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Books > Sport & Leisure > Transport: general interest > Aircraft: general interest
London-born Brian Burdett had only one career objective - to be a
pilot. By the time that he touched down on his last flight, Brian
had flown more than twenty-five different types of aircraft both
for the RAF and a variety of famous commercial airlines. It all
began for Brian, as it has for so many, with the Air Cadets, flying
Tiger Moths at the age of just fourteen. He obtained his civil
license at the age of seventeen, and six months later he was
accepted into the RAF. The year was 1954. With the RAF he graduated
from Piston Provost trainers, to the de Havilland Vampire and
eventually the Hawker Hunter. It was to fly Hunters that Brian was
posted to 257 (Burma) Squadron at Wattisham in Suffolk, where the
jets were frequently scrambled to intercept Soviet intruders in the
dark days of the Cold War. His RAF career developed further with a
transfer to Transport Command where Brian could fly the planes he
loved the best - the big jets. After training on Handley Page
Hastings, Brian was given the chance to fly the famous de Havilland
Comet. With 216 Squadron, flying high above the ceiling for
commercial aircraft, Brian flew the long-distance routes between
the RAF bases around the world, through the Middle East, Pakistan,
Shri Lanka and down to South Africa and Australasia. This included
taking personnel to Woomera and Christmas Island nuclear testing
sites. After a period as a trainer at Cranwell, Brian became the
youngest four-jet captain in the world. He then flew VIPs around
Europe in the RAF's VC10s, his passengers included the then Prime
Minister, Harold Wilson, among other dignitaries. Brian eventually
turned to the commercial world, flying Falcons, VC 10s, Tristars
and every type of Boeing 747, for a variety of airlines. His
adventures are legion. From a double engine failure on take-off and
still managing to land safely, to losing control in cloud and
levelling off feet from the ground, to a mid-air near miss with an
American aircraft that no-one knew was there, to spotting a strange
object that remains unidentified to this day. Brian's last flight
was into Los Angeles in an Airbus 340, in December 2000\. He had
22,500 hours in his log book, after forty-seven years aloft.
Flight Paths to Success profiles the personal journeys of 33 women
who have been, and continue to be, successful in aviation, space,
and academia. Each woman was asked to select one question of
several questions in five categories: personal career insight,
work-life balance, mentorship/sponsorship, avoiding a career stall,
and powering through challenging situations. Each woman shared her
unique experiences about work-life integration, resilience, career
changes, relocation, continuing education, and career advancement.
While reading their stories, we saw that there were many flight
paths to success and each woman navigated her own way by charting
her own course and committing to it. Their stories were published
as they wrote them-in their own words.
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