The aviation world is mourning Bette Nash, a D.C.-based flight attendant who died earlier this month after spending nearly seven decades serving passengers in the skies — and making history along the way.
Nash
began her career
The industry changed drastically during Nash’s tenure, especially with the introduction of technology (no more handwritten tickets, for example). But, as she said at a celebration of her
60 years of service
“My favorite part of flying over the years has been greeting my passengers as they board and deplane,” Nash said at the time. “People really are fascinating and it’s truly been a joy.”
Nash became an increasingly recognizable fixture on American Airlines flights in recent years — particularly on shuttle flights between Washington and Boston, which the company affectionately nicknamed “the
Nash-Dash
Nash earned the
Guinness World Record
And she never officially retired, according to
ABC News
American Airlines confirmed her death
in a statement
The Association of Professional Flight Attendants also
mourned Nash’s passing
“Her passion for flying and her commitment to her passengers were truly inspiring,” continued the union, which represents thousands of American Airlines flight attendants. “Bette’s legacy will forever be remembered in the aviation community and by all who had the privilege of knowing her.”
Highlights from a historic career

Nash was inspired to become a flight attendant from her first time on a plane as a teenager, flying from Washington to Dayton, Ohio.
She “fell in love with ‘the spiffy appearances and gracious manners of the crew members,’ ” according to American Airlines, and followed suit a few years later.
At the start of her career, in the late 1950s, passengers bought life insurance at an airport vending machine and paid their airfare on board, according to
ABC affiliate WJLA
Flight attendants had to wear gloves — a coworker remembered Nash would always
pack two pairs
“It used to be horrible,” Nash told WJLA in 2017. “You put on a few pounds and you had to keep weighing yourself, and then if you stayed that way, they would take ya off the payroll!”
Over the years, Nash served many famous passengers — including Jackie Kennedy, according to American Airlines. But she said her most memorable encounter wasn’t with a big-name celebrity.
In a
2019 interview
American Airlines celebrated Nash’s “
diamond jubilee
The company gave her a pair of diamond earrings to mark her 60th work anniversary and donated $10,000 to the Sacred Heart Catholic Church Food Bank, a cause it said she regularly supported.
Nash said at the time that she didn’t plan to hang up her wings anytime soon.
“As long as I have my health and I’m able, why not work,” she said. “It’s still fun.”
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