When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.Wally Funk emerging from a Blue Origin capsule after her suborbital spaceflight on July 20, 2021. | Credit: Blue OriginWally Funk, who flew to space at 82 after a lifetime of flying and fighting for women in aviation and aerospace, has passed away at age 87.Born in Texas in 1939, Funk was determined to take to the skies, flying as a teenager and becoming a professional aviator at the tender age of 20. Her dreams extended even beyond Earth, and in 1961 she joined the “Mercury 13” group of women who completed the testing given to NASA’s male Apollo astronauts. But Funk was the only Mercury 13 alum to ever reach space. After a lifetime of flying, in July 2021, the then 82-year-old Funk launched to suborbital space aboard a Blue Origin New Shepard vehicle, a trip that she described as “incredible.”AdvertisementAdvertisement”We are deeply saddened by the passing of Wally Funk,” Blue Origin shared in a statement on X on Thursday (July 9). “Wally was a pioneer in every sense of the word … On NS-16, sixty years later, Wally made history as the oldest astronaut at the time and remains the oldest woman to ever fly to space. It was a moment six decades in the making. We were humbled to be part of her journey. Her story will continue to inspire generations of future explorers. Fly Wally, Fly.”Making space historyFunk’s spaceflight was historic in every sense of the word. “I’ve been waiting a long time to finally get up there,” she said during a livestreamed postflight briefing at the time. “I’ve done a lot of astronaut training through the world — Russia, America … I could always beat the guys on what they were doing, because I was always stronger. I’ve always done everything on my own.”Wally Funk early in her aviation career. | Credit: Blue OriginAt the time of her spaceflight, Funk was the oldest person to ever go to space. But she was also the only member of the Mercury 13 to ever make it there. Funk joined the group, officially called the “Women in Space” program, as its youngest member at only 21 years old. Led by physician William Lovelace, the program put a group of young women through the same rigorous physical and mental testing as NASA’s male astronauts to see how they would fare. And, across the board, the group either kept pace with or even excelled by comparison.While the program didn’t have official government sponsorship, there was hope that success could pave the way for women to be allowed into the human spaceflight program. (NASA astronauts were all male at the time; the agency didn’t select a female astronaut candidate until 1978.) And in a way, it did, though it took far longer than the group likely expected.AdvertisementAdvertisementDespite the group not leading to spaceflight access for women at the time, the participants proved their capability beyond doubt. In one particular test, participants were submerged in a sensory deprivation tank, a test meant to measure a participant’s mental fortitude. While famed NASA astronaut John Glenn — who became the first American to orbit Earth — lasted three hours in the tank, Funk stayed in for a whopping 10 hours and 35 minutes.’Married to airplanes’Though Funk was quite young when she joined the Mercury 13, she’d already racked up years of aviation experience and an impressive array of accomplishments. In fact, Funk, who never married, famously said that she was “married to airplanes.”From her teenage experience with the “Flying Susies,” Funk found her way to the skies as early as possible. And following her participation in the Mercury 13 program, Funk became the first female civilian flight instructor at a U.S. military base. Her aviation career was storied; she served as the National Transportation Safety Board’s first female Air Safety Investigator, competed in air races and was even chief pilot for multiple aviation schools across the country, sharing her knowledge and expertise with countless aviation hopefuls.But while she continued to make history an …