Having flown
military assault gliders during the war, Burns took up
gliding as a sport in 1954 winning awards and establishing both national and international records for women. On her first cross-country flight, from
Lasham, Hampshire in an
Eon Olympia she reached
RAF Ternhill, Shropshire in 4hr 55min breaking the British women's distance record. In December 1956, she flew a
Slingsby Skylark 3b to setting new women's British national and UK absolute altitude and gain-of-height records. Again flying a Skylark 3, she became the first woman to cross the
English Channel in a glider in 1957. She was presented with the
British Women Pilots' Association's
Jean Lennox Bird Trophy on 28 April 1960 by
Lord Brabazon of Tara for her record flight on 10 May 1959, breaking all then existing British women's glider records. By 1961 she held 10 of the 11 UK women's records including the current altitude record of . In breaking the altitude record in South Africa she had entered the base of a
cumulonimbus cloud at about 6,000 ft above ground. On the way up, there were electrical discharges to the pilot's knees from various metal parts of the aircraft. At about 34,000 ft there was a nearby major strike which discharged itself violently through the left wing. A small panel from the wing was blown away. Anne was temporarily confused by this shock but, coming-to more or less instantaneously, she decided it was time to get out of the cloud and descend. In 1962, Anne and Denis Burns were jointly awarded the Royal Aero Club's
Britannia Trophy for their gliding achievements. In 1963 she claimed the women's world record for speed over a 500 km triangular course of 103.33 km/h. In 1966 she became British Gliding Champion, the first woman to hold the title. She received many other awards for gliding achievements including the
Fédération Aéronautique Internationale Lilienthal Gliding Medal in 1966. In 1977 her glider tail parachute deployed unexpectedly at high altitude. She decided to bail out but became tangled in the parachute's
shroud lines, nevertheless escaping with only an injured ankle by landing in a sycamore tree. She thus became the first woman since the 1930s to become a member of
Irvin's Caterpillar Club and aged 62, she was also the oldest person ever to join this club. She then gave up gliding and took up fly fishing and snooker, again winning awards in both sports. Anne Burns died on 22 January 2001. ==References==