Written By: Ben Cosgrove

When LIFE ran a cover story in August 1958 on women that the magazine dubbed “Glamor Girls of the Air,” a career as an “air hostess” was still a relatively new pursuit. The way that LIFE described that pursuit, meanwhile, verged on the (almost laughably) patronizing:

The rather odd education that the girls [featured in this article] are getting is preparing them for one of the most coveted careers open to young American women today. They all want to be airline stewardesses. . . . The job they want does not pay extraordinarily well, only $255 to $355 a month. The life is irregular and opportunities for promotion are small. But the chance to fly, to see the world, and meet all sorts of interesting people mostly the kind of men who can afford to travel by plane gives the job real glamor. And the dawning age of jet transport, in which the stewardesses and their planes will go a lot farther and faster, gives it new excitement.

U.S. airlines employ 8,200 stewardesses. The positions are so eagerly sought that only three to five of every hundred girls who apply to major airlines are taken. To qualify, a girl should be between 21 and 26 years old, unmarried, reasonably pretty and slender, especially around the hips, which will be at eye level for the passengers. She should have been to high school, be poised and tactful, have a good disposition and a pleasant speaking voice.

You get the picture. But above and beyond the mid-century blather about slender hips and rich husbands-to-be, the article in LIFE offered a surprisingly nuanced picture of a stewardess-in-training’s day-to-day existence. From emergency drills and comportment exercises to the sisterly camaraderie forged during a month and a half spent working and playing together in this case, at a stewardess school near Dallas, Texas it’s clear that learning to be a “hostess with the mostest,” as LIFE put it, was no walk in the park.

 

Liz Ronk edited this gallery for LIFE.com. Follow her on Twitter @lizabethronk.

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Emergency exit from plane is practiced by Louise Becker who leaps down canvas slide at Fort Worth's airport. Slide is dusted with chalk to make it slippery. Louise made perfect seat-first landing.

An emergency exit from the plane was practiced by Louise Becker, who leapt down the canvas slide at Fort Worth’s airport. The slide was dusted with chalk to make it slippery. Louise made a perfect seat-first landing.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Stewardess School, 1958

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Farewell for newly graduated stewardesses, Ft. Worth, Texas, 1958.

A farewell for newly graduated stewardesses, Ft. Worth, Texas, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Recent stewardess-school graduates, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Recent stewardess-school graduates, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Stewardess school, Texas, 1958.

Recent stewardess-school graduates, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

More Like This

lifestyle

A Joyful Thanksgiving and a “Marriage Experiment”

lifestyle

Pamper House: America As It Was Learning to Treat Itself

lifestyle

Wild and Frozen: Minnesota at Its Coldest and Most Remote

lifestyle

A Lone Star Fashion Show, 1939

lifestyle

The Moment When Sweaters Grew Up

lifestyle

The Logging Life: Gone Down the River