Dara Fitzpatrick | |
---|---|
Born | 1971/1972 Kilternan, Dublin, Ireland |
Died |
(aged 45) Castlebar, County Mayo, Ireland |
Occupation | Irish Coast Guard helicopter search and rescue pilot |
Years active | 1992–2017 |
Children | 1 |
Dara Fitzpatrick (1971/1972 – 14 March 2017) was the Irish Coast Guard's most senior helicopter search and rescue pilot. As a Captain, she piloted the Dublin-based Rescue 116 helicopter. She was killed in the 2017 Irish Coast Guard Rescue 116 crash in March 2017.
Fitzpatrick had originally wanted to join Aer Lingus, but didn't get accepted. The Irish Air Corps was hiring pilots, so she began taking helicopter lessons. She was one of the first women to pilot an aircraft for the Irish Marine Emergency Service, the precursor to the Coast Guard. She was initially stationed with the Shannon-based search and rescue team, before transferring to Waterford in 2002 where she became chief pilot of the Rescue 117 helicopter, a Sikorsky S-61N. She later joined the Dublin Coast Guard crew and was pilot in charge of Rescue 116, a modern Sikorsky S-92A.
She was the first woman pilot with Irish Marine Emergency Services. In 2010 she and her crew received the "Best of Irish Award" for rescuing an airplane pilot who had crashed into the Irish Sea. In August 2013, Fitzpatrick and her colleague, Captain Carmel Kirby, made Irish aviation history when they crewed the first all-female mission in the Irish Coast Guard helicopter service.
In 2007, she created a video with the Irish Bishops’ Conference, on the theme of "alcohol and the challenge of moderation." She was also known for her starring role in Rescue 117, a 2011 documentary series on RTÉ which gave behind-the-scenes access to the helicopter search and rescue service.
Fitzpatrick died after her search and rescue team's helicopter, Rescue 116, crashed into the Atlantic Ocean while providing top cover for the Sligo-based search and rescue helicopter, Rescue 118, during a rescue mission off the west coast of County Mayo, Ireland. Fitzpatrick was found and later pronounced dead at Mayo University Hospital in Castlebar. The body belonging to one of the missing crew was found in the cockpit section of the aircraft on 24 March by Navy divers and it was retrieved on 26 March after which it was identified as that of co-pilot Captain Mark Duffy. The two remaining members of her crew; Winch Operator Paul Ormsby and Winchman Ciarán Smith are still missing. The search and rescue operation is still ongoing. Her funeral took place on 18 March and she was buried.