Jane Winstone
Born
Jane Winstone

24 September 1912
Whanganui
Died10 February 1944
Cause of deathEngine failure
Resting placeMaidenhead cemetery, Berkshire, England
NationalityNew Zealander
EducationSacred Heart College
Aviation career
Flight license1928
Air forceRoyal Air Force
RankLieutenant

Jane Winstone (24 September 1912 10 February 1944) was a New Zealand aviator. She was born in Whanganui, New Zealand in 1912[1] and flew in the Second World War as a pilot in the British civilian Air Transport Auxiliary and died in service.

Early life

Born in Whanganui, New Zealand on 24 September 1912, Jane Winstone was a daughter of chemist Arthur Winstone. Reared and educated in Whanganui, she attended the Sacred Heart school there, and learned to fly while still a student.[2] At one time the youngest female solo pilot in New Zealand, Winstone first obtained her pilot's license at the age of 16.[3]

Flying career

A charter member of the Whanganui Aero Club, she also was one of those aboard the first flight from Whanganui's airport. After flying in Charles Kingsford Smith's Southern Cross, she became one of four female pilots to fly with New Zealand aviatrix Jean Batten in 1934.[4]

Winstone applied to be a pilot for the ATA while living in New Zealand and they informed her she would be considered if she was able to be examined in Britain. She paid for her own passage to Britain to be able to sit the examination and flying test and passed with excellence. Once enlisted she was assigned to Ferry Service and flew Hurricanes and Spitfires to deliver them to pilots on bases.[5]

Achieving the rank of lieutenant with the Royal Air Force, Air Transport Auxiliary, 12 Ferry Pool,[6] she died in service on 10 February 1944 while flying for the Air Transport Auxiliary when her Spitfires's Merlin engine failed.[1] Her fiancé, Angus Carr MacKenzie, who was a RNZAF officer, had died two years earlier on air operations.

Honors and legacy

In 2006, a retirement village built on St. John's Hill in Whanganui was named in Winstone's honor; it is called Jane Winstone Retirement Village.[7][8]

References

  1. 1 2 Beaglehole, Diana. "Jane Winstone". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
  2. "Wanganui retirement village named after aviatrix". Wellington, New Zealand: Scoop News, 5 August 2005.
  3. NZDF Personnel Archives & Medals, service file of Jane Winstone.
  4. "Wanganui retirement village named after aviatrix", Scoop News.
  5. Fortune, Gabrielle (2 September 2021). "'ATA-girl': The Fab Five of New Zealand Aviation". Auckland Museum.
  6. "Jane Winstone" (online cenotaph). Auckland, New Zealand: Auckland Museum, retrieved online 1 September 2018.
  7. Karaurla, Merania. "Carols Mark Chapel Reopening". Wanganui, New Zealand: Wanganui Chronicle, 28 December 2013.
  8. "Record entries for golf croquet tournament". NZ Herald. 30 November 2023.
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