They took her idea. And with that single conversation, the role of the airline hostess—later the "stewardess," later the "flight attendant"—was born.
You will meet the woman who flew for TWA during the "Golden Age" and secretly had an abortion using a crew doctor. You will meet the first Black flight attendant hired by a major U.S. carrier in 1962—and the white passengers who refused to sit in her section. You will meet the Japanese "sky girl" who sued her airline for the right to wear trousers.
is available now from University of Chicago Press. Recommended for readers of The Devil in the White City (for its social history) and Hidden Figures (for its recovery of women’s labor). Feature by [Your Name/Publication]. For interviews with the author or image requests, contact the press office. Come Fly with Us-- A Global History of the Airline Hostess
One of the most powerful quotes in the book comes from a 1975 deposition: "They didn’t want us to have lives. They wanted us to look like we didn't have pasts, presents, or futures—only smiles." The final section of Come Fly With Us traces the shift from "hostess" to "flight attendant"—and from service to safety. After 9/11, the public finally understood what crew members had always known: their primary job is not pouring coffee. It is evacuating a burning aircraft, subduing a violent passenger, and managing mass panic.
In 1930, a 25-year-old registered nurse named Ellen Church walked into a Boeing Air Transport office in San Francisco. She wasn’t there to fly. She was there to become a pilot. When the male executives politely refused her application, Church proposed a radical counter-offer: What if you put nurses in the cabin to calm the nervous public? They took her idea
Come Fly with Us: A Global History of the Airline Hostess (just published by University of Chicago Press) is not a nostalgic scrapbook of retro uniforms. It is a sharp, deeply researched, and often unsettling look at how a single job became a battlefield for race, gender, labor rights, and global capitalism.
Today’s flight attendants are 80% female, but increasingly diverse in age, race, and gender. They are unionized, trained in self-defense, and battling a different enemy: passenger rage, low pay during boarding, and chronic fatigue. You will meet the first Black flight attendant
The word "hostess" has all but disappeared from the industry. But its history remains embedded in the jumpseat. Come Fly With Us is not a light beach read. It is a work of serious labor history, rich with archival photos, oral histories, and statistical analysis. But it is also deeply human.