Patricia Graham was the only daughter of Mr and Mrs Walter R. Graham of
Coffs Harbour. She managed two hairdressing salons in Coffs Harbour before, at the age of nineteen, deciding to learn how to fly aircraft. She took lessons at the Coffs Harbour branch of the Newcastle Aero Club before moving to
Tamworth to gain experience on a wider variety of aircraft. In 1950, she became a founding member of the Australian Women Pilots' Association and in May 1951, Patricia Graham, Heather McDougall and Elizabeth Beeston piloted a plane together to Sydney in order to attend the association's first meeting. Graham gained her Commercial B class licence in Australia on 29 October 1951, making her the third woman after
Nancy Ellis and
Helen Curkett to achieve a commercial pilot licence in the country. Graham undertook the written test in
Newcastle with Heather McDougall. Unable to find employment in Australia, in 1952 on the recommendation of her brother, Graham started working as a trainee pilot for Gibbes Sepik Airways in
Papua New Guinea, a bush airline founded by Royal Australian Air Force ace
Bobby Gibbes. The decision of Gibbes to hire her resulted in Graham becoming both the only female pilot in Papua New Guinea at the time and the first female commercial pilot in the country. The airline carried cargo and passengers around the country, and Graham initially flew
Lockheed L-18s, later progressing to the role of captain on
Noorduyn Norseman aircraft. In later life, Graham regained her fixed wing licence at
Archerfield Airport in
Brisbane. In 2015 she was a special guest at the 65th anniversary celebrations of the Australian Women Pilots’ Association and Archerfield Airport’s first
Brisbane Open House. ==References==