The San Diego Air & Space Museum is honored to remember the legendary Fran Bera, a pioneering aviator and member of the International Air & Space Hall of Fame. Bera passed away on February 10, 2018.
Bera was born in Mulliken, Michigan (between Grand Rapids and Lansing) as a first-generation American, and one of eight children, born to Hungarian parents Elizabeth and Fred Sebastian, who were peppermint and vegetable farmer. She started flying in December of 1940 in Grand Rapids while she was in high school--skipping school to take lessons. Inspired by a dollar plane ride at the local fairgrounds, she saved her school lunch money to pay for the lessons. By the age of 16, she had flown her first solo flight and soon after earned her commercial license and flight instructor rating.
During World War II, Fran qualified as a free fall parachutist, and after the war she ferried surplus-aircraft around the country. She became one of the first women FAA Pilot Examiners at the then minimum age of 24. She was a Pilot Examiner for private, commercial, multi-engine and instrument ratings for more than 25 years, certifying more than 3,000 pilots.
As an experimental test pilot for Lift Systems, Inc., Bera was the first woman to fly a helicopter with no tail rotor. She also was one of 25 women invited to participate in a week-long testing program of potential women astronauts at the Lovelace Clinic in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Bera was a seven-time winner of the All Woman Transcontinental Air Race (Powder Puff Derby), won the Palm to Pines All Women’s Air Race in 1997, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2004, and 2005, and placed in other speed races, including the Reno Air Races and the International Air Race.
She holds the world altitude record for class C-l-d aircraft, established in June 1966 in Long Beach, California, in a Piper Apache. An active member of The 99s, Fran also was a member of Whirly Girls, Silver Wings, and AOPA. She served three years on the Women’s Advisory Committee on Aviation, organized by the FAA in Washington, DC. In the 1960s, she served on Governor Ronald Reagan’s Aviation Education Task Force in California.
Fran never had any children but is survived by her sister, Edna Baldwin, many nieces, nephews and cousins.
Blue skies forever for Fran!
2001 Pan American Plaza, San Diego, CA
Phone: 619.234.8291
Información En Español
Contact Us
We would like to thank all our sponsors who help us make a difference. Click here to view all who help us.
The San Diego Air & Space Museum is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. Federal Tax ID Number 95-2253027.