Audrey Sale-Barker

Audrey Florice Durell "Wendy" Drummond Sale-Barker[1][2] (1903 – 21 December 1994) was a British alpine skiing champion and prominent aviator.

Very tall, extremely slim, her height accentuated by trousers so long that they touched the ground around her boots, pale honey-coloured hair, a vague dreamy expression, and when she skied I can only describe her as a sleep-walker.

She had incredible courage, and I will never forget seeing her take the last steep slope of Dengert at the finish of the 1928 Arlberg-Kandahar absolutely straight, with lifted arms like someone in a trance.In 1929 a letter was received inviting the British to send skiers to compete in an event in Poland.

The organisers in Zakopane were surprised to find that the British team included Sale-Barker and another LSC founder member Doreen Elliott.

[9] In October and November 1932, she and another female pilot, Joan Page, flew from London to Cape Town in a de Havilland Gipsy Moth.

In June 1940, Sale-Barker joined the Women's Section of the Air Transport Auxiliary (ATA), the organisation responsible for ferrying military aircraft from the aircraft-factories to the RAF units.

[18] In a remembrance written a few days after her death by her sister-in-law, Elizabeth Douglas-Hamilton, Duchess of Hamilton and Brandon, she described her postwar married life as a selfless one, dedicated to supporting her husband and those in need.

Flying in 1932
Skiing in 1939
Five ATA flyers Lettice Curtis , Jenny Broad , Audrey Sale-Barker, Gabrielle Patterson and Pauline Gower in 1942 by an Airspeed Oxford trainer