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Light Hearted special edition – Dolly Snow Bicknell and the Flying Santa

Light Hearted special edition – Dolly Snow Bicknell and the Flying Santa

Published 5 years, 5 months ago
Description

The Flying Santa tradition traces its origins to a pioneering pilot named Bill Wincapaw. Wincapaw flew amphibious airplanes around the Penobscot Bay region in Maine. He often relied on the area’s lighthouses to get him safely home. To show his appreciation to the lighthouse keepers and their families, on Christmas Day 1929 he loaded his plane with a dozen packages containing gifts for the lighthouse families. He dropped the packages at some of the lighthouses in the Penobscot Bay region.

The Flying Santa plane passes Boston Light in 1947 (Friends of Flying Santa)

In the years that followed, Wincapaw expanded the flights to more of the Maine coast and to the other New England states. A few years later the Wincapaw family relocated to Winthrop, Massachusetts. Bill Wincapaw Jr. had a history teacher at Winthrop High School by the name of Edward Rowe Snow, a budding historian. Edward Rowe Snow took an interest in the Flying Santa and took part in the 1936 flights. After some years when the Flying Santa duties were shared by the Wincapaws and Edward Rowe Snow, Bill Wincapaw Sr. died in a plane crash in 1947.

Edward Rowe Snow with his wife, Ann-Myrle Snow, and their daughter, Dolly, in 1963. (Friends of Flying Santa).

From the Christmas season that year through 1980, Mr. Snow kept the Flying Santa tradition alive. His wife, Anna-Myrle Snow, flew along each year, and their daughter Dolly took part beginning the year she was born in 1951.

Edward Rowe Snow loading the Flying Sa
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