Close Menu

    Subscribe for Updates

    Get the latest local airport and aviation news delivered right into your inbox each week!

    News Updates
    Bath England 7 Metropolitan Airport News

    From Roman History to Rooftop Pools on a Soothing Weekend in Bath

    June 14, 2026
    New Terminal One at JFK Airport

    New Terminal One Releases ESG Report Highlighting Innovation, Energy Resilience and Sustainability Progress

    June 13, 2026
    ASAK Saudi FIFA Metropolitan Airport News

    Cleared for Takeoff: NY & NJ Airports Brace for World Cup Crowds

    June 12, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube Flickr
    Metropolitan Airport News
    • Airport & Aviation Events
      • Airport & Aviation Events
      • Submit Event
    • Latest Airport News
      • Publisher’s Message
      • Editor’s Notebook
      • Leadership Insights
      • New York Aviation History
      • Fast Five
      • Non-Rev Traveler
      • On Duty
      • Company Spotlight
      • Air Cargo
      • Airline News
      • Airport Community
      • Airport Employment News
      • Airport News
      • Airport Safety & Security
      • Ground Services
      • Intermodal
    • Airport Employment
    • Back Issue Archive
    Metropolitan Airport News
    Home»New York Aviation History»Hellcat Test Pilot: Barbara Kibbee Jayne
    New York Aviation History

    Hellcat Test Pilot: Barbara Kibbee Jayne

    Julia Lauria-BlumBy Julia Lauria-BlumApril 4, 20192 Comments4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email
    Grumman F6F flightline Hooker, Kenyon, and Kibbee, Bethpage, NY
    Grumman F6F flightline Hooker, Kenyon, and Kibbee, Bethpage, NY

    History was made in 1943 when three pilots from Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation, in Bethpage, NY, became the first women in the United States to test Navy fighter aircraft.

    One of these pioneering aviatrices was Barbara Kibbee Jayne. Hailing from Troy, NY, Barbara grew up with a desire to fly. As a child, Barbara and her brother would often jump off their garage roof to experience “flight”. But it wasn’t until she was 21 that her parents gave the official green light to pursue her passion.

    After earning a pilot license at the Ryan School of Aeronautics in San Diego, CA, Barbara was eager to find work across the country but instead encountered gender discrimination. She finally received an offer back in Troy where she became the first female instructor in the Civilian Pilots’ Training program. In 1941, Barbara was coaxed by Grumman executive Bud Gillies to be chief instructor at the exclusive Long Island Aviation Country Club in Hicksville, where she instructed the rich and famous to fly. Once WWII started, Barbara became a courier pilot at Grumman, flying parts and workers in transport and passenger planes.

    Barbara Kibbee in equipment room Bethpage, NY c.1943.
    Barbara Kibbee in equipment room Bethpage, NY c.1943.

    In spring of 1942, Barbara along with pilots Cecil “Teddy” Kenyon and Elizabeth Hooker were recruited by Bud Gillies, head of testing and Flight Operations at Grumman to be the first women test pilots of naval aircraft in the US. At the time, there was a shortage of pilots, but Gillies, whose wife Betty, was also a pilot and a member of the Women’s Auxillary Ferrying Squadron or WAFS, had tremendous faith in these women and in their abilities to get the job done; testing warplanes, before the planes could be shipped to the Navy for combat.

    Their first assignment was to test the F6F Hellcat right off the assembly line. On that day, Grumman closed the airfield, telling personnel to go home in case “things didn’t work out”. Bud Gillies, however, invited the press and these women soon became media darlings.

    This F6F Hellcat became the best carrier-based fighter of World War Two. This aircraft was the kind of fighter considered to the backbone of the Naval Air War in the Pacific. A larger and more powerful development of the earlier F4F Wildcat, the Hellcat was designed to counter Japan’s excellent Zero fighter.  The Hellcat’s design sacrificed speed for a high rate of climb and exceptional maneuverability. It was also a very rugged and well armored design. The plane was deployed operationally in the Pacific in August 1943 where it participated in every major engagement of the war. At one point in 1944 Grumman was turning out one Hellcat per hour – 644 in one month – an aircraft production record which has never been equaled. A total of 12,275 were built.

    At first, male pilots couldn’t fathom the idea of women doing their jobs. Many of these men ignored the women when they walked into the Ready Room and some even threatened to quit, but Bud Gillies stood firm and told these men to go right ahead, but they quickly changed their minds. In time, the women proved their exceptional piloting skills and their male colleagues came to accept them.

    Barbara Kibbee and Selden Converse, Grumman-Chief Test-Pilot c.1943 Bethpage, NY.
    Barbara Kibbee and Selden Converse, Grumman-Chief Test-Pilot c.1943 Bethpage, NY.

    After the war ended, Barbara ran a GI Training Program and her own fixed base operation at Annapolis Airport. Early in the 1950s, she returned to California and flew her own aircraft for a real estate business. In her retirement, she flew often in Baja California Peninsula and with her friend, Betty Gillies on a number of “fly yourself safaris” around South America, Africa, and Australia. She passed away October 17, 1999 in her home in Rancho, Santa Fe, where she had lived since the early 1950s.

    The passion, determination, and bravery of these pioneering female test pilots continue to be an inspiration for young girls and women in aviation today.

    A F6F Hellcat is on display in World War II Gallery at the Cradle of Aviation Museum. 

    Cradle of Aviation Museum
    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email
    Julia Lauria-Blum
    • Website
    • LinkedIn

    Julia Lauria-Blum earned a degree in the Visual Arts at SUNY New Paltz. An early interest in women aviation pioneers led her to research the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) of WW II. In 2001 she curated the permanent WASP exhibit at the American Airpower Museum (AAM) in Farmingdale, NY, and later curated 'Women Who Brought the War Home, Women War Correspondents, WWII’ at the AAM. Julia is the former curatorial assistant at the Cradle of Aviation Museum and is currently an editor for Metropolitan Airport News.

    RELATED NEWS & UPDATES

    LaGuardia Airport Aerial

    Temporary Flight Restrictions: Why They Matter in the Tri-State Area

    June 11, 2026
    NY Knicks 2026

    Knicks Fever Takes Flight

    June 5, 2026
    Building 1 at Newark Liberty International Airport.

    Landmark Status and Preservation 

    June 4, 2026
    Northeast Airlines Conviar 880

    Northeast Yellowbirds

    May 24, 2026
    106th Rescue Wing

    The 106th Rescue Wing: New York’s Guardians of Life in the Air

    May 14, 2026
    The Aline Rhonie Mural at the Cradle of Aviation Museum

    The Aline Rhonie Mural – The Pre-Lindbergh Era of American Aviation

    May 5, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

    Subscribe for Weekly Email Updates

    Get the latest local airport news, events, and jobs delivered right into your inbox each week.

    Metropolitan Airport News Logo

    Metropolitan Airport News provides timely news, information and updates for both Port Authority of New York & New Jersey (PANYNJ) employees and businesses that provide services at, and around the major New York airports (JFK, LGA, EWR).

    John F. Kennedy International Airport
    PO Box 300877
    Jamaica, NY 11430 USA
    Phone: (718) 750-4441

    1. Guest on QueensLink or QueensWay?

      With QueensLink, you'll get both the park and train. QueensWay will provide only a park. Other cities that have tried…

    2. Maureen Katz on One Day Visit to Naples, Italy

      Hi Peter, It is great to hear from you! The 8 airlines were Evergreen International, Cosmopolitan Air Lines, People Express,…

    3. Peter Stagnitta on One Day Visit to Naples, Italy

      Hi Mo! Just curious, what were the eight airlines you worked for? You may not remember me, but I know…

    Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn Flickr Instagram
    • About Us
    • Advertising
    • Airport Worker
    • Charitable Giving Program
    • Back Issue Archive
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    Copyright © 2026 Airport Media, Inc. All rights reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.