Female helo pilot finishes Air Force One tour

Minstrel

Hero Member
Oct 12, 2008
520
3
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Detector(s) used
Garrett-GTI-2500
Female helo pilot finishes tour
By DARLENE SUPERVILLE (AP) -

WASHINGTON -- Jennifer Grieves wanted independence, exposure and
something she could be proud of when she joined the Marine Corps. She
got all that, and more -- including a place in history as the first woman
to ever pilot Marine One, the president's helicopter.

For about 40 times in the past 14 months, she has been the one
responsible for ferrying President Barack Obama, former President George
W. Bush and former Vice President Dick Cheney to and from Andrews Air
Force Base, and other points in their world travels.

Her 14-month rotation as a "Marine One" ended Thursday with another
first: An all-female crew, led by Grieves, landed on the South Lawn of
the White House to take Obama to Andrews for a day trip to New Jersey
and New York.

For Grieves, now a major, enlisting was not about piloting the president
or being the first woman with the responsibility.

"It's just about being a Marine," she says matter-of-factly.

Grieves, 38, joined nearly 20 years ago in her hometown of Glendale,
Ariz., seeking broader horizons. Until then, her only exposure to the
military was a grandfather who had served in the Navy.

"I think I just wanted some independence. I wanted some exposure. I
wanted to be a part of an organization that I could be proud of," she
said Friday in an interview with The Associated Press. "I had no idea
initially that it would turn into something that I've been more proud of
than anything else in my life. I got lucky in that respect, and I made a
good decision and it ended up turning out very well."

Grieves came to helicopters by chance. A college mentor recommended that
she take an aptitude test. She did, and it pointed her toward flying.
She was accepted to flight school and "ended up realizing that I should
have wanted to do that ever since I was a kid."

"It's something I love," Grieves said of flying; she can fly three
different types of helicopters.

A supervisor who had served in the Marine One squadron recommended that
she apply. She joined in 2005, spent a couple of years as a co-pilot and
then became qualified to fly vice presidents and visiting heads of state.

She was given the ultimate responsibility, being designated a "Marine
One," in 2008.

The native of Alameda, Calif., said she didn't realize the significance
of her achievement until her rotation ended Thursday. Next comes
leadership school in Quantico, Va., starting in August. Grieves expects
to finish in June 2010 and return to flying, either in North Carolina or
Afghanistan.

"Yesterday, I realized that it might be significant, and it might be
important," she said, adding that she was proud of her crew and all the
Marines who support her. "And I guess, a little bit, I'm kind of proud
of myself, too."

On Thursday, Obama greeted Grieves and her co-pilot, Maj. Jennifer
Marino, of Palisade, Colo., as he boarded. Once on the tarmac at
Andrews, he walked up front and told them how proud he was, she said. He
gave her one of his personal presidential coins.

"He said he's always felt like he was in good hands with all of us,"
Grieves said.

There's little time to get to know the president, but that isn't Grieves' job.

"Our job is to fly him, to be professional, take him from A to B and to
take him there safely," she said.

Her first day flying Bush, "I was a nervous wreck. I was extremely
nervous," she said.

She remembers he boarded and came to shake her hand. "He kind of did a
doubletake," at the sight of a woman in the pilot's chair. They greeted
each other and "he smiled at me and I knew. I kind of felt what he was
thinking and he walked back to the back and he was great ever since,
just like President Obama," Grieves said. "I think the fact that they
both have daughters makes it a little more special for them."

Source: http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/
ALeqM5h2SbtA8Tc7sHscUoiIfeu77kDEJAD99GFJ681
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Top