Lucyna Wlazło-Bajewska Krzywonos
Lucyna Wlazło-Bajewska Krzywonos | |
---|---|
Born | Teodora Lucyna Wlazło 1 October 1928 |
Died | 26 January 2007 | (aged 78)
Nationality | Polish |
Occupation | glider pilot |
Teodora Lucyna Wlazło-Bajewska Krzywonos (known as Lucyna Wlazło for the early part of her competitive career) (1 October 1928 – 26 January 2007) was a Polish glider pilot and gliding instructor. She set 6 world records and 11 national records.[1]
Early life and learning to fly
Teodora Lucyna Wlazło was born on 1 October 1928 and grew up in Białystok.[1]
In 1947 Wlazło completed a gliding course organised in Leszczewie by the Związek Harcerstwa Polskiego (ZHP) (the Polish Scouting and Guiding Association) at the same time as fellow glider pilot Zofia Zalewska who also came from Białystok.[2] She was a member of the Białystok Aeroclub, and later the Aeroklub Warszawski (Warsaw Aero Club).
In 1951 she appeared in a film where she was teaching glider pilots at the Warsaw Aero Club on how to loop de loop.[3]
Record breaking glider flights
12 November 1950, she flew a record 4963 metres high with fellow pilot Irena Kempówna in a IS-C Żuraw two-seater.
28 July 1951, Wlazło set the national Polish gliding record in a target flight of 123 wkm.[4]
18 July 1958 she set two world records in target and open flight in a two-seater glider totalling 489.8 km at the international competition in Leszno.[4][5]
18 July 1958, she set a world record in target flight of 489.80 km, taking off together with Krystyna Cieślik as her crew in a SZD Bocian.[6]
26 June 1960 she set a world record in target-return flight of 387 km.[4]
18 May 1966 she won the national Polish women's gliding competition.[4]
4 July 1969, she won the women's Polish national gliding competition.[4]
Personal life
Lucyna Wlazło married and took the surname Wlazło-Bajewska Krzywonos, and had a son Tadeusz Bajewski.[7] She continued to fly until 2005.[1]
Lucyna Wlazło-Bajewska Krzywonos died on 26 January 2007 in Łomianki.
Awards and honours
- 1960 Diamentowa Odznaka Szybowcowa Nr. 54 (159) (Diamond Gliding Badge No. 54 (159))[8] awarded to pilots who fly 300 km to a pre-defined goal, go 500 km in one flight (but not necessarily to a pre-defined goal), and gain 5,000 m in height. Earning all three "diamonds" qualifies the pilot for the FAI registry as a Diamond Badge holder.[9]
- 1969 Medal Tańskiego (pl.)[10]
- 2002 Dominika Medal (awarded to the woman pilot of the year, created by Dominik Orczykowski, a Capuchin friar and chaplain to Polish aviators).[11]
References
- ^ a b c "Polskie Lotniczki". prezi.com. Retrieved 13 November 2022.
- ^ Modelarstwo lotnicze moją najtrwalszą pasją. Od lat młodzieńczych do dojrzałości. (PDF)
- ^ "W Aeroklubie Warszawskim | Repozytorium Cyfrowe Filmoteki Narodowej". repozytorium.fn.org.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 20 November 2022.
- ^ a b c d e Historia (in Polish)
- ^ "Lucyna Bajewska (POL) (4366) | World Air Sports Federation". www.fai.org. 10 October 2017. Retrieved 13 November 2022.
- ^ Lucyna Bajewska (POL) (4366), 10 October 2017
- ^ "W krzywem zwieciadle - Brzozowiana.pl - Regionalny Portal Informacyjno-Kulturalny". brzozowiana.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 13 November 2022.
- ^ Odeszli (in Polish)
- ^ A History of American Soaring, by Ralph S. Barnaby. Soaring Society of America, 1974.
- ^ Kontakt do laureatów Medalu im. Czesława Tańskiego (in Polish)
- ^ Aerosabat 2014 - XVII Zlot Polskich Pilotek IM. Ireny Kostki / Medal Dominika, archived from the original on 17 April 2021, retrieved 13 November 2022