Feb 24, 2011 - Claremont, Calif. - Community members gathered Feb. 19 to celebrate their favorite aviatrix—Iris Critchell, instructor of aeronautics emerita, on the occasion of her 90th birthday. In attendance were over 100 people, including family, many alumni, faculty and friends, who shared personal stories about Iris and her husband, Howard ("Critch"). HMC students receiving aeronautical scholarships were also in attendance.
Included among the guests were Bates Aeronautics Program alumni whom Iris and Howard had taught to fly. In 1962, Iris prepared the curriculum for the Bates Foundation for
Aeronautical Education, which later became HMC's Bates Aeronautics
Program and was run by Iris and Howard, until 1990. The two-year curriculum of classes and flight was designed
specifically for the needs of the science and engineering students at
HMC. Critchell, who was named the local FAA Instructor Pilot of the Year
in the early 1970's, served as the chief flight instructor of the
flight portion and on the faculty as Aeronautics Program Director. Critchell, who served as a designated pilot examiner for the FAA FSDO
for more than 20 years, began flying in 1939 at Mines Field, now known
as the Los Angeles International Airport (LAX). From then on, her
diverse flight experience helped define the role women were able to
assume in the field of aeronautics.
In 1941, Critchell's became the first woman to complete the Civil
Pilot Training Program at the University of Southern California (USC),
where she also earned a degree in physical sciences and mathematics. As a member of the Women Air Force Service Pilots (WASP), Critchell
went on to ferry military planes across the county during World War II
for the U.S. Army. Following the WASP disbandment, she continued her flight training and
designed the curriculum for USC's aeronautical courses for veterans at
its College of Aeronautics in Santa Maria in 1946. While there,
Critchell served as chief ground instructor and chief instrument rating
flight instructor for three years. After retiring from HMC as instructor emerita of aeronautics in
1990—the year the college's Bates Program officially ended—Critchell
continued to serve as a faculty advisor on numerous projects. Over the
years, she also assisted the HMC Engineering Clinic's aeronautics
projects and performed equipment flight tests. Critchell's lifetime achievements also include swimming in the 1936
Berlin Olympics, winning the 1957 Powder Puff Derby (a transcontinental
race performed by women pilots) and being inducted into the National
Flight Instructors Hall of Fame in 2000 and receiving a Congressional Gold Medal in 2010 along with fellow members of the Women Airforce Service Pilots. Today, she lectures and
consults on various phases of aviation education and history.


Scholarship recipients and presenters
Scott Gordon '70


Barbara Filkins '75, Iris Critchell, Fritzi Culick, Fred Culick, Carl Baumgaertner
Family and friends


Don Coleman '70/71 and Iris Critchell
Iris Critchell, instructor of aeronautics emerita










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