In honor of Valérie André, I am declaring a moratorium on French and French Army jokes for the next 72 hours.
She became a brain surgeon, a parachutist and a helicopter pilot who was said to be the first woman to fly rescue missions in combat zones for any military force. She was also the first Frenchwoman to be named a general and was a five-time winner of the Croix de Guerre, for bravery in Indochina and Algeria.
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In 120 combat missions in the early 1950s in the dense jungles and soggy rice paddies of Indochina, where the French were trying without success to repulse Communist guerrillas, Dr. André flew 168 wounded soldiers from the battlefields to hospitals in Hanoi — including enemy soldiers, when there was room on the two litters mounted on her single-seat Hiller chopper.
She later flew 365 missions into combat zones in North Africa, where Algerians were seeking independence from France. In 1976 she was promoted to general, the first woman to be elevated to that rank in the French Army.
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According to the National Air and Space Museum at the Smithsonian Institution, she was one of the first 12 women in the world to receive a helicopter pilot rating and the first woman to fly a helicopter into combat zones.
She was 102 when she died.
This entry was posted on Thursday, February 6th, 2025 at 1:26 pm and is filed under Helicopters, Heroism, History, Obits, Planes. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
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5 time winner of the Croix de Guerre? She was one very impressive person, male or female. May she RIP, and God have mercy on her soul.
Five time winner of the Croix de Guerre, combat medevac pilot, AND neurosurgeon?
If they ever want to make a sequel to Buckaroo Banzai with a female lead, all they have to do is just film her life story.