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Mary Feik has passed away

Started by Mustang, June 11, 2016, 06:28:11 AM

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Mustang

Just received word that Mary Feik has passed away, no details as yet.
"Amateurs train until they get it right; Professionals train until they cannot get it wrong. "


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Майор Хаткевич

Sad news. I had the opportunity to meet Colonel Feik in 2005 at Honor Guard Academy.


EMT-83

What an incredible lady she was. She loved cadets, and they loved her! I have vivid memories of cadets crowding around her, absorbing every word she spoke.

My now-adult, former-cadet, son will be saddened by the news.

THRAWN

Fair winds and following seas...
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Pace

Very sad to read about, but she was a hell of a strong spirit. She will be missed. I remember her squeezing the crap out of my hand and the first hand accounts she had of many of the exhibits in the air and space museum when I met her in DC 11 years ago. Blue skies.
Lt Col, CAP

lordmonar

Blue skies Mary


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PATRICK M. HARRIS, SMSgt, CAP

Chappie

#7
From the "Volunteer Now":

Col. Mary S. Feik, the Civil Air Patrol icon and aviation pioneer who was especially renowned as a CAP ambassador devoted to the organization's cadets, has passed away.. She was 92.

"The passing of Mary Feik is a great loss to the aerospace community and to Civil Air Patrol, and especially to our cadets," said Maj. Gen. Joe Vazquez, CAP national commander. "Mary's achievements and honors over seven decades as a pioneer in so many fields are too numerous to even try to list, but we in CAP will always remember her for her devotion to our young members. Their accomplishments in the years to come, in whatever walks of life they choose, will be the greatest memorial to her legacy.

Feik's aviation career dated back to the early 1940s, and her contributions as an engineer, pilot, mechanic, instructor, aerospace educator and in other capacities earned her numerous national and international distinctions.

She insisted, however, that "my greatest honor" was the CAP cadet milestone award named for her in 2002.

At her own expense, she printed and signed more than 10,000 Mary Feik Achievement certificates and distributed them to cadets at wing conferences and other CAP gatherings throughout the nation. The award signified completion of the third achievement of the cadet program.

While visiting CAP National Headquarters at Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama, in August 2014 to speak to more than 130 Cadet Officer School participants from all across the nation, she said, "The cadets, they energize me. They keep my battery charged."

Feik was named a CAP colonel and awarded the organization's Distinguished Service Medal in 2004. In 2008 she was made a Lifetime Member. She was a longtime member of the Maryland Wing's Annapolis Composite Squadron, renamed in her honor to the Mary S. Feik Composite Squadron in April.

Outside CAP, her honors included:
•Member of the Women in Aviation Pioneer Hall of Fame.
 
•First woman to receive the Federal Aviation Administration's Taylor Master Mechanic Award in recognition of contributions to aviation safety.
 
•Designation by NASA as one of the 47 most significant women in aerospace.
 
•Order of Merit from the World Aerospace Education Organization.

Recognition with the Katharine Wright Trophy, administered by the National Aeronautic Association in partnership with The Ninety-Nines and presented annually to a woman who has contributed to the success of others or made a personal contribution to the advancement of the art, sport and science of aviation and space flight over an extended period.

Those honors and many others reflected a long, diverse career as an aviation engineer, pilot, master mechanic, aircraft maintenance instructor, maintenance instruction manual author, trainer designer and National Air and Space Museum restorer of vintage aircraft.

Feik taught aircraft maintenance for the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II. She was the first woman engineer to work in research and development at the Air Technical Service Command's Engineering Division at Wright Field, Ohio.

She flew more than 6,000 hours as a B-29 flight engineer, pilot and engineering observer and as a pilot in fighter, attack, bomber, cargo and training aircraft.

Feik's daughter, Lt. Col. Robin Vest, is a longtime CAP member and former Middle East Region finance officer. She is currently serving as a CAP Wing Financial Analyst. Her son-in-law, Col. Warren Vest, is a former national finance officer and former chief of staff and vice commander of the Virginia Wing and Middle East Region. He currently serves on CAP's Board of Governors.

Col. Mary Feik will be greatly missed by all. 

Tribute video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HT0lTiVwsUc


On a personal note:  I first met Col Mary Feik during the 2005 CAWG Conference.  In the years that have followed, I looked forward to seeing Mary at the various wing/region/national conferences that we attended.  I will miss her conversations...but more than that her hugs.   She was truly a joy to be around and an inspiration to all. "Blue skies and tail winds", my friend.


Disclaimer:  Not to be confused with the other user that goes by "Chappy"   :)

MacGruff

I met her last year at the joint NER conference. She was - what? - 91? at the time and you could not get within 10 feet of her unless you were a cadet! They were all around her listening to every word and absorbing every moment of her presence. What a great lady!