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Here's what you need to know about 'The Flying Seven', BC's first female pilots (VIDEO)

In a massive WW2 fundraising campaign, the group dropped thousands of pamphlets from their planes onto Vancouver

This is the story of how a group of seven women from Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­not only helped change the perception of women in aviation but for society in general.

In 1936 there were only seven female pilots in all of British Columbia and they all flew out of Langley airport. Wanting to help the war effort, they offered their services to the military but were turned down. In fact, female pilots weren't accepted into the military in Canada for another 40-or-so years.

Instead, the group decided to band together to let everyone know women could "do anything", as pilot Marcia Strang, who flew with some of The Flying Seven in the 1980s, said in a 2019 interview.

They got thousands of pamphlets printed that were effectively a fundraising effort and dropped them all over the city of Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­from their planes.

With the money raised, they were able to buy eight training aircraft.

And train people they did; Harry Pride is now over 90 years old, and he trained under Rosalie "Rolie" Moore of The Flying Seven.

He started flying in 1945, with Moore as his instructor.

"She was a very brave woman who tried all sorts of stuff in airplanes, which a lot of men wouldn't do", Pride said in 2019, adding that Moore had won a number of awards during her career.

She did aerobatics, formation flying, and something called "ribbon cutting" where she would tilt her aircraft and cut a ribbon (suspended between two sticks a few feet from the ground) with the wing.

The "Dawn to Dusk Patrol" was an event that The Flying Seven are perhaps best known for.

At dawn, one pilot would take off, then before she landed another would take off, and so on until dusk. It was an entire day with women in the air, meant to show how safe and confident they were.

As Strang tells it, They wanted to make sure everyone knew "a woman's place was in the sky".

These days only 6% of pilots in Canada are women, so we still have a long way to go.

However there has been a lot of progress since The Flying Seven took to the skies in the 1930s.

This story was originally published in 2019 as part of a series called , a British Columbia history TV show co-produced by Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­ and Artaban Productions. A book of the same name is set to be published in time for the province's centennial celebrations in 2021. Watch all of the episodes for free on .