AFA - US Airways E-Line
March 16, 2002
http://www.afausairways.org/eline.htm
Contents:
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AFA Interactive - Special Tribute
Edition
Ada Brown Greenfield - Founder,
Association of Flight Attendants
AFA
Interactive - Special Tribute Edition
Ada Brown Greenfield - Founder,
Association of Flight Attendants
June 27, 1917 - March 12,
2002
We are deeply saddened by
the death of Ada Brown on March 12, 2002. Our tremendous appreciation and
admiration for all that she did for flight attendants and our profession
will remain with us always.
In the very early days of
our profession, flight attendants fit a very narrow description: young,
single registered nurses who met height, weight and appearance requirements.
One of those stewardesses was Ada Brown, who was hired by United Airlines
in 1940.
In 1943, Brown spent a year
working in management as Assistant and Chief Stewardess before she rejoined
the line stewardesses in 1944. Brown recognized the widespread discrimination
that stewardesses faced on the job, and how badly they needed to organize
to improve their pay and working conditions.
"We hadn't had an increase
in pay in 15 years," Brown explained later. "We had no rules or regulations
about flight time. If a stewardess didn't show up to replace you on multi-stops
across the country, the company would just say, 'You have to continue flying.'
And we had no grievance procedure."
Brown and a group of her
flying partners signed up almost 300 women, and formed the world's first
stewardess union at United, the Air Line Stewardess Association (ALSA).
"I know management never thought we'd really do it," Brown recalled. "As
far as I know, we were the first women to have negotiated a contract on
our own."
ALSA was established on August
22, 1945 and Ada Brown was elected president. The first stewardess agreement
was signed April 16, 1946. All future flight attendants at United now had
a forum to negotiate for their rates of pay, rules, and working conditions.
Brown's commitment to organizing
was legendary and contagious. "We've already started organizing at several
airlines," Brown explained at the time, "and I hope to start the others
going very shortly. We want this to become a national association."
Today, thanks to Ada Brown,
and other brave, forward-thinking women and men, flight attendants at United
Airlines and 25 other carriers are represented by the union that grew from
ALSA: The Association of Flight Attendants.
With seven years of seniority,
Brown was forced to resign her career and union presidency when she married
in 1947. Had she not been forced out by United's no-marriage rule, she
would have continued to fly.
"Founding our union needed
to be done," Brown said at an AFA Board of Directors meeting in 1995. "And
I am proud that I was able to help get it going."
For more information on Ada
Brown Greenfield and other AFA founders, visit http://www.ual.com/site/primary/0,10017,2286,00.html
and follow the links to 'Flight Attendant History' at the bottom of each
'Era' page.
Visit http://www.afanet.org
for a photo of Ada Brown Greenfield and for more information about the
union she founded. |