News

“The first Catalan aviator”

“She wanted to be a pilot. It was 1930 and SHE was 17 years old“ “SHE TRAINED 70 PILOTS WHO FOUGHT AGAINST FRANCO’S PLANES”

The ob­sti­nacy to fly of María Pepa Colomer, the first flight in­struc­tor in Spain and the pi­o­neer of avi­a­tion in Cat­alo­nia, could have ended trag­i­cally very early in her life. Pepa was only eight years old, in 1921, when, hold­ing onto an um­brella, she jumped from a sec­ond-story bal­cony in the Gràcia neigh­bour­hood of Barcelona, trust­ing that she would be able to take flight. Her prank left her with two bro­ken legs that con­fined her to a wheel­chair for a long time.

It is not sur­pris­ing that when years later she asked her fa­ther, a rich Cata­lan tex­tile in­dus­tri­al­ist, to pay for the cost of fly­ing lessons and enough fly­ing hours to ob­tain a pilot’s li­cence, he tried to dis­suade her using all his au­thor­ity and power of per­sua­sion. But it was in vain. The young woman’s tenac­ity would make her over­come all ob­sta­cles.

In fact, be­fore that, María Pepa had al­ready drunk from the chal­ice of temp­ta­tion. One day, at the air­field that would later be­come the El Prat air­port, on the out­skirts of Barcelona, the in­tre­pid young woman paid five pe­se­tas for some­one to take her for a short plane ride. When she fin­ished the flight, she had al­ready de­cided what di­rec­tion she wanted to take in her life. She wanted to be a pilot. It was 1930 and María Pepa was 17 years old.

She took the lessons al­most in se­cret and hid­den from her mother who only knew about her daugh­ter’s ac­com­plish­ment when, one day, she saw this very front page. She was dis­mayed. It took a few days be­fore dis­may and anger turned into pride. After all, it was al­ready too late to stop her ad­ven­tur­ous daugh­ter.

A few years later, dur­ing Franco’s mil­i­tary up­ris­ing against the Re­pub­lic, María Pepa had the op­por­tu­nity to be­come an im­por­tant asset in the anti-fas­cist fight. Al­though she never par­tic­i­pated in air com­bat, she trained up to 70 pi­lots who did go to fight against Franco’s planes.

María Pepa also dropped pro­pa­ganda leaflets from the air, went to the Aragon front to pick up the wounded and trans­fer them to hos­pi­tals, car­ried out hun­dreds of re­con­nais­sance flights on the coast try­ing to spot enemy ships, planes or troop move­ments, and in the last days of the war, be­fore the fall of Barcelona, she trans­ported im­por­tant po­lit­i­cal fig­ures to France to save them from the reprisals of the vic­tors.

Marí Pepa her­self went into exile in the south of Eng­land, where she died in 2004 at the ven­er­a­ble age of 91, and with­out her ever hav­ing lost her un­usual vi­tal­ity and her easy-going and con­fi­dent smile.

BREAK­ING NEWS Front pages through his­tory

La Van­guardia, barcelona

Thursday 22 January 1931
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