ATA Anne Welch MBE, OBE

Ann Welch aged 17 – 1st Solo Flight 1934

Ann Courtenay (Edmonds) Welch (1917-2002) daughter of a Railway Engineer was a World-class Glider Pilot & an Aviator who Flew more than 100 Aircraft Types, from Gliders to Wellington Bombers.

She was keen on Aviation from a young age: her parents’ home in Bickley, Kent was under an Approach Route to Croydon, the main London Airport during the inter-War years. In her Autobiography, Happy to Fly, she wrote “I did not know they were the 1st Airliners, Pioneering their way from Brussels, Antwerp & Paris to Croydon.” During a holiday in Cornwall, she had her 1st Flight aged 13 in an Airspeed Ferry of Alan Cobham’s Circus in Wadebridge which travelled around the Country giving many people their 1st close-up taste of Aviation. “I was a small, skinny and tousle-headed 13-yr-old, the year was 1930, and I wanted to Fly”. As a 16-yr -old living within cycling distance of Biggin Hill, Croydon & Kenley, Ann would cycle to the Airfields to watch Aircraft. “I did not know they were the 1st Airliners, Pioneering their way from Brussels, Antwerp & Paris to Croydon.” She funded her Flying Lessons by selling Artwork to Flight & Aeroplane magazines. She learnt to Fly, going Solo in September 1934 in a Tiger Moth at Barnstaple, Devon while on holiday.  On her return home, she joined the Brooklands Aero Club.

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Ann as a Glider

In 1937 Ann took up Gliding at Dunstable Aerodrome near Luton, home of the London Gliding Club, and became an Instructor. In October 1938, she was a Founding Member of the Surrey Gliding Club at Buckland, between Dorking & Reigate. Aged 21, she was the Club’s Chief, and only, Instructor.

That year she travelled to the Berchtesgaden Alps, the Site of Adolph Hitler’s Summer Residence, with a group of other young British Glider Pilots at the invitation of their German counterparts. When not Flying, efforts were made to subvert the loyalty of these prospective RAF Recruits. Hitler’s deputy, Rudolf Hess, was among those who attempted to indoctrinate the party – unsuccessfully.

Early in WW2, in November 1940, Ann joined the Air Transport Auxiliary (ATA) as many other brave women did at the time. “The war was just beginning to get serious,” she wrote, “and I had to be involved; it had to be in Flying. Nothing else could even be contemplated.” Often they Flew Aircraft they’d never seen after quickly reading the single page guide about the Aircraft in the superb Ferry Pilot’s Notes which fitted into the breast pocket of the ATA uniform. “It was All There,” as Ann put it.  The brilliantly succinct Notes enabled ATA Pilots to Fly dozens of different types; sometimes 3 or 4 in a day.  It could be exacting, dangerous work – 173 ATA Pilots died during the War.

In February 1942, a simple 50-mile delivery Flight turned into an Epic. Delivering a priority Spitfire to Colerne Airfield north of Bath for fitting out before being sent to the besieged Island of Malta, Ann waited for 3-days in appalling weather at Chattis Hill in Hampshire. Spotting a slight clearance in the Weather, she headed off, Flying at 300-ft & lower. “I flew as slowly as possible, flaps down,” she recalled. “I picked my way along the Roads & Railway Tracks at 140-mph, flying the last mile Uphill to the Aerodrome (593-ft).”  No other Spitfires made it to Colerne that day.  In his book, Spitfire Women of WW2, Giles Whittell wrote “It wasn’t Combat, but Welch had run a series of risks that Combat Pilots rarely ran. … It was exceptionally brave.” During her time in the ATA, Ann flew many different types of Aircraft including Tiger Moth Trainers, Blenheim Fighter-bombers, Spitfire & Hurricane Fighters, as well as Wellington bombers. Her work as an ATA pilot came to an end in 1944 with the Pregnancy of her 1st daughter.

After the War, in 1946, Ann restarted the Surrey Gliding Club at RAF Kenley, initially with 5-Members – but no Aircraft. Almost all the country’s Gliders had been requisitioned by the RAF and had been broken up or rotten away in unsuitable storage conditions during the War. Their 1st Glider, a Weihe, was an ex-German requisition. In 1947 the Club relocated to nearby Redhill Airfield – it wouldn’t return to Kenley until 1985 as the Surrey Hills Gliding Club which still Flies from the Airfield. Ann worked hard to re-establish the British Gliding Association, resigning as its Vice Chairman in 1976. She managed the British Team at the World Gliding Championships between 1948 & 1968. She presided over the formation of the British Hang-Gliding Association in 1974 and was president of the British Microlight Association.  She was also a Fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society and in 1997 was elected as an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Institute of Navigation. Awarded an MBE and OBE for services to Gliding, Ann Welch was an amazing all-rounder. A mother of 3-girls, she was a Pilot, an Instructor, a Flying Competition Organiser, National Administrator, Author, Painter & Skier.

Happy to Fly

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