Winifred Spooner was born on 11 September 1900 in
Woolwich in
Kent, to Annie (née Kirk) and Major Walter B. Spooner, a fifth child and the only girl in the family. Her brothers made her learn to swim, a skill which later saved her life. She attended
Sherborne Girls in Dorset between 1916 and 1918. Both her parents died young, her father in 1901 and her mother on
Armistice Day, 11 November 1918 from influenza. she became a competitor in sports aviation. She was the 16th woman in Britain to receive a licence. She also received an Aviator's Certificate in the United States, dated 21 August 1931 and signed by
Orville Wright. Winifred's brothers, Tony and Frank, had leased farmland and stables near Folly Court in
Wokingham, Berkshire, where they schooled and sold polo-ponies, hunters and steeplechasers. They called their enterprise The Polo Farm. During the First World War Frank had served as a cavalry officer in India, and from 1917 to 1918 had been the head of the equestrian school. Winifred's other brother, Captain Hugh "Tony" Spooner, who served in the
19th King George's Own Lancers, married to
Glenda Spooner, was Superintendent of Flying Operations and Chief Pilot to the Misr-Airwork Company of Egypt. He was killed in a flying accident in a sandstorm in Egypt on 15 March 1935. There was a field on the farm big enough upon which to land a light aircraft, so Winifred built a wooden hangar and moved her Moth from
Stag Lane. During this period Winifred, Hugh and Frank lived at 4 South Drive in
Wokingham, with Frank's daughter Vivian. Winifred continued her air-taxi service, charging £4 an hour or one shilling a mile, covering Britain and France, and gave flying lessons. She also bought a car; Wokingham locals recall her being one of the first woman drivers in the area. Some time later she moved to Scott's Farm near Bearwood, now part of
Woosehill. == Achievements ==