Adelaide Cleaver

(Redirected from Adelaide Pollock)

Adelaide Franklin Cleaver (née Pollock; 1885 - 14 August 1939) was an Irish aviator from Northern Ireland.[1]

Adelaide Cleaver
Born1885
Died14 August 1939
NationalityBritish
Known forFirst woman to fly across the United States
SpouseArthur Spencer Cleaver

Life and flying

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She was the daughter of Northern Ireland's first Minister of Finance, Hugh MacDowell Pollock.[2] Her husband was Lieutenant-Colonel Arthur Spencer Cleaver.[1]

In 1929 she spent 3 months flying to India and back in her de Havilland Gypsy Moth G-AAEA named Will o' the Wisp. She was piloted by Captain Donald Drew of Imperial Airways, and arrived back at Croydon Airport on 10 June.[3]

In July 1933 she was responsible for a flying display which was held at Aldergrove Aerodrome, Co. Antrim with the intention of stimulating air-mindedness in Ulster. In 1934, Mary de Bunsen wrote that "Mrs Spencer Cleaver makes the usually fatiguing journey to Northern Ireland three or four times a year in her own aeroplane, and, fitted with extra tanks to save refuelling during the day, it has many times enabled her to breakfast in London, shop in Paris from 11 to 1, and return in plenty of time for dinner at her house in London."[4]

Equipment

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An immense lover of flying, Cleaver owned several aircraft:

References

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  1. ^ a b "Death Of Mrs. A. S. Cleaver". The Times. 18 August 1939. p. 12.
  2. ^ "The Government of Northern Ireland". Archived from the original on 2018-09-25. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  3. ^ McKay, Stuart: "The de Havilland DH.60 Moth", Amberley Publishing; Reprint edition (15 Oct. 2016), ISBN 978-1445657233
  4. ^ de Bunsen, Mary Bertha: "Practical Flying for Women" (1934)
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