Kimberly's Flight: The Story of Captain Kimberly Hampton, America's First Woman Combat Pilot Killed in Battle

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Casemate Publishers, 2 Apr 2013 - Biography & Autobiography - 240 pages
US Army Captain Kimberly N. Hampton was living her dream: flying armed helicopters in combat and commanding D Troop, 1st Squadron, 17th Cavalry, the armed reconnaissance aviation squadron of the 82nd Airborne Division. An all-American girl from a small Southern mill town, Hampton was a top scholar, student body president, ROTC battalion commander, and highly ranked college tennis player. In 1998, she was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the army. Driven by determination and ambition, Hampton rapidly rose through the ranks in the almost all-male bastion of military aviation to command a combat aviation troop. On January 2, 2004, Captain Hampton was flying an OH-58D Kiowa Warrior helicopter above Fallujah, Iraq, in support of a raid on an illicit weapons marketplace, searching for an elusive sniper on the rooftops below. A little past noon, her helicopter was wracked by an explosion. A heat-seeking surface-to-air missile had knocked off the helicopter’s tail boom. The helicopter crashed, killing Hampton. Kimberly’s Flight is the story of Captain Hampton’s exemplary life. This story is told through nearly fifty interviews and her own e-mails to family and friends, and is entwined with her mother’s narrative of loving and losing a child.

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About the author (2013)

Retired award-winning journalist Anna Simon has been a reporter with The Greenville News in South Carolina for twenty-one years. She received the South Carolina Press Association’s first place award for Reporting in Depth in 2009 and is a past recipient of multiple awards for education, news, and feature reporting, as well as the press association’s Judson Chapman Award for community service. Kimberly’s mother, Ann Hampton, first met Anna Simon at the bleakest point in her life, immediately following her daughter’s death, when Simon wrote a series of stories for The Greenville News about Kimberly’s life and the reaction in the small Southern town of Easley, South Carolina, to her death. Ann Hampton has traveled twice to Iraq; in 2010, as a Gold Star Mom, she joined a Hugs for Healing program sanctioned by the US State Department, in which American and Iraqi mothers grieving the deaths of their children work side-by-side on humanitarian projects; and in 2011, she worked on a humanitarian mission with Friends of Kurdistan. 

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