"Pam Jordan, who has died aged 99, was believed to be the last of six women who served as Second World War motorcycle despatch riders in the Air Transport Auxiliary, or ATA. The younger of two daughters of a Bedfordshire farmer, Pamela Logsdon (as she then was) enrolled in the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry after leaving school. FANYs served as SOE agents, in motor transport – famously, training the young Princess Elizabeth to drive and service lorries – and many as nurses, including Pam after she failed a driving test. Tired of checking for nits and administering enemas, she leapt at the suggestion of her Bedfordshire friend John Jordan that she join the ATA as a motorcycle rider. He had been thrown out of the RAF for indiscipline in 1942 and became one of the ATA’s most unruly but most skilled pilots, delivering 53 different types of aircraft for the RAF – once, in 1944, taking a wildly illegal detour over Normandy “to see how the invasion’s coming along” in a brand new Mosquito which lacked the Allied black-and-white stripes, meaning either side could, and would, have shot him down. Pam joined the ATA aged 19 in February 1945 and rode a Triumph T100, 750cc Nortons and BSA M20s. She never did crash a bike – just as well, as she would have been unable to pick them up. In the cold of winter she would stuff a magazine down her front as insulation. Navigation was tricky during the black-outs, with road signs removed for the duration and with no maps – although she found that local taxi drivers could be helpful, once they had got over their surprise at being asked for directions by a woman despatch rider. Pamela Dorothy Logsdon was born on April 4 1925 to William Logsdon and Dorothy, née Powers. She would later recall her pride as her parents came to admire her smart uniform and shining bike at an ATA open day at White Waltham aerodrome. Demobbed at the end of November 1945, she married John Jordan in 1946 and was widely known as “Whizzer” for her love of fast cars – John becoming known as “Shunter” for the way he drove his." Pam Jordan, last of the ATA’s female motorcycle despatch riders in the Second World War