Frankie
Renner, 1897-1985
Frankie Renner,
Akron's first woman licensed pilot, tried to set the women's world altitude
record. She failed because of equipment problems, she argued. But flying
was only one part of her life. She went into radio and produced one
of the first programs for women on WADC, Akron.
Renner was born
in Sugar Creek, Ohio, in 1897; but she lived most of her life in Akron.
Renner was 30 years
old when she earned her pilot's license (#7410). She had paid for her
lessons at the Hugh Robbins Flying Service at the Stow Air Field (now
the Kent State University Airport) with the small inheritance from her
father, a real estate dealer. Renner said she was absolutely "fascinated"
by flying and nothing was going to keep her from it -- not even the
antics of her flying instructor who did everything he could to frighten
her.
In 1927, she finally
won her license. In 1930, she earned another license (#314), this one
signed by aviation pioneer Orville Wright. That same year Renner was
a member of the 99s, the International Organization of Women Pilots
organized by aviatrix Amelia Earhart and attended its first convention
in Chicago.
In 1931, she was
ready to set a record - the women's world altitude record. Renner was
positioned for the move. She had connections with the Waco Plane Company,
a manufacturer of biplanes. At the time she was the manager of the air
field in Stow and salesperson for the Robbins agency, the local distributor
of Waco planes.
Waco outfitted a
special biplane for her. (Planes at the time had no cockpit; goggles
were the only windshield.) Renner gave up her parachute to lighten the
load. On March 13, 1931, Renner, dressed in electrically heated flying
clothes, boarded her plane and took off. Her plane climbed for 3-1/2
hours. She soared about 6 miles above the earth. Her altimeter froze
and stopped registering at 28,000 feet, she remembered. Then her plane
"shuddered and behaved queerly," when the temperature dropped
to 30, 40 even 50 degrees below zero, she told the Plain Dealer.
Her goggles were frosted over and she couldn't get them clear. Her lips
started bleeding from the extreme cold and low pressure. "I really
was frightened, it was so cold, so deathlike, so unreal," she said.
Renner started down, sure that she had broken the record. She landed
"breathless and blue." But the government said she was 3,700
feet short of the record. Renner always argued that she had broken the
record but the government-certified equipment had frozen during the
flight. Although she promised to try again, Renner never did.
Instead in 1932
she earned her commercial license, becoming Akron's first female transport
pilot, and started taking passengers and cargo across the Midwest. In
1933, her flying career ended when a fire at the Stow airfield destroyed
a hangar and the uninsured planes inside.
After that, she
looked for another career and she found it in radio. She took a job
as an administrative assistant to aviation enthusiast Allen T. Simmons,
owner of radio station WADC (now WSLR). Early on, she produced one of
the first programs for women in Akron, a 15-minute segment on fashion
and homemaking. She stayed with WADC until her retirement.
Renner died in a
nursing home in Millersburg, Ohio, in 1985. She was 87.
Photo courtesy of
the Beacon Journal.
--Kathleen
L. Endres
