Updated On: 21 May, 2023 11:57 AM IST | Mumbai | Nidhi Lodaya
Ahead of the diamond jubilee of Air India’s maiden international journey, its last surviving crew member speaks to mid-day from Connecticut

Thelma McCoy was one of only two hostesses on the flight serving 35 passengers
It was on June 8, 1948 when Malabar Princess, Air India’s first international flight took off and made Indian civil aviation history. From then Bombay, it left for London via Cairo and Geneva.
Ahead of the airline’s 75th anniversary, Santa Cruz-based aviation enthusiast and historian Debasish Chakraverty introduced us to Thelma McCoy, the last surviving crew member, and one of two air-hostesses on board the Malabar Princess. “I became interested in the young flight attendant when I saw the photograph of the flight’s arrival at London airport on June 9,” says Chakraverty. He got in touch with her cousin, Carlton Ross, and McCoy’s daughter, Rhonda Young, who then facilitated the interview with the nonagenarian.