1969, William Dana Orcutt, Celebrities Off Parade: Pen-and-ink Portrait Sketches[1], →ISBN, page 111:
“... — Did you know that she was an aviatrix?” he interjected.
1987, Pat Browne, Heroines of Popular Culture[2], →ISBN, page 54:
The Women Flyers: From Aviatrix to Astronaut
2001, Roger E. Bilstein, Flight in America: From the Wrights to the Astronauts[3], →ISBN, page 22:
Hariet Quimby, a writer for Leslie's Weekly, in 1911 became the first American aviatrix and won international accalim in 1912 as the first woman to pilot a plan across the English Channel.
2002, Deena Mandrell, Deadbeat Dads: Subjectivity and Social Construction[4], →ISBN, page 307:
In 1929 she turned an ide that she ‘stole’ from her son into a screenplay, Wings in the Dark, featuring a protagonist based on Ameria Earhart, the famous aviatrix with whom Shipman was acquainted...