Today's Birthdays

one click shows all of today's celebrity birthdays

Browse All Birthdays

43,625    Actors
27,931    Actresses
4,867    Composers
7,058    Directors
842    Footballers
221    Racing drivers
925    Singers
9,111    Writers

Get FamousLikeMe on your website
One line of code gets FamousLikeMe on your website. Find out more.

Subscribe to Daily updates


Add to Google

privacy policy



Famous Like Me > Actress > B > Florence Barnes

Profile of Florence Barnes on Famous Like Me

 
Name: Florence Barnes  
   
Also Know As:
   
Date of Birth: 29th July 1901
   
Place of Birth: California, USA
   
Profession: Actress
 
 
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia
Florence Lowe Barnes
Florence Lowe Barnes
Pancho Barnes as taken by her close friend
George Hurrell in the 1930s.
Born July 14, 1901
San Marino, California, USA
Died March 30, 1975
Boron, California, USA

Florence Lowe Barnes, born Florence Leontine Lowe but known as Pancho Barnes for most of her life, was a pioneer of women's aviation and the owner of the celebrated Happy Bottom Riding Club located on land annexed into Edwards Air Force Base in southern California's Antelope Valley in the southwestern United States.

Early years

Born into a wealthy family in San Marino, California, Florence Lowe was reared to become a society lady. An adventurous streak had always been present in her family, and the young Florence learned the spectrum of hunting, fishing, and camping skills from her father. Another inspiration was her grandfather, Thaddeus Lowe, who had pioneered American aviation with the establishment of the first balloon corps for the Union Army of the Potomac in the American Civil War. However, her upper-class upbringing and her mother's fears about her wild tendencies and tomboy-like attitude led to a 1919 marriage to Reverend C. Rankin Barnes of South Pasadena, with whom she had a son, William E. Barnes.

How Pancho got her nickname

The peaceful life of a clergyman's wife was not for Florence however. After her mother's death in 1924 and subsequently inheriting the family fortune, in early 1928 she returned to her flamboyant and headstrong ways, which caused her marriage to end in a 1941 divorce. She abandoned her family, disguised herself as a man, and stowed away on a freighter bound for Mexico, joining a banana boat crew once there. In San Blas, Mexico, she jumped ship with a fellow crewmember and began to roam the Mexican countryside with him. It was during this time in 1928 roaming the land on a donkey's back - reminding her male companion of the character he erroneously called "Pancho" who in reality was Sancho Panza from the novel Don Quixote - Florence Barnes first became known by her nickname of Pancho. She was known by it for the rest of her life.

Pancho's adventures

Having spent four months abroad, Pancho returned to San Marino and in the Spring of 1928, while driving her cousin Dean Barnes to flying lessons, decided immediately to learn to fly. Convincing her cousin's flight instructor of her desire that same day, she soloed after just six hours of formal instruction. True to her flamboyant devil-may-care spirit, she forthwith brought friends along for rides and began "buzzing" her husband's Sunday morning congregation for the fun of it. At this time in avation history, Barnes was one of only two dozen aviatrixes in the United States, a contemporary of female flyers such as Amelia Earhart.

Her passion for aviation took off, and she ran an ad-hoc barnstorming show and competed in air races. Despite a crash in the 1929 Women's Air Derby, Pancho returned in 1930 under the sponsorship of the Union Oil Company to win the race — and break Amelia Earhart's world women's speed record with a speed of 196.19 mph (315.7 km/h). Barnes broke this record in a Travel Air Model R, which she dubbed her "Mystery Ship."

After her contract with Union Oil expired, Pancho moved to Hollywood to work as a stunt pilot for movies. Pancho already had connections in Hollywood; her close friend George Hurrell was head of the portrait department of MGM Studios, but had got his start after Pancho introduced him to Ramon Novarro, another good friend of Pancho's. Pancho quickly formed friendships with other stars such as Susan Oliver and Richard Arlen.

The high life treated Pancho well, but her poor money management during the Great Depression and disputes with her family were quickly draining her small fortune. By 1935, Pancho had only her apartment in Hollywood left. She sold this and in March, 1935 bought 80 acres (32.4 ha) of land in the Mojave Desert, near the Rogers dry lake bed and the nascent Muroc Field, then referred to as March Field because it was an adjunct property of March Army Air Base at this time.

The Happy Bottom Riding Club

Pancho, center, and the staff of the Happy Bottom Riding Club.
Main article: Happy Bottom Riding Club

On her land, Pancho Barnes built the Happy Bottom Riding Club, also known as the Rancho Oro Verde Fly-Inn Dude Ranch, a dude ranch and restaurant which catered to airmen at the nearby airfield. Pancho became very close friends with many of the early test pilots, including Chuck Yeager, General Jimmy Doolittle, and Buzz Aldrin. Pancho's ranch became famous for the parties and high-flying lifestyle of all the guests. However, a change of command in 1952 contributed to her getting into conflict with the US Air Force, and Pancho's colorful character left the base after a suspicious fire burned her ranch to the ground in 1953.

After the fire

After the Rancho Oro Verde was destroyed, Pancho was so disgusted that she moved to Cantil, California, with hopes of restarting a similar ranch there. In 1961, a change in Air Force leadership resulted in Pancho being reinvited back to Edwards Air Force Base. Resettling in nearby Boron, California, Pancho once again became a commonplace figure at the base and was referred to as the "Mother of Edwards AFB". The officer's mess at Edwards was renamed the Pancho Barnes Room, and the wounds began to heal as Pancho reconnected with many old-timers.

Death

Pancho was scheduled to be the keynote speaker at the Antelope Valley Aero Museum's annual "Barnstormers Reunion" on April 5, 1975. However, when a friend called on March 30, she could not reach Pancho. When Pancho's son Bill went to investigate, he found Pancho dead in her home. The coroner determined that she had died of a heart attack several days earlier.

Her fourth husband "Mac" McKendry survived her for many years and continued to live in Cantil.

Legacy

Son Bill Barnes died piloting a P-51 Mustang flying near the site of the Happy Bottom Riding Club in October, 1980. His mother Pancho founded in 1940 Barnes Aviation of Lancaster which Bill operated in his adult years. It is still in the general aviation business today.

Her life and personality were portrayed in the 1983 epic film The Right Stuff adapted from Tom Wolfe's bestselling novel of the same name. Kim Stanley played Pancho Barnes in the film which documented - as far as the history of early Space Flight goes - "How the Future Began."

Pancho's Mystery Ship remains today in a hangar at Mojave Airport where it is slowly being restored.

Her Happy Bottom Riding Club site is today the location for the annual Edwards Air Force Base Pancho Barnes Day celebration (established in 1980). A barbeque is held and drinks are served, along with dancing and live music to honor the remembrance of this aviation pioneer and friend. . . way into the night, just like in the old days when Pancho was there with her many friends.

Quotes of note

  • "We had more fun in a week than most of the weenies in the world have in a lifetime." (referring to the times she and her fellow aviators had at her fly-in ranch)
  • "Don't even try to be like someone else, because we've seen it already!"
  • "When you have a choice, choose happy!"

This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Florence Barnes