the bomber’s successful testing phase, he assumed the role of director of operations for the 17th Bombardment Operational Training Wing (Very Heavy), with a focus on training pilots in the operation of the new aircraft.

Instructing these aviators proved to be a daunting task. Their reluctance was well-founded, given the B-29’s history of unreliable engines and frequent fires, as well as its relatively limited testing, compared to other aircraft. Additionally, the bomber’s notably larger size marked a significant departure from the aircraft previously flown by the US Army Air Forces (USAAF).

The women who flew the B-29 Superfortress

Frances Green, Peg Kirchner, Ann Waldner and Blanche Osborne walking away from an aircraft
L to R: Frances Green, Peg Kirchner, Ann Waldner and Blanche Osborne, WASPs who were trained to ferry the Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress, 1944. (Photo Credit: U.S. Air Force / Public Domain)

To address the concerns surrounding the B-29, Tibbets decided to train female pilots on the aircraft, in the hope of alleviating the fears among their male counterparts. He recruited two Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs) and discreetly omitted any prior issues with the bomber when briefing Dora Dougherty Strother and Dorothea Johnson “Didi” Moorman.

Interestingly, both women encountered no problems during their piloting sessions.

Specifically chosen because neither had previously flown a four-engine aircraft, Strother and Moorman intended to demonstrate that mastering flying a B-29 was within reach for anyone. Tibbets gave the pair just three days of training before deeming them ready to perform demonstrations for the male pilots. They conducted various flights out of the base in Alamogordo, New Mexico, with different aircrews onboard for each demonstration.

Reception as demonstration pilots

Dora Dougherty Strother standing around an aircraft with two other female pilots
Dora Dougherty Strother and two anonymous women (WASPs), who flew aircraft during the Second World War, 1943. (Photo Credit: US Air Force / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain)

Strother and Moorman achieved success in persuading the male pilots to fly the B-29s. Maj. Harry Shilling, in a maintenance bulletin, lauded their flying skills and comprehensive knowledge of the aircraft. He encouraged other men on the base to seek advice from them on handling the bombers and to replicate their impressive takeoffs.

Despite their accomplishments, Strother and Moorman’s time as demonstration pilots was short-lived. When Tibbets’ superiors learned that women were flying the B-29s, they compelled him to terminate the program. Air Staff Maj. General Barney Giles remarked that the women were “putting the big football players to shame.”

Remembering their role

Paul Tibbets, Dora Dougherty Strother and Dorothea Johnson "Didi" Moorman standing with crewmen in front of the "Ladybird"
Dora Dougherty Strother in front of the Boeing B-29 Superfortress “Ladybird” with Paul Tibbets, Dorothea Johnson “Didi” Moorman and its aircrew, 1943. (Photo Credit: U.S. Air Force / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain)

Although their role as demonstration pilots may seem small, it wasn’t viewed as such by the men who watched them. On August 2, 1995, Harry McKeown, a retired lieutenant colonel with the US Air Force, wrote a letter to Strother about her role flying the B-29s. He’d met her and Moorman in 1944 when they brought a B-29 to Clovis Army Airfield, where he served as the Director of Maintenance & Supply and a test pilot.

He said that after their demonstration “we never had a pilot who didn’t want to fly the B-29,” and ended his letter on a more personal note. “I still want to thank you for your helping me that day at Clovis,” he wrote. “I will admit that I was scared… You made the difference in my flying from then on. I wasn’t the only pilot that felt this way, and I am sure that they would thank you too if they knew where you were.”

Life after the war

Dora Dougherty Strother sitting in the cockpit of a helicopter while speaking with two men
Dora Dougherty Strother after having just broken a helicopter altitude record, 1961. (Photo Credit: Smithsonian Institution / Flickr / No Known Copyright Restrictions)

Both women carried on with the WASPs until the organization disbanded in 1944. Strother went on to earn her PhD from New York University and worked for Bell Helicopters from 1962-86. She kept in touch with McKeown and married him in 2002. Moorman raised five children in North Carolina after the war, and kept in close contact with Tibbets until her death in 2005.

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The WASPs, including Strother and Moorman, were denied military veteran status until 1977, when the US House and Senate voted to grant them what they had earned. This decision made them eligible for veterans benefits and also allowed the woman to commemorate their fallen sisters as veterans – something they hadn’t previously been able to do.

Rosemary Giles

Rosemary Giles is a history content writer with Hive Media. She received both her bachelor of arts degree in history, and her master of arts degree in history from Western University. Her research focused on military, environmental, and Canadian history with a specific focus on the Second World War. As a student, she worked in a variety of research positions, including as an archivist. She also worked as a teaching assistant in the History Department.

Since completing her degrees, she has decided to take a step back from academia to focus her career on writing and sharing history in a more accessible way. With a passion for historical learning and historical education, her writing interests include social history, and war history, especially researching obscure facts about the Second World War. In her spare time, Rosemary enjoys spending time with her partner, her cats, and her horse, or sitting down to read a good book.

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