ATA Freydis Mary Sharland

Born in Cambridge, Freydis was one of 3-children, she was Educated at Ancaster Gate School in Bexhill, East Sussex & Wycombe Abbey School in Bucks. 

Freydis Mary (nee Leaf) Sharland

One evening I was at a Dance in Cambridge and I as I danced with my father (Charles Leaf, a Meteorologist and Archaeologist) he said to me, “I think I really must let you go and Learn how to Fly because I am Learning too.” The 3 of us, my Father, my Brother and I all learnt at the Local Marshalls Flying School. I was about 17. There were 1 or 2 other Girls, Veronica Volkertz who became an ATA Pilot with me, she learned to Fly there, but I didn’t meet other Girls all that often. We were taken for Granted by the Men there. Of course, Women had been Flying from the very start. We learnt to Fly on Gypsy Moths, the same sort of little Moth that Amy Johnson Flew to Australia, so we were in good Company. They also taught people to be Fighter Pilots at Marshalls and had Battles around Circuits.

Once the War started all Civil Flying stopped so I couldn’t do any more. Father joined the Barrage Balloon Battalion and my brother David was already in the Wavy Navy, the RNVR. At the Outbreak of War I was living in Twickenham. My Mother was in a Red Cross Group and I worked as a Voluntary Aid Detachment in a Military Hospital in Colchester for about a year. I was dying to get into the ATA but every time I wrote to them they said no. My 4hrs-40mins Solo was not enough. It wasn’t until the beginning of 1942 that they ran out of people with more Flying than me and they gave me a Flight Test at White Waltham Aerodrome.

White Waltham Aerodrome

The Instructor told me to take over the Plane, Start-up the Engine &Take off which I did. Then we did some Circuits and we Flew, Climbed & Descended and various other Manoeuvres he asked me to perform. All the time I kept an eye on where the Aerodrome was because, I thought, “I bet he’ll ask me to find my way Home.” which eventually he did. I knew exactly where it was so I turned to the Aerodrome and flew Home. I did a Circuit there & Landed , went into the Club House and waited. Then I heard I had passed my Flying Test and they would try to get me into the ATA. My father was very supportive. He knew it was rather dangerous & risky but he knew it was a good job and took a great interest in it. Mother was very long suffering about it all but she accepted it was the War and that I was doing something useful. My Brother was very keen on my Flying & I joining the ATA. It took a little while because I was quite useful as a Nurse and the thinking was, why go off doing something else when you are perfectly alright doing Nursing. They did eventually let me go. One day, when I was Flying at White Waltham, I had an Anson Taxi Plane and I had to pick up an ATA Pilot and another man and take them to an Aerodrome from where they were Flying to France. However, this Pilot said “I refuse to Fly with a Woman!” and as he was Senior to me I couldn’t really say much. He took over and I had to sit in the back feeling absolutely furious but I just had to accept it.

Freydis Leaf 1939

The ATA was started in 1939 by Gerard d’Erlanger, a Banker and a Private Flyer. He had a Group of friends who had done a lot of Flying but were too Old or Infirm to Join the Services and he wrote to them suggesting they start an Organisation to do some Flying for the Air Force and the Navy to save time for the contact Pilots. Eight women who had learnt to Fly and were acting as Flying Instructors were recruited as the 1st Women in the ATA and to start with they were just Flying Tiger Moths to Scotland, which the men didn’t want to do as it was so Cold. As things tightened up, the Work became more important and they did more Flying after they had been Trained on Single Seater Fighters & Twin-Engine Aircraft and that’s about the time I came in. We started off with Miles Magisters, little Single Engine Training Planes, that sort of Aircraft and then went back and did Flying on Twin-Engine Aircraft, Oxfords, Ansons & Rapides, and then on heavier single-Engine things after which you were able to Fly Hurricanes, Spitfires in fact any Single or Twin-Engine Plane that needed Ferrying. I was Stationed at Hamble, down near Southampton. There was a whole Factory turning out Spitfires so we Flew those sometimes. It was all rather exciting. We Flew them to Maintenance Units (MUs) where various Modifications would be made or to the Squadrons who would be Flying them in Combat. I also Flew Ansons, Oxfords, Bostons, Wellingtons, Blenheims and after the Spitfires & Seafires we Flew Tornados, Tempests & Mosquitos. We got quite keen on Flying New Types and there was quite a lot of Competition with everyone trying to Fly as many Aeroplanes as they could. It was always interesting in the morning when you got your Chits. These told you what they wanted you to Fly and where to. The Weather was our Limiting Factor and if we couldn’t see the Ground we would be Lost so we could only Fly when the Weather was Clear. We didn’t have Radios, that was all kept for the Combatants. We Lost about 10% of our Pilots due to bad Weather or Errors of Judgement – like Flying into a Hill or something but on the whole, the Planes we collected were New, beautifully maintained with nothing wrong with them at all. If anything went wrong it would be down to the Pilot.

We did get caught in Bad Weather from time to time. I remember feeling quite worried & frightened wondering whether I’d get through but if you allowed yourself enough time and were sensible about summing up the conditions you usually got through alright but when you Landed you felt great relief! The Spitfire was one of my favourite Aeroplanes. It was so Light, so Manoeuvrable and you fitted into it so well, it was such a nice little Cockpit. It was quite Fast, so you had to take extra care in Bad Weather. The Mosquito was quite hard to Fly. Once the Wheels & Flaps were down it had quite a high Stalling Speed and you had to be very careful to keep well above that Speed otherwise ‘Ping!’ one day you’d hit the Ground and that would be the end of you. I was up at No.7 Ferry Pool, Sherburn-in-Elmet in Yorks for a while. It was mostly men at Sherburn and on the whole they were very good & accepted us. We were trying to do the best we could and we realised if we made mistakes in Aeroplanes some men would come down on us like a Ton of Bricks and say, “You see! I told you Women can’t do it!” In fact Women could do it and they did it quite successfully. From there I Flew up to a place on the Cromarty Firth in Scotland called Evanton, a Fleet Air Arm Airfield. If the Weather was bad on the way back I would put in at RAFLeuchars. They were very nice people there. They’d all come in off Operations and were spending a few months recovering from it all. They were great fun & I loved going there. Navigation was quite easy. We had Maps with us and I compared them to what I could see on the Ground. Before you left you worked out the heights at which it was safe to Fly and what large things, like Lakes & Mountains, you would see on the way, where you would see them and when, so that as they came up you knew you were on Course until finally your Destination turned up and that was that. It wasn’t terribly difficult, rather Basic, and of course you got to know England like the back of your hand almost. If you got into difficulties you could often follow a Railway Line although there were some places, like the Midlands, where there were so many Railway Lines so that was no good. You would look for a Lake or something like that.

Margaret Frost – 3rd Officer
Joy Lofthouse

I had some close friends in the ATA, particularly Margaret Frost, who came from Wales, and Joy Lofthouse. We used to see quite a lot of each other if we were on the Ground but when we were Flying we tended to do different things so I didn’t see them as much. We had quite varied Backgrounds, Margaret’s father was a Parson and I think Joy would have considered herself to be Working Class but I suppose most of us came from fairly privileged backgrounds in that they had enough cash to learn how to Fly. That has been the Limiting Factor all through my Life. It’s expensive, Flying.

Pauline Gower, was determined to do her best for us. We were Paid less than the Men in the ATA and when she showed Sir Stafford Cripps the Records of what we’d all done he said, “They do the same work as the men and take the same risks, why aren’t they Paid the same?” We said, “Why indeed?” & in 1943 we received equal pay and I became quite rich. I’d never had so much money in my life and I was able to put some by and make the Deposit on a Flat. That was lovely and entirely due to Sir Stafford Cripps giving us Equal Pay. It was perfectly justified, we were doing the same work and it was stupid to differentiate & give us so little money.

Sir Stafford Cripps Visit

It was arranged that Sir Stafford [Minister of Aircraft Production] would approach the Treasury, saying that he was likely to be asked in Parliament if Women Pilots doing exactly the same Job as Men, were being Paid less, and if so why? The Ploy worked, and when Irene Ward, on the 18th of May, asked the Minister in the House of Commons about Women Pilots’ Conditions of Pay, he was able to respond by saying that as from June, their Salaries would be brought into Line with the Men.

On the whole, things went smoothly but I did Fly a Tiger Moth that was turned over in the Slipstream of a Liberator. I was delivering it to a place in Wales and I could see all these Liberators Lined-up and one of them had Started his Engines. I should have stopped and waited for someone to Hold my Aeroplane but I didn’t, I thought I’d try and Rush along behind him and get through but of Curse I didn’t. The Tiger Moth was a very flimsy little Aircraft and the Slipstream just turned me over. That was rather bad, it wasn’t too badly damaged – just the Wings & the Propeller, but I had to deliver it in a rather miserable state and I was responsible for it which was a Black Mark on my Record.

You never knew what Aircraft you would be Flying or where you’d be going the next day, The RAF would Ring up the Pool in the Night and the Operations Officers would take down a List of all the Aeroplanes they wanted Delivered the next day & where to, and then they’d work out who should do what. You always tried to stay as safe as you could so that your Aeroplane was brought Safely to the Squadron which was, of course, the whole point of it. The War ended and I was very sad to stop Flying because it had been such a wonderful job. I was very glad that the War was over, my Brother had been Killed by then and it wasn’t until afterwards that one had time to Mourn the people who’d been Killed, my elder brother Derek (KIA 1944) & my Cousins. I felt so sad for them that I didn’t go to any Parties (the one I had been Invited to was supposed to have been very good) I just went Home. I felt the people I should have been Celebrated with weren’t there.

She worked as a Freelance Commercial Pilot, won her full RAF Wings – which she never collected, saying she looked Lanky in the Uniform – and was active in the Women’s Junior Air Corps & the Girls Venture Corps.

Hawker Tempest Mk.V
Freydis Sharland (nee Leaf), left, with fellow WJAC Pilot and BWPA Member Diana Barnato Walker

In 1953 Freydis Sharland climbed into a 430-mph Hawker Tempest V, and set off from an Airfield in Southern England on a 4,000-mile Intercontinental Flight. Her Aeroplane was one of the biggest & fastest, of the last Generation of Piston-Engined RAF Fighters, and her Destination was Pakistan. Sharland’s Stopovers, an Itinerary for the last days of Empire, took in Nicosia, Baghdad – where she was Entranced by the Almond Trees – & Bahrain, and then she undertook the Final & Longest, Leg to Karachi. Solo Map Reading – as she did in the ATA. Upon arrival, and having delivered the Tempest to the Pakistan Air Force, she was denied access to the Officer’s Mess. She was, after all, a Woman.

British Air Racing Champion Pilot 1954 – Freydis (Leaf) Sharland and 2-seater Miles Hawk Major

Although I felt Lucky, I always thought I’d live to see 80-yrs of age. It was a sort of ingrained knowledge. I continued Flying after the War and I got my Commercial License and became the British Air Racing Champion in 1954 competing against 16-men. (The 1st Woman ever to hold the Title – Flying a Miles Hawk Major).

A Typical Handicapped Air Racing Season comprises some 8-Venues & 16-Races: the maximum points available for a win in each Race is 100 on a sliding scale. The British Air Racing Champion is the Winner of this Cumulative Championship. This Win was just 1-yr before the Foundation of the British Womens Pilot Association, it was truly no wonder that in 1955 she was the 1st Chairwoman – albeit for only 1-yr – she then Married and her Family naturally also came 1st. (Inset – Freydis Sharland (nee Leaf) with a Trophy at her Home in Oxfordshire – born 22nd September 1920; died 24th May 2014 died aged 93). She was Survived by her Husband, her younger brother, Robin, 2-daughters, Virginia & Angela, a son, Charles & 9-grandchildren.

Freydis with her Momento
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