Maxine Dunlap was born in 1908 in
Pleasanton, California, the daughter of Henry H. and Catherine M. Dunlap ( Langan). She grew up in
Oakland, California, and attended the
University of California. The February 1939
Charlotte Observer writes that Dunlap became "smitten with lindberghitis" in 1927; The
San Francisco Examiner of April 29, 1929 notes that Dunlap's glider qualification flight made her the first woman in the US to receive a glider pilot's license. Furthermore, her flight's duration of 50 seconds "far exceeded the record of 17 seconds flight formerly held by
Amelia Earhart, the Atlantic flyer. Miss Earhart was unable to remain aloft for the requisite 30 seconds to qualify for a license." In March 1930 she became the first woman glider club president in the U.S. after being appointed by the National Glider Association as president of the Bay Region California Gliding Club. She joined the newly-founded
Ninety Nines in 1930 and participated in many
air races. In 1935 she set the women world speed record for light airplanes in
Tulsa, Oklahoma. ==Personal life==