Future Top Gun could become Miss America this month
  • 4 months ago
A potential Top Gun may become Miss America this month.

Madison Marsh is not only the current Miss Colorado and a Harvard student but, as a U.S. Air Force 2nd lieutenant, has a coveted place to train as a fighter pilot.

On 14 January, the 22-year-old will compete for the Miss America crown in Florida, an event featuring several phases including a public interview, as well as evening gown and fitness stages.

The Arkansas native explains: "Pageants are changing and one of the ways is in what being physically fit means to women."

"For me, it's great because I need to stay physically fit and in the gym for the military, so it already coincides with pageant training.”

From a young age, Madison had a love of science and a dream to be a pilot and astronaut. Her parents encouraged her dreams, sending her to Space Camp when she was 13 years old where she met astronauts and fighter pilots.

Around that time, she learned about the United States Air Force Academy. At 15 years old, she started flying lessons earning her pilot’s license two years later and then began to work towards her goal of becoming a cadet.

Marsh was crowned Miss Colorado in May 2023, just before graduating from the United States Air Force Academy (USAFA) and commissioning as an Air Force Officer.

Currently, she is in a master’s degree program at the Harvard Kennedy School through the Air Force Institute of Technology’s Civilian Institution Programs.

While at USAFA, Marsh decided she would try competing in pageants as an extracurricular activity.

She says: "As a freshman at the Academy, you might have a hard time finding your identity in a very new and challenging environment."

"My cousin had competed in pageants for a long time, and one of the big things about it that I love is the community service aspect and the focus on public speaking."

Three years later, she was crowned Miss Colorado.

Madison says: "It was very surreal. I believe I'm the first active duty officer from any branch to represent at the national level of the Miss America organisation."

Madison is quick to address the many preconceived notions and stereotypes about beauty pageants and their contestants.

She explains: "The Miss America organisation that I'm a part of now is all focused on what you can provide for the community through your social impact, making sure that you have a stellar resume, that you're good at public speaking, that you can connect with people and are empowered to lead in other ways that's not just about you."

As Miss Colorado, Marsh enjoys talking with other young girls about being a pilot and serving in the military and sees it as an opportunity to dispel stereotypes that exist about military women.

She says: "It’s an awesome experience to bring both sides of the favourite parts of my life together and hopefully make a difference for others to be able to realise that you don't have to limit yourself."

"In the military, it's an open space to really lead in the way that you want to lead - in and out of uniform. I felt like pageants, and specifically winning Miss Colorado, was a way to truly exemplify that and to set the tone to help make other people feel more comfortable finding what means most to them."

But Madison's future may see her as a Top Gun fighter pilot.

Upon graduation from USAFA and commissioning into the Air Force, she received a coveted pilot slot and is currently determining the career opportunities and personal projects she wants to pursue.

However, the sad loss of her mother to pancreatic cancer may see Madison's career take in cancer research.

She says: "I lost my mom about five years ago to pancreatic cancer and I started a nonprofit almost immediately afterwards with my family to raise money and awareness of pancreatic cancer for people in our town."

"I'm now trying to take the next step and use my studies from the Kennedy School to learn about the inner workings and the difficulties of what policy really looks like."

"Issues like economic environments and other social pressures that might be inhibiting our ability to implement cancer policies that can affect all Americans."

In September, Marsh started a two-year master’s degree program in public policy from the Harvard Kennedy School through the Air Force Institute of Technology’s Civilian Institution Programs.

She will also work with the Dana Farber Cancer Institute and a professor from the Harvard Medical School to research early detection of pancreatic cancer.

“Towards the end of my time at USAFA, I started to realise that my bigger passions were in policy-making and cancer research so that's why I ended up at the Kennedy School,” adds Madison.
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