
Lynn Rippelmeyer
Lynn Rippelmeyer
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Show notes
Pioneering airline pilot Lynn Rippelmeyer reflects on her extraordinary journey from being hired as a TWA stewardess in the early 1970s to becoming one of the first women to fly the Boeing 747, and later retiring from United Airlines after a career shaped both by deregulation, mergers, and furloughs, and by generosity, unexpected opportunities, and adventure.
We talk about her two-part memoir, beginning with Life Takes Wings, which traces her path from the cabin to the flight deck at a time when women were told — explicitly — that they didn’t belong there. Lynn shares unforgettable stories from the cockpit, including a laugh-out-loud reading involving a seeing-eye dog, Florida mud, and an entire airport watching it unfold. In Life Takes Flight, the adventures continue as she pursues her flying career, takes a break to raise a family, and then returns to flying as a single mom.
This episode also explores:
- The transition from “stewardess” to “flight attendant” and what that shift meant culturally
- Being told women couldn’t fly “the heavies” — and proving otherwise
- The mentors (and gatekeepers) who shaped her career
- How discovering the WASP later in life reframed everything she’d been told
- Why writing her story became a responsibility, not just a creative act
- How her flying career ultimately led to humanitarian work in Honduras and the founding of a nonprofit
Lynn’s story sits at the intersection of aviation, feminism, labor history, and storytelling — and it’s one every aspiring aviator (and writer) should hear.
Buy the books directly from Lynn to support her non-profit Roatan Support Effort. https://lynnrippelmeyer.com/purchase-now

