TRANSCRIPT
    Her dream was to become a pilot,       but her real ambition was to    open up a flying school so that    other blacks would       be a part of this new industry.   
    1919 Chicago, Illinois,       27 year old Bessie Coleman    worked as a manicurist in a    barber shop.   
    She was inspired by the    story of Harriet Quimby,       the first woman to earn a    pilot's license in the U.S. Then    Coleman overheard       customers talking about European    women who served as combat    pilots during World       War I.   
    I thought, that's it,    I'm going to be a pilot,       and everybody started laughing    at me. Girls sit down and grab    that nails file.   
    You ain't flying no plane.   
    The aviation industry    back at that time,       it was a white man's world. It    was hard enough for white women.   
    For a black woman it was nearly    insane to choose that industry.   
    I refuse to take    no for an answer.   
    If I can create the minimum of    my plans and desires, there    shall be no regrets.   
    One of 13 children,       Coleman was born in    1892 in Atlanta,       Texas and grew up in a    small cabin in Waxahachie.   
    Her parents were African    American sharecroppers, her    father, part Cherokee.   
    Bessie was born literally on a    dirt floor and picked cotton    alongside her mom.   
    There weren't any    opportunities, quite frankly,       in that timeframe for a black    woman, but she had bigger    dreams.   
    I want to find a bigger life.    I want to amount to something.   
    To be a pilot, you have to be    adventurous. There's a fearless    factor to it.   
    I'm the first and only black    female to fly the U2 aircraft.    We       don't have a lot of    women in aviation,       so our cadre is very small.   
    Bessie Coleman was able to up    the bar in terms of who could    fly,       despite gender and racial    barriers of that time.   
    In 1915 Coleman joined 'The    Great Migration' North to    Chicago --       along with millions of other    African Americans determined to    escape racial       violence and find new    job opportunities.   
    The 1896 Supreme court    case Plessy vs.   
    Ferguson had legalized    racial segregation,       ushering in a new era of racism    against African Americans.   
    1919 was the year of    the Red Summer. A       race war broke out    across the country.   
    That was the time of    'Birth of a Nation',       the most racist film in American    history that was based on the    book,       'The Clansman'. All    across the South,       and parts of the North as well,    there were lynchings. Harsh,       harsh soul crushing times.   
    After four years of working in    Chicago, in a barber shop and a    restaurant,       Coleman started applying to    flight schools throughout the    country.   
    But no one would teach her.   
    Everyone thought she was    crazy. She was A) Black,       B) a woman. When she realized    that she needed help,       she went to Robert Abbott, the    owner of the Chicago Defender,    pleaded       her case to him about why it was    important for there to be a    Negro woman flying.   
    He was really impressed by her    and stepped in to support her in    sponsorship.   
    After a year of French lessons,    Coleman went to France in 1920,       to enroll at a prestigious    aviation school.   
    She didn't face the same    obstacles in France.   
    All they cared about was whether    or not you had the courage and    the willingness       to learn how to fly.   
    You've never lived    until you have flown.   
    The air is the only place    free from prejudice.   
    Like her, I like to push myself    to that next level. How far can    I take it?   
    How much better can    I be as a pilot?   
    The U-2 is a challenging    aircraft to fly. It's not for    the weak at heart.   
    You have a space suit. We fly    typically above 70,000 feet.   
    You start seeing the    curvature of the earth.   
    You get to see how small the    planet really is in comparison    to the universe.   
    Why are we so focused on skin    color? There's just so much more    out there.   
    Bessie went on to become the    first-the first-not only the    first female black       pilot,       but she was the first to hold    an international license to fly.   
    Coleman returned to America and    became an instant sensation as a    barnstormer       --the latest craze in    public entertainment.   
    The early aviation, you know,       it's seat of the pants    flying. Like the Wild West.   
    All of them risked their    lives every single time they       decided to jump out of a plane,    to walk on a wing, to do a    figure eight.   
    These planes were open air.   
    As she performed    around the country,       Coleman used her newfound    celebrity to take a stand    against racism.   
    Bessie Coleman was an activist.   
    She refused to perform in    airshows where blacks were not    allowed to use the       front entrance. Jim Crow    laws were very broad.   
    People couldn't sit together,    they couldn't come in together.   
    She wasn't having any of that.   
    Black should not have to    experience the difficulties I    have faced,       so I decided to open a flying    school and teach other black    women to fly.   
    For accidents may happen, and    they would be someone to take my    place.   
    In 1923 Coleman succeeded in    buying her own plane. A month    later,       it was demolished in a crash    near Santa Monica, California.   
    Coleman was pulled    unconscious from the wreckage.   
    She broke several ribs, and her    leg. And from the bed, she said,       'you tell the world..'       You tell the world    I'm coming back.   
    The fact that I'm alive proves    that flying in the air is no    more dangerous than       riding in an automobile    on the ground.   
    In 1925,       Coleman made her come back with    a barnstorming tour throughout    Texas,       including a flight in her    hometown of Waxahachie.   
    Coming home to her family and    seeing the pride in their faces    and have all these       people cheering...    that's a success.   
    In 1926, while preparing for an    airshow in Jacksonville,    Florida,       Coleman was thrown from the    open cockpit of a plane,       some 2,000 feet to her    death. She was 34.   
    Her story is one of    perseverance, overcoming    barriers. Keep wanting.   
    Push harder. Don't give up.   
    Coleman's dream of opening a    flight school for African    American pilots came true       in 1929,       when the Bessie Coleman Aero    Club was founded by her friend    and fellow aviation       pioneer, William Powell.   
    It inspired many    outstanding black pilots,       including the Tuskegee    airmen of World War II.   
    And year after year,       they would fly low and drop    flowers onto her grave in her    memory.   
    It's about the spirit of    going for your dreams.   
    When you are focused and    determined, there are no limits,       and she really    proved that to us.   
    You can be somebody. You    can fly high just like me.