First female Korean aviator (1901–1988)
Kwon Ki-ok (Korean : 권기옥 ; 11 January 1901 – 19 April 1988) was the first Korean female aviator , as well as one of the first female pilots in China. Her name in Chinese is Quan Jiyu .[ 1] Kwon went into exile in China during the Japanese occupation of Korea and became a lieutenant colonel in the Republic of China Air Force . She returned home after the liberation of Korea and became a founding member of the Republic of Korea Air Force .
Biography
Kwon was born in Sangsugu Village,[ a] Pyongyang , South Pyongan Province , Korean Empire to Gwon Don-gak[ b] and Jang Mun-myeong.[ 2] [ c] She was the second of five children (four daughters and one son).[ 3] She was of the Andong Kwon clan [ko ] .[ 4]
Kwon attended Pyongyang's Sunghyeon Elementary School[ d] from 1913 to 1918.[ 2] There, she was inspired to learn to fly after seeing a 1917 aerobatics demonstration by American stunt pilot Art Smith .[ 5] [ 6]
Career
The following year, she participated in the March 1st Movement , for which she spent three weeks in jail; after her release, she assisted with fundraising activities for the Korean Patriotic Women's Association,[ e] as a result of which she was arrested and imprisoned for six months. Upon her release, she went into exile in China. In China, she enrolled in the Hongdao Women's School[ f] in Hangzhou , operated by American missionary Ellen Peterson, in order to learn Chinese and English . She completed a four-year course of study in just two years.[ 7]
In 1923, at the recommendation of the Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea in Shanghai , she entered the Republic of China Air Force School in Yunnan , graduating in 1925.[ 8] She was the only woman in the first graduating class. After graduation, she was stationed in Beijing , and then relocated to Nanjing in 1927. By 1940, she had achieved the rank of lieutenant colonel .[ 9]
In 1945, with the end of World War II and the restoration of Korean independence , Kwon returned to Korea, where she was instrumental in the founding of the Republic of Korea Air Force .[ 9] During the Korean War , she served as a member of South Korea's Ministry of National Defense .[ 5] Following the war, she retired to private life, serving as the vice-president of the Korea-China Cultural Association from 1966 until 1975. She received various recognitions for her service to the country, including a 1968 presidential commendation and the 1977 Order of Merit for National Foundation . She died on 19 April 1988 and was buried in the National Cemetery in Dongjak-gu , Seoul .[ 6]
Legacy
In August 2003, Kwon was selected as "Independence Activist of the Month" by the Ministry of Patriots' and Veterans' Affairs . At the time of the release of the 2005 South Korean film Blue Swallow , Park Kyung-won was believed to have been Korea's first female aviator; as knowledge that Kwon actually preceded her became more widespread, the distributor was forced to change their marketing campaign.[ 10]
See also
^ 상수구리 ; 上水口里
^ 권돈각 ; 權敦珏
^ 장문명 ; 張文明
^ 숭현보통학교
^ 대한애국부인회 ; 大韓愛國婦人會 ; Daehan Aeguk Buinhoe
^ Chinese: 弘道女中; Pinyin: Hóngdào Nǚ Zhòng; Korean : 홍도여중
References
^ "谁是"中国第一女飞行家"?秋瑾之女还是李霞卿" . China.com.cn . 9 August 2010. Archived from the original on 9 October 2019. Retrieved 9 October 2019 .
^ a b 김, 성은. "권기옥 (權基玉)" . Encyclopedia of Korean Culture (in Korean). Academy of Korean Studies . Retrieved 16 September 2023 .
^ "8월의 독립운동가로 權基玉 여사 선정 (Kwon Ki-ok chosen as August independence activist)" (PDF) , Andong Kwon Newspaper , 1 September 2003, archived from the original (PDF) on 14 June 2007, retrieved 2 May 2007
^ "청남 권영한 홈페이지입니다" . www.andongkwon.pe.kr . Retrieved 16 September 2023 .
^ a b "우리나라 최초의 여류비행사, 권기옥을 말한다 (Discussing Kwon Ki-ok, our country's first female aviator)" , AF Tongsin , Republic of Korea Air Force, archived from the original on 29 September 2007, retrieved 21 May 2007
^ a b "독립운동의 날개꽃 권기옥 (Kwon Ki-ok, blossoming flower of the independence movement)" , OhmyNews , 29 December 2005, retrieved 22 May 2007
^ Jeong, Chun-ok (9 April 2007), "한국 첫 여성 비행사 권기옥 (Korea's first female aviator, Kwon Ki-ok)" , Sisa News , archived from the original on 28 September 2007, retrieved 21 May 2005
^ "映画『青燕』、韓国初の女性飛行士めぐり論争 (Movie 'Blue Swallow' and the debate about Korea's first female aviator)" , Chosun Online , 16 October 2005, archived from the original on 30 September 2007, retrieved 22 May 2007
^ a b Yang, Lirui (9 March 2006), " "韩国空军祖母"是我师姐 ("Korea's Grandmother of Aviation" was my senior)" , New Kunming , archived from the original on 13 May 2008, retrieved 21 May 2007
^ Kim, Tae-jong (22 February 2006), " 'Blue Swallow' faces turbulence" , Korea Times
Further reading
Im, Bok-nam (21 March 2007), 우리나라 최초 여성 파일럿, 권기옥 (Our country's first female pilot, Kwon Ki-ok) , Small Seed, ISBN 978-89-90787-51-4