- "Earhart" redirects here. For the alternative
spelling, see Earheart.
Amelia Mary Earhart ( );
(born July 24, 1897; missing July 2, 1937) was a noted American
aviation pioneer and
author. Earhart was the first
woman to receive the Distinguished Flying
Cross, awarded for becoming the first aviatrix to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean
. She set many other records, wrote
best-selling books about her flying experiences and was
instrumental in the formation of The
Ninety-Nines, an organization for female
pilots. Earhart joined the faculty of the world famous
Purdue
University aviation department in 1935 as a visiting faculty
member to counsel women on careers and help inspire others with her
love for aviation. She was also a member of the
National Woman's Party, and an early
supporter of the
Equal Rights
Amendment.
During an
attempt to make a circumnavigational flight of the globe in
1937 in a Purdue-funded Lockheed
L-10 Electra, Earhart disappeared over the central Pacific Ocean
near Howland Island
. Fascination with her life, career and
disappearance continues to this day.
Early life
Childhood

Amelia Earhart
Amelia
Mary Earhart, daughter of Samuel "Edwin" Stanton Earhart (March 28,
1867) and Amelia "Amy" Otis Earhart (1869–1962), was born in
Atchison
, Kansas
, in the home
of her maternal grandfather, Alfred Gideon Otis (1827–1912), a
former federal judge,
president of the Atchison Savings Bank and a leading citizen in
Atchison. This was the second child in the marriage as an
infant was stillborn in August 1896. Alfred Otis had not initially
favored the marriage and was not satisfied with Edwin's progress as
a
lawyer.
Amelia was named, according to family custom, after her two
grandmothers (Amelia Josephine Harres and Mary Wells Patton). From
an early age Amelia, nicknamed "Meeley" (sometimes "Millie") was
the ringleader while younger sister (two years her junior), Grace
Muriel Earhart (1899–1998), nicknamed "Pidge," acted the dutiful
follower. Both girls continued to answer to their childhood
nicknames well into adulthood. Their upbringing was unconventional
since Amy Earhart did not believe in molding her children into
"nice little girls." Meanwhile their maternal grandmother
disapproved of the "
bloomers"
worn by Amy's children and although Amelia liked the freedom they
provided, she was aware other girls in the neighborhood did not
wear them.
Early influence
A spirit of adventure seemed to abide in the Earhart children with
the pair setting off daily to explore their neighborhood. As a
child, Amelia spent long hours playing with Pidge, climbing trees,
hunting rats with a rifle and "belly-slamming" her sled downhill.
Although this love of the outdoors and "rough-and-tumble" play was
common to many youngsters, some biographers have characterized the
young Amelia as a
tomboy. The girls kept
"worms, moths,
katydid and a tree
toad" in a growing collection gathered in their outings.
In 1904,
with the help of her uncle, she cobbled together a home-made ramp
fashioned after a roller coaster she had seen on a trip to St.
Louis
and secured the ramp to the roof of the family
toolshed. Amelia's well-documented first flight ended
dramatically. She emerged from the broken wooden box that had
served as a sled with a bruised lip, torn dress and a "sensation of
exhilaration." She exclaimed, "Oh, Pidge, it's just like
flying!"
Although
there had been some missteps in his career up to that point, in
1907 Edwin Earhart's job as a claims officer for the Rock Island Railroad led to a transfer
to Des
Moines
, Iowa
. The
next year, at the age of 10, Amelia saw her first
aircraft at the Iowa
State fair in Des Moines. Her father tried to
interest her and her sister in taking a flight. One look at the
rickety old "flivver" was enough for Amelia (Millie), who promptly
asked if they could go back to the merry-go-round. She later
described the biplane as “a thing of rusty wire and wood and not at
all interesting.”
Education
The two sisters, Amelia and Muriel (she went by her middle name
from her teens on), remained with their grandparents in Atchison,
while their parents moved into new, smaller quarters in Des Moines.
During this period, Amelia received a form of home-schooling
together with her sister, from her mother and a governess. She
later recounted that she was "exceedingly fond of reading" and
spent countless hours in the large family library. In 1909, when
the family was finally reunited in Des Moines, the Earhart children
were enrolled in public school for the first time with Amelia
entering the seventh grade at the age of 12 years.
Family fortunes
While the family's finances seemingly improved with the acquisition
of a new house and even the hiring of two servants, it soon became
apparent Edwin was an alcoholic. Five years later (in 1914), he was
forced to retire and although he attempted to rehabilitate himself
through treatment, he was never reinstated at the Rock Island
Railroad. At about this time, Amelia's grandmother Amelia Otis died
suddenly, leaving a substantial estate that placed her daughter's
share in trust, fearing that Edwin's drinking would drain the
funds. The Otis house and all of its contents, was auctioned;
Amelia was heart-broken and later described it as the end of her
childhood.
In 1915,
after a long search, Amelia's father found work as a clerk at the
Great Northern Railway
in St. Paul, Minnesota, where Amelia entered Central High School
as a junior. Edwin applied for a transfer to Springfield
, Missouri
, in 1915 but the current claims officer
reconsidered his retirement and demanded his job back, leaving the
elder Earhart with nowhere to go. Facing another
calamitous move, Amy Earhart took her children to Chicago
where they
lived with friends. Amelia made an unusual condition in the
choice of her next schooling; she canvassed nearby high schools in
Chicago to find the best science program. She rejected the high
school nearest her home when she complained that the chemistry lab
was "just like a kitchen sink." She eventually was enrolled in
Hyde Park High School but
spent a miserable semester where a yearbook caption captured the
essence of her unhappiness, "A.E. – the girl in brown who walks
alone."
Amelia graduated from Hyde Park High School in 1916. Throughout her
troubled childhood, she had continued to aspire to a future career;
she kept a scrapbook of newspaper clippings about successful women
in predominantly male-oriented fields, including film direction and
production, law, advertising, management and mechanical
engineering.
She began junior college at Ogontz
School
in Rydal, Pennsylvania
but did not complete her program.
During
Christmas vacation in 1917, she visited her sister in Toronto
. World War I had
been raging and Earhart saw the returning wounded soldiers.
After
receiving training as a nurse's aide from the Red Cross
, she began work with the Volunteer Aid Detachment at
Spadina
Military Hospital
.Her duties included preparing food in the kitchen
for patients with special diets and handing out prescribed medication in the hospital's
dispensary.
1918 Spanish flu pandemic
When the 1918
Spanish flu pandemic
reached Toronto, Earhart was engaged in arduous nursing duties
including night shifts at the Spadina Military Hospital. She became
a patient herself, suffering from pneumonia and maxillary
sinusitis. She was hospitalized in early November
1918 owing to pneumonia and discharged in December 1918, about two
months after the illness had started. Her
sinus related symptoms were pain and
pressure around one eye and copious mucus drainage via the nostrils
and throat. In the hospital, in the pre-antibiotic era, she had
painful minor operations to wash out the affected maxillary sinus,
but these procedures were not successful and Earhart subsequently
suffered from worsening headache attacks.
Her convalescence
lasted nearly a year, which she spent at her sister's home in
Northampton
, Massachusetts
. She passed the time by reading poetry,
learning to play the banjo and studying mechanics. Chronic
sinusitis was to significantly affect Earhart's flying and
activities in later life, and sometimes even on the airfield she
was forced to wear a bandage on her cheek to cover a small drainage
tube.
Early flying experiences
At about
that time, with a young woman friend, Earhart visited an air fair
held in conjunction with the Canadian
National Exposition
in Toronto. One of the highlights of the day
was a flying exhibition put on by a World War I "ace." The pilot
overhead spotted Earhart and her friend, who were watching from an
isolated clearing and dived at them. "I am sure he said to himself,
'Watch me make them scamper,'" she said. Earhart characteristically
stood her ground, swept by a mixture of fear and exhilaration. As
the aircraft came close, something inside her awakened. "I did not
understand it at the time," she said, "but I believe that little
red airplane said something to me as it swished by."
By 1919
Earhart prepared to enter Smith College
but changed her mind and enrolled at Columbia University signing up for a
course in medical studies among other programs. She quit a year later
to be with her parents who had reunited in California
.
In
Long
Beach
, on December 28, 1920, she and her father visited
an airfield where Frank Hawks
(who later gained fame as an air racer)
gave her a ride that would forever change Earhart's life.
"By the time I had got two or three hundred feet off the ground,"
she said, "I knew I had to fly." After that 10-minute flight (that
cost her father $10), she immediately became determined to learn to
fly. Working at a variety of jobs, as a photographer, truck driver
and stenographer at the local telephone company, she managed to
save $1,000 for flying lessons. Earhart had her first lessons,
beginning on January 3, 1921, at Kinner Field near Long Beach but
to reach the airfield Amelia took a bus to the end of the line,
then walked four miles (6 km). Amelia's mother also provided
part of the $1,000.00 "stake" much against her "better judgement."
Her teacher was
Anita "Neta" Snook, a
pioneer female aviator who used a surplus
Curtiss JN-4 "Canuck" for training. Amelia
arrived with her father and a singular request, "I want to fly.
Will you teach me?"
Amelia's commitment to flying required her to accept the frequently
hard work and rudimentary conditions that accompanied early
aviation training. She chose a leather jacket but aware that other
aviators would be judging her, slept in it for three nights to give
the jacket a more "worn" look. To complete her image
transformation, she also cropped her hair short in the style of
other female flyers. Six months later, Amelia purchased a
second-hand bright yellow
Kinner Airster
biplane which she nicknamed "The Canary." On October
22, 1922, Earhart flew the Airster to an altitude of , setting a
world record for female pilots. On May 15, 1923, Earhart became the
16th woman to be issued a pilot's license (#
6017) by the
Fédération
Aéronautique Internationale (FAI).
Aviation career and marriage

Amelia Earhart, Los Angeles,
1928
Boston
According to the
Boston Globe,
she was "one of the best women pilots in the United States,"
although this characterization has been disputed by aviation
experts and experienced pilots in the decades since. Amelia was an
intelligent and competent pilot but hardly a brilliant aviator,
whose early efforts were characterized as inadequate by more
seasoned flyers. One serious miscalculation occurred during a
record attempt that had ended with her spinning down through a
cloud bank, only to emerge at . Experienced pilots admonished her,
"Suppose the clouds had closed in until they touched the ground?"
Earhart was chagrined, yet acknowledged her limitations as a pilot
and continued to seek out assistance throughout her career from
various instructors. By 1927, "Without any serious incident, she
had accumulated nearly 500 hours of solo flying – a very
respectable achievement."
Throughout this period, her grandmother's inheritance, which was
now administered by her mother, was constantly depleted until it
finally ran out following a disastrous investment in a failed
gypsum mine. Consequently, with no immediate
prospects for recouping her investment in flying, Earhart sold the
"Canary" as well as a second Kinner and bought a yellow
Kissel "Speedster" two-passenger
automobile, which she named the "Yellow Peril." Simultaneously,
Earhart experienced an exacerbation of her old sinus problem as her
pain worsened and in early 1924, she was hospitalized for another
sinus operation, which was again unsuccessful. After trying her
hand at a number of unusual ventures including setting up a
photography company, Amelia set out in a new direction.
Following
her parents' divorce in 1924, she drove her mother in the "Yellow
Peril" on a transcontinental trip from California with stops
throughout the West and even a jaunt up to Calgary
, Alberta
. The meandering tour eventually brought the
pair to Boston
, Massachusetts
where Amelia underwent another sinus procedure,
this operation being more successful. After recuperation,
she returned for several months to Columbia University but was
forced to abandon her studies and any further plans for enrolling
at the MIT
because her mother could no longer afford the
tuition fees and associated costs. Soon after, she found
employment first as a teacher, then as a social worker in 1925 at Denison House, living
in Medford,
Massachusetts
.
When she
lived in Medford, she flew out of Dennison Airport (later the
Naval Air
Station Squantum
) in Quincy, Massachusetts
and helped finance it. She also flew the
first official flight out of Dennison Airport in 1927.
Earhart maintained her interest in aviation, becoming a member of
the American Aeronautical Society's Boston chapter and was
eventually elected its vice president. She also invested a small
sum of money in the Dennison Airport as well as acting as a sales
representative for Kinner airplanes in the Boston area.
She wrote local
newspaper columns
promoting flying and as her local celebrity grew, she laid out the
plans for an organization devoted to female flyers.

Amelia Earhart being greeted by Mrs.
Foster Welch, Mayor of Southampton, June 20, 1928
1928 transatlantic flight
After
Charles Lindbergh's solo flight
across the Atlantic
in 1927, Amy Phipps Guest, (1873–1959), expressed
interest in being the first woman to fly (or be flown) across the
Atlantic Ocean. After deciding the trip was too perilous for
her to undertake, she offered to sponsor the project, suggesting
they find "another girl with the right image." While at work one
afternoon in April 1928, Earhart got a phone call from Capt. Hilton
H. Railey, who asked her, "Would you like to fly the
Atlantic?"
The project coordinators (including book publisher and publicist
George P. Putnam) interviewed Amelia and asked her to
accompany pilot
Wilmer Stultz and
co-pilot/mechanic Louis Gordon on the flight, nominally as a
passenger, but with the added duty of keeping the flight log.
The team
departed Trepassey Harbor
, Newfoundland
in a Fokker F.VIIb/3m
on June 17, 1928, landing at Burry Port
(near Llanelli
), Wales
, United
Kingdom
, exactly 20 hours and 40 minutes later.
Since most of the flight was on "instruments" and Amelia had no
training for this type of flying, she did not pilot the aircraft.
When interviewed after landing, she said, "Stultz did all the
flying—had to. I was just baggage, like a sack of potatoes." She
added, "...maybe someday I'll try it alone."
While in
England, Earhart is reported as receiving a rousing welcome on June
19, 1928, when landing at Woolston
in Southampton, England. She flew the
Avro Avian 594 Avian III, SN: R3/AV/101
owned by
Lady Mary Heath and later
purchased the aircraft and had it shipped back to the United States
(where it was assigned “unlicensed aircraft identification mark”
7083).
When the
Stultz, Gordon and Earhart flight crew returned to the United
States they were greeted with a ticker-tape parade in New York followed
by a reception with President Calvin Coolidge at the White House
.
Celebrity image
Trading on her physical resemblance to
Lindbergh, whom the press had dubbed
"Lucky Lindy," some newspapers and magazines began referring to
Amelia as "Lady Lindy." The United Press was more
grandiloquent; to them, Earhart was the
reigning "Queen of the Air." Immediately after her return to the
United States, she undertook an exhausting lecture tour
(1928–1929). Meanwhile, Putnam had undertaken to heavily promote
her in a campaign including publishing a book she authored, a
series of new lecture tours and using pictures of her in mass
market endorsements for products including luggage,
Lucky Strike cigarettes (this caused image problems for her,
with
McCall's magazine retracting
an offer) and women's clothing and sportswear. The money that she
made with "Lucky Strike" had been earmarked for a $1,500 donation
to Commander
Richard Byrd's
imminent South Pole expedition.
Rather than simply endorsing the products, Amelia actively became
involved in the promotions, especially in women's fashions.
For a
number of years she had sewn her own clothes, but the "active
living" lines that were sold in 50 stores such as Macy's
in
metropolitan areas were an expression of a new Earhart
image. Her concept of simple, natural lines matched with
wrinkle-proof, washable materials was the embodiment of a sleek,
purposeful but feminine "A.E." (the familiar name she went by with
family and friends). The luggage line that she promoted (marketed
as Modernaire Earhart Luggage) also bore her unmistakable stamp.
She ensured that the luggage met the demands of air travel; it is
still being produced today. A wide range of promotional items would
appear bearing the Earhart "image" and likewise, modern equivalents
are still being marketed to this day. The marketing campaign by
G.P. Putnam was successful in establishing the Earhart mystique in
the public psyche.

Studio portrait of Amelia Earhart,
c.
Putnam specifically instructed Earhart to disguise a
"gap-toothed" smile by keeping her mouth closed in formal
photographs.
Promoting aviation
The celebrity endorsements would help Amelia finance her flying.
Accepting a position as associate editor at
Cosmopolitan
magazine, she turned this forum into an opportunity to campaign for
greater public acceptance of aviation, especially focusing on the
role of women entering the field.
In 1929, Earhart was among the first
aviators to promote commercial air travel through the development
of a passenger airline service; along with Charles Lindbergh, she
represented Transcontinental Air
Transport (TAT) and invested time and money in setting up the
first regional shuttle service between New York
and Washington, DC
. (TAT later became
TWA).
She was a Vice President of
National
Airways, which conducted the flying operations of the
Boston-Maine Airways and several other airlines in the northeast.
By 1940, it had become
Northeast
Airlines.
Competitive flying
Although she had gained fame for her transatlantic flight, Earhart
endeavored to set an "untarnished" record of her own. Shortly after
her return, piloting Avian
7083, she set off on her first
long solo flight which occurred just as her name was coming into
the national spotlight. By making the trip in August 1928, Earhart
became the first woman to fly solo across the North American
continent and back. Gradually her piloting skills and
professionalism grew, as acknowledged by experienced professional
pilots who flew with her. General Leigh Wade flew with Earhart in
1929: "She was a born flier, with a delicate touch on the
stick."
Earhart subsequently made her first attempt at competitive air
racing in 1929 during the first Santa Monica-to-Cleveland Women's
Air Derby (later nicknamed the "
Powder
Puff Derby" by
Will Rogers). During
the race, at the last intermediate stop before the finish in
Cleveland, Earhart and her friend
Ruth
Nichols were tied for first place. Nichols was to take off
right before Earhart, but her aircraft hit a tractor at the end of
the runway and flipped over. Instead of taking off, Earhart ran to
the wrecked aircraft and dragged her friend out. Only when she was
sure that Nichols was uninjured did Amelia take off for Cleveland
but due to the time lost, she finished third. Her courageous act
was symbolic of Earhart's selflessness; typically, she rarely
referred to the incident in later years.
In 1930, Earhart became an official of the
National Aeronautic
Association where she actively promoted the establishment of
separate women's records and was instrumental in the
Fédération
Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) accepting a similar
international standard. In 1931, flying a
Pitcairn PCA-2 autogyro, she set a world altitude record of 18,415
feet (5,613 m) in a borrowed company machine. While to a reader
today it might seem that Earhart was engaged in flying "stunts,"
she was, with other female flyers, crucial to making the American
public "air minded" and convincing them that "aviation was no
longer just for daredevils and supermen."
During this period, Earhart became involved with
The Ninety-Nines, an organization of female
pilots providing moral support and advancing the cause of women in
aviation. She had called a meeting of female pilots in 1929
following the Women's Air Derby. She suggested the name based on
the number of the charter members; she later became the
organization's first president in 1930. Amelia was a vigorous
advocate for female pilots and when the 1934
Bendix Trophy Race banned women, she
openly refused to fly screen actress
Mary
Pickford to Cleveland to open the races.
Marriage
For a while she was engaged to Samuel Chapman, a chemical engineer
from Boston, breaking off her engagement on November 23, 1928.
During the same period, Earhart and Putnam had spent a great deal
of time together, leading to
intimacy.
George P. Putnam, who was known as GP, was divorced in 1929 and
sought out Amelia, proposing to her six times before she finally
agreed. After substantial hesitation on her part, they married on
February 7, 1931 in Putnam's mother's house in Noank, Connecticut.
Earhart referred to her marriage as a "partnership" with "dual
control." In a letter written to Putnam and hand delivered to him
on the day of the wedding, she wrote, "I want you to understand I
shall not hold you to any midaevil ([sic]) code of faithfulness to
me nor shall I consider myself bound to you similarly."
Amelia's ideas on marriage were liberal for the time as she
believed in equal responsibilities for both "breadwinners" and
pointedly kept her own name rather than being referred to as Mrs.
Putnam. When
The New York Times, per the rules of its
stylebook, insisted on referring to her as Mrs. Putnam, she laughed
it off. GP also learned quite soon that he would be called "Mr.
Earhart." There was no honeymoon for the newlyweds as Amelia was
involved in a nine-day cross-country tour promoting autogyros and
the tour sponsor,
Beech-nut Gum. Although
Earhart and Putnam had no children, he had two sons by his previous
marriage to Dorothy Binney (1888–1982), a chemical heiress whose
father's company,
Binney &
Smith, invented
Crayola crayons: the
explorer and writer
David Binney
Putnam (1913–1992) and George Palmer Putnam, Jr. (born 1921).
Amelia
was especially fond of David who frequently visited his father at
their family home in Rye, New York
. George had contracted
polio shortly after his parents' separation and was
unable to visit as often.
A few years later, a fire broke out at the Putnam residence in Rye
and before it could be contained, destroyed much of the Putnam
family treasures including many of Earhart's personal mementos.
Following
the fire, Putnam and Earhart decided to move to the West Coast,
since Putnam had already sold his interest in the publishing
company to his cousin Palmer, setting up in North Hollywood
, which brought Putnam close to Paramount Pictures and his new position
as head of the editorial board of this motion picture
company.
1932 transatlantic solo flight

Amelia Earhart Museum, Derry
At the
age of 34, on the morning of May 20, 1932 Earhart set off from
Harbour Grace
, Newfoundland
with the latest copy of a local newspaper (the
dated copy was intended to confirm the date of the flight).
She
intended to fly to Paris
in her
single engine Lockheed Vega 5b to
emulate Charles Lindbergh's solo
flight. Her technical advisor for the flight was famed
Norwegian American aviator
Bernt Balchen who helped prepare her
aircraft. He also played the role of "decoy" for the press as he
was ostensibly preparing Earhart's Vega for his own Arctic flight.
After a
flight lasting 14 hours, 56 minutes during which she contended with
strong northerly winds, icy conditions and mechanical problems,
Earhart landed in a pasture at Culmore
, north of Derry
, Northern
Ireland
. The landing was witnessed by Cecil King and
T. Sawyer. When a farm hand asked, "Have you flown far?" Amelia
replied, "From America." The site now is the home of a small
museum, the
Amelia Earhart Centre.
As the
first woman to fly solo non-stop across the Atlantic, Earhart
received the Distinguished Flying
Cross from Congress, the
Cross of Knight of the Legion of
Honor from the French
Government and the Gold Medal of the National
Geographic Society
from President Herbert
Hoover. As her fame grew, she developed friendships with
many people in high offices, most notably,
Eleanor Roosevelt, the
First Lady from 1933–1945. Roosevelt shared many
of Earhart's interests and passions, especially women's causes.
After flying with Earhart, Roosevelt actually obtained a student
permit but did not pursue her plans to learn to fly. The two
friends communicated frequently throughout their lives. Another
famous flyer,
Jacqueline Cochran,
who the public considered Amelia's greatest rival, also became a
confidante and friend during this period.

Earhart and "old Bessie" Vega 5b
c. 1935
Other solo flights
On
January 11, 1935, Earhart became the first person to fly solo from
Honolulu,
Hawaii
to Oakland, California
. Although this transoceanic flight had been
attempted by many others, most notably by the unfortunate
participants in the 1927
Dole Air Race
which had reversed the route, her trailblazing flight had been
mainly routine, with no mechanical breakdowns. In her final hours,
she even relaxed and listened to "the broadcast of the Metropolitan
Opera from New York."
That
year, once more flying her faithful Vega which she had tagged "old
Bessie, the fire horse," Earhart soloed from Los Angeles
to Mexico
City
on April 19. The next record attempt was a
nonstop flight from Mexico City to New York.
Setting off on May 8,
her flight was uneventful although the large crowds that greeted
her at Newark, New
Jersey
were a concern as she had to be careful not to taxi
into the throng.
Earhart again participated in long-distance air racing, placing
fifth in the 1935
Bendix Trophy Race,
the best result she could manage considering that her stock
Lockheed Vega topping out at was outclassed by purpose-built air
racers which reached more than . The race had been a particularly
difficult one as one competitor, Cecil Allen, died in a fiery
takeoff mishap and rival Jacqueline Cochran was forced to retire
due to mechanical problems, the "blinding fog" and violent
thunderstorms that plagued the race.
Between 1930–1935, Amelia had set seven women's speed and distance
aviation records in a variety of aircraft including the Kinner
Airster, Lockheed Vega and Pitcairn Autogiro. By 1935, recognizing
the limitations of her "lovely red Vega" in long, transoceanic
flights, Amelia contemplated, in her own words, a new "prize... one
flight which I most wanted to attempt – a circumnavigation of the
globe as near its waistline as could be." For the new venture, she
would need a new aircraft.
1937 world flight
Planning
Earhart
joined the faculty of Purdue University
in 1935 as a visiting faculty member to counsel
women on careers and as a technical advisor to the Department of
Aeronautics. In July 1936, she took delivery of a
Lockheed L-10E Electra financed by
Purdue and started planning a round-the-world flight. Not the first
to circle the globe, it would be the longest at 29,000 miles
(47,000 km), following a grueling equatorial route. Although
the Electra was publicized as a "flying laboratory," little useful
science was planned and the flight seems to have been arranged
around Earhart's intention to circumnavigate the globe along with
gathering raw material and public attention for her next book. Her
first choice as navigator was Captain Harry Manning, who had been
the captain of the
President Roosevelt, the ship that had
brought Amelia back from Europe in 1928.
Through
contacts in the Los
Angeles
aviation community, Fred
Noonan was subsequently chosen as a second navigator because there were significant
additional factors which had to be dealt with while using celestial
navigation for aircraft. He had vast experience in both
marine (he was a licensed ship's captain) and
flight navigation.
Noonan had recently
left Pan Am, where he
established most of the company's China
Clipper seaplane routes across the Pacific
.
Noonan
had also been responsible for training Pan American's navigators
for the route between San Francisco
and Manila
.
The original plans were for Noonan to navigate from Hawaii to
Howland Island, a particularly difficult portion of the flight;
then Manning would continue with Earhart to Australia and she would
proceed on her own for the remainder of the project.
First attempt
On
St. Patrick's Day, March 17, 1937,
they flew the first leg from Oakland, California
to Honolulu, Hawaii
. In addition to Earhart and Noonan, Harry
Manning and Hollywood stunt pilot
Paul
Mantz (who was acting as Earhart's technical advisor) were on
board. Due to lubrication and galling problems with the propeller
hubs' variable pitch mechanisms, the aircraft needed servicing in
Hawaii.
Ultimately, the Electra ended up at the
United States Navy's Luke Field on Ford Island
in Pearl
Harbor
. The flight resumed three days later from
Luke Field with Earhart, Noonan and Manning on board and during the
takeoff run, Earhart
ground-looped. The circumstances of
the ground loop remain controversial. Some witnesses at Luke Field
including the Associated Press journalist on the scene said they
saw a tire blow. Earhart thought either the Electra's right tire
had blown and/or the right landing gear had collapsed. Some
sources, including Mantz, cited pilot error.
With the
aircraft severely damaged, the flight was called off and the
aircraft was shipped by sea to the Lockheed facility in Burbank,
California
for repairs.
Second attempt
While the Electra was being repaired Earhart and Putnam secured
additional funds and prepared for a second attempt.
This time flying west
to east, the second attempt began with an unpublicized flight from
Oakland to Miami,
Florida
and after arriving there Earhart publicly announced
her plans to circumnavigate the globe. The flight's opposite
direction was partly the result of changes in global wind and
weather patterns along the planned route since the earlier attempt.
Fred Noonan was Earhart's only crew member for the second flight.
They
departed Miami on June 1 and after numerous stops in South America, Africa,
the Indian subcontinent and
Southeast Asia, arrived at Lae
, New Guinea
on June 29, 1937. At this stage about 22,000
miles (35,000 km) of the journey had been completed. The
remaining 7,000 miles (11,000 km) would all be over the
Pacific.
Departure from Lae
On July
2, 1937 (midnight GMT) Earhart and Noonan took
off from Lae
in the
heavily loaded Electra. Their intended destination was Howland Island
, a flat sliver of land 6,500 ft (2,000 m) long and
1,600 ft (500 m) wide, 10 feet (3 m) high and 2,556 miles
(4,113 km) away. Their last known position report was near
the Nukumanu
Islands
, about 800 miles (1,300 km) into the
flight. The
United
States Coast Guard cutter
Itasca was on station at Howland,
assigned to communicate with Earhart's Lockheed Electra 10E and
guide them to the island once they arrived in the
vicinity.
Final approach to Howland Island
Through a series of misunderstandings or errors (the details of
which are still controversial), the final approach to Howland
Island using radio navigation was not successful. Fred Noonan had
earlier written about problems affecting the accuracy of radio
direction finding in navigation. Some sources have noted Earhart's
apparent lack of understanding of her Bendix direction-finding loop
antenna, which at the time was very new technology. Another cited
cause of possible confusion was that the USCG cutter
Itasca and Earhart planned their communication schedule
using time systems set a half hour apart (with Earhart using
Greenwich Civil Time (GCT) and the
Itasca under a Naval
time zone designation system).
Motion picture evidence from Lae suggests that an
antenna mounted underneath the fuselage may
have been torn off from the fuel-heavy Electra during taxi or
takeoff from Lae's turf runway, though no antenna was reported
found at Lae. Don Dwiggins, in his biography of
Paul Mantz (who assisted Earhart and Noonan in
their flight planning), noted that the aviators had cut off their
long-wire antenna, due to the annoyance of having to crank it back
into the aircraft after each use.

Earhart in the Electra cockpit,
c.1936
Radio signals
During Earhart and Noonan's approach to Howland Island the
Itasca received strong and clear voice transmissions from
Earhart identifying as KHAQQ but she apparently was unable to hear
voice transmissions from the ship. At 7:42 a.m. Earhart radioed "We
must be on you, but cannot see you—but gas is running low. Have
been unable to reach you by radio. We are flying at 1,000 feet."
Her 7:58 a.m. transmission said she couldn't hear the
Itasca and asked them to send voice signals so she could
try to take a radio bearing (this transmission was reported by the
Itasca as the loudest possible signal, indicating Earhart
and Noonan were in the immediate area). They couldn't send voice at
the frequency she asked for, so Morse code signals were sent
instead. Earhart acknowledged receiving these but said she was
unable to determine their direction.
In her last known transmission at 8:43 a.m. Earhart broadcast "We
are on the line 157 337. We will repeat this message. We will
repeat this on 6210 kilocycles. Wait." However, a few moments later
she was back on the same frequency (3105 kHz) with a
transmission which was logged as a "questionable": "We are running
on line north and south." Earhart's transmissions seemed to
indicate she and Noonan believed they had reached Howland's charted
position, which was incorrect by about five nautical miles
(10 km). The Itasca used her oil-fired boilers to generate
smoke for a period of time but the fliers apparently did not see
it. The many scattered clouds in the area around Howland Island
have also been cited as a problem: their dark shadows on the ocean
surface may have been almost indistinguishable from the island's
subdued and very flat profile.
Whether any post-loss radio signals were received from Earhart and
Noonan remains controversial. If transmissions were received from
the Electra, most if not all were weak and hopelessly garbled.
Earhart's voice transmissions to Howland were on 3105 kHz, a
frequency restricted to aviation use in the United States by the
FCC. This frequency was not thought to be fit for broadcasts over
great distances. When Earhart was at cruising altitude and midway
between Lae and Howland (over from each) neither station heard her
scheduled transmission at 0815 GCT. Moreover, the 50-watt
transmitter used by Earhart was attached to a
less-than-optimum-length V-type antenna.
The last voice transmission received on Howland Island from Earhart
indicated she and Noonan were flying along a line of position
(taken from a "sun line" running on 157–337 degrees) which Noonan
would have calculated and drawn on a chart as passing through
Howland. After all contact was lost with Howland Island, attempts
were made to reach the flyers with both voice and
Morse code transmissions. Operators across the
Pacific and the United States may have heard signals from the
downed Electra but these were unintelligible or weak.
Some of these transmissions were
hoaxes but
others were deemed authentic.
Bearings taken by Pan American Airways stations suggested
signals originating from several locations, including Gardner
Island
. It was noted at the time that if these
signals were from Earhart and Noonan, they must have been on land
with the aircraft since water would have otherwise shorted out the
Electra's electrical system. Sporadic signals were reported for
four or five days after the disappearance but none yielded any
understandable information. The captain of the USS
Colorado later said "There was no doubt many stations were
calling the Earhart plane on the plane's frequency, some by voice
and others by signals. All of these added to the confusion and
doubtfulness of the authenticity of the reports."
Search efforts
Beginning approximately one hour after Earhart's last recorded
message, the USCG
Itasca undertook an ultimately
unsuccessful search north and west of Howland Island based on
initial assumptions about transmissions from the aircraft. The
United States Navy soon joined
the search and over a period of about three days sent available
resources to the search area in the vicinity of Howland Island. The
initial search by the
Itasca involved running up the
157/337 line of position to the NNW from Howland Island. The
Itasca then searched the area to the immediate NE of the
island, corresponding to the area, yet wider than the area searched
to the NW. Based on bearings of several supposed Earhart radio
transmissions, some of the search efforts were directed to a
specific position 281 degrees NW of Howland Island without finding
land or evidence of the flyers. Four days after Earhart's last
verified radio transmission, on July 6, 1937 the captain of the
battleship
Colorado
received orders from the Commandant,
Fourteenth
Naval District to take over all naval and coast guard units to
coordinate search efforts.
Later search efforts were directed to the
Phoenix Islands south of Howland Island.
A week
after the disappearance, naval aircraft from the Colorado
flew over several islands in the group including Gardner Island
, which had been uninhabited for over 40
years. The subsequent report on Gardner read: "Here signs of
recent habitation were clearly visible but repeated circling and
zooming failed to elicit any answering wave from possible
inhabitants and it was finally taken for granted that none were
there... At the western end of the island a tramp steamer (of about
4000 tons)... lay high and almost dry head onto the coral beach
with her back broken in two places. The lagoon at Gardner looked
sufficiently deep and certainly large enough so that a seaplane or
even an airboat could have landed or takenoff [sic] in any
direction with little if any difficulty. Given a chance, it is
believed that Miss Earhart could have landed her aircraft in this
lagoon and swum or waded ashore." They also found that Gardner's
shape and size as recorded on charts were wholly inaccurate. Other
Navy search efforts were again directed north, west and southwest
of Howland Island, based on a possibility the Electra had ditched
in the ocean, was afloat, or that the aviators were in an emergency
raft.
The official search efforts lasted until July 19, 1937. At $4
million, the air and sea search by the Navy and
Coast Guard was the most costly and intensive in
US history up to that time but
search
and rescue techniques during the era were rudimentary and some
of the search was based on erroneous assumptions and flawed
information. Official reporting of the search effort was influenced
by individuals wary about how their roles in looking for an
American hero might be reported by the press. Despite an
unprecedented search by the United States Navy and Coast Guard no
physical evidence of Earhart, Noonan or the Electra 10E was found.
The
United States Navy Lexington
aircraft carrier and Colorado
battleship, the Itasca (and even two Japanese ships, the
oceanographic survey vessel Koshu and auxiliary seaplane
tender Kamoi) searched for six–seven days each, covering
.
Immediately after the end of the official search, Putnam financed a
private search by local authorities of nearby Pacific islands and
waters, concentrating on the Gilberts.
In late July 1937
Putnam chartered two small boats and while he remained in the
United States, directed a search of the Phoenix Islands, Christmas
Island
, Fanning
Island
, the Gilbert Islands
and the Marshall
Islands
, but no trace of the Electra or its occupants were
found.
Back in the United States, Putnam acted to become the trustee of
Earhart's estate so that he could pay for the searches and related
bills. In probate court in Los Angeles, Putnam requested to have
the "
death in absentia" seven-year
waiting period waived so that he could manage Earhart's finances.
As a result, Earhart was declared legally dead on January 5,
1939.
Theories on Earhart's disappearance
Many theories emerged after the disappearance of Earhart and
Noonan. Two possibilities concerning the flyers' fate have
prevailed among researchers and historians:
Crash and sink theory
Many researchers believe the Electra ran out of fuel and Earhart
and Noonan ditched at sea. Navigator and aeronautical engineer
Elgen Long and his wife Marie K. Long
devoted 35 years of exhaustive research to the "crash and sink"
theory, which is the most widely accepted explanation for the
disappearance. Capt.
Laurance F.
Safford, USN, who was
responsible for the interwar Mid Pacific Strategic Direction
Finding Net, and the decoding of the Japanese
PURPLE cipher messages for the
attack on Pearl Harbor, began a lengthy analysis of the Earhart
flight during the 1970s. His research included the intricate radio
transmission documentation. Safford came to the conclusion, "poor
planning, worse execution." Rear Admiral Richard R. Black, USN, who
was in administrative charge of the Howland Island airstrip and was
present in the radio room on the
Itasca, asserted in 1982
that "the Electra went into the sea about 10 am, July 2, 1937 not
far from Howland". British aviation historian Roy Nesbit
interpreted evidence in contemporary accounts and Putnam's
correspondence and concluded Earhart's Electra was not fully fueled
at Lae. William L. Polhemous, the navigator on Ann Pellegreno's
1967 flight which followed Earhart and Noonan's original flight
path, studied navigational tables for July 2, 1937 and thought
Noonan may have miscalculated the "single line approach" intended
to "hit" Howland.
David Jourdan, a former Navy submariner and ocean engineer
specializing in deep-sea recoveries, has claimed any transmissions
attributed to Gardner Island were false. Through his company
Nauticos he extensively searched a quadrant north and west of
Howland Island during two deep-sea sonar expeditions (2002 and
2006, total cost $4.5 million) and found nothing. The search
locations were derived from the line of position (157–337)
broadcast by Earhart on July 2, 1937. Nevertheless, Elgen Long's
interpretations have led Jourdan to conclude, "The analysis of all
the data we have – the fuel analysis, the radio calls, other things
– tells me she went into the water off Howland." Earhart's stepson
George Palmer Putnam Jr. has been quoted as saying he believes "the
plane just ran out of gas." Thomas Crouch, Senior Curator of the
National Air and Space Museum, has said the Earhart/Noonan Electra
is "18,000 ft. down" and may even yield a range of artifacts that
could rival the finds of the
Titanic, adding, "...the
mystery is part of what keeps us interested. In part, we remember
her because she's our favorite missing person."
Gardner Island hypothesis
Immediately after Earhart and Noonan's disappearance, the United
States Navy, Paul Mantz and Earhart's mother (who convinced G.P.
Putnam to
undertake a search in the Gardner Group) all expressed belief the
flight had ended in the Phoenix
Islands (now part of Kiribati
), some southeast of Howland Island.
In July
2007, an editor at Avionews in
Rome
called the Gardner Island hypothesis the "most
confirmed" explanation of Earhart's disappearance.
The
International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery (TIGHAR) has suggested Earhart and Noonan may have
flown without further radio transmissions for two-and-a-half hours
along the line of position Earhart noted in her last transmission
received at Howland, arrived at then-uninhabited Gardner Island
(now Nikumaroro
) in the Phoenix group, landed on an extensive reef
flat near the wreck of a large freighter and ultimately
perished.
TIGHAR's research has produced a range of documented archaeological
and anecdotal evidence supporting this hypothesis.
For example, in 1940,
Gerald Gallagher, a British
colonial officer and licensed pilot, radioed his
superiors to inform them that he had found a "skeleton... possibly that of a woman", along with
an old-fashioned sextant box, under a tree
on the island's southeast corner. He was ordered to
send the remains to Fiji
, where in
1941, British colonial authorities took detailed measurements of
the bones and concluded they were from a stocky male.
However, in 1998 an analysis of the measurement data by forensic
anthropologists indicated the skeleton had belonged to a "tall
white female of northern European ancestry." The bones themselves
were misplaced in Fiji long ago.
Artifacts discovered by TIGHAR on Nikumaroro have included
improvised tools, an aluminum panel (possibly from an Electra), an
oddly cut piece of clear Plexiglas which is the exact thickness and
curvature of an Electra window and a size 9 Cat's Paw heel dating
from the 1930s which resembles Earhart's footwear in world flight
photos. The evidence remains circumstantial, but Earhart's
surviving stepson, George Putnam Jr., has expressed enthusiasm for
TIGHAR's research.
A 15-member TIGHAR expedition visited Nikumaroro from July 21 to
August 2, 2007, searching for unambiguously identifiable aircraft
artifacts and DNA. The group included engineers,
environmentalists, a
land developer,
archaeologists, a
sailboat
designer, a team doctor and a
videographer. They were reported to have found
additional artifacts of as yet uncertain origin on the
weather-ravaged atoll, including bronze bearings which may have
belonged to Earhart's aircraft and a
zipper
pull which might have come from her flight suit.
Myths, urban legends and unsupported claims
The unresolved circumstances of Amelia Earhart's disappearance,
along with her fame, attracted a great body of other claims
relating to her last flight, all of which have been generally
dismissed for lack of verifiable evidence. Several unsupported
theories have become well known in popular culture.
Spies for FDR
A
World War II-era movie called
Flight for Freedom
(1943) starring
Rosalind Russell
and
Fred MacMurray furthered a
myth that Earhart was
spying on the Japanese in the Pacific at the request of
the
Franklin Roosevelt
administration. By 1949, both the
United
Press and U.S. Army Intelligence had concluded this rumor was
groundless.
Jackie Cochran, a
pioneer aviatrix and one of Earhart's friends, made a postwar
search of numerous files in Japan and was convinced the Japanese
were not involved in Earhart's disappearance.
Saipan Claims
In 1966,
CBS Correspondent
Fred Goerner published a book claiming Earhart and Noonan were
captured and executed when their aircraft crashed on Saipan
Island,
part of the Northern Marianas archipelago
while it was under Japanese occupation.
In 2009, an Earhart relative stated that the pair died in Japanese
custody, citing unnamed witnesses including Japanese troops and
Saipan natives. He said that the Japanese cut the valuable Lockheed
aircraft into scrap and threw the pieces into the ocean.
Thomas E. Devine (who served in a postal Army unit) wrote
Eyewitness: The Amelia Earhart Incident which includes a
letter from the daughter of a Japanese police official who claimed
her father was responsible for Earhart's execution.
Former
U.S. Marine Robert Wallack claimed he and other
soldiers opened a safe on Saipan and found Earhart's briefcase.
Former U.S. Marine Earskin J. Nabers claimed that while serving as
a wireless operator on Saipan in 1944, he decoded a message from
naval officials which said Earhart's aircraft had been found at
Aslito AirField, that he was later
ordered to guard the aircraft and then witnessed its destruction.
In 1990, the
NBC-TV series
Unsolved Mysteries broadcast an
interview with a Saipanese woman who claimed to have witnessed
Earhart and Noonan's execution by Japanese soldiers. No independent
confirmation or support has ever emerged for any of these
claims.
Strippel 1995, p. 52.
Purported photographs of Earhart during her captivity have been
identified as either fraudulent or having been taken before her
final flight.
Since the
end of World War II, a location on
Tinian
, which is
five miles (eight km) southwest of Saipan, had been rumoured to be
the grave of the two aviators. In 2004 a scientifically
supported archaeological dig at the site failed to turn up any
bones.
Tokyo Rose Rumor
A rumor which claimed that Earhart had made propaganda radio
broadcasts as one of the many women compelled to serve as
Tokyo Rose was investigated closely by George
Putnam. According to several biographies of Earhart, Putnam
investigated this rumor personally but after listening to many
recordings of numerous Tokyo Roses he did not recognize her voice
among them.
Rabaul
David Billings, an Australian aircraft engineer, has asserted a map
marked with notations consistent with Earhart's engine model number
and her airframe's construction number, has surfaced.
It originates from a
World War II Australian patrol stationed on New Britain Island off
the coast of New Guinea and indicates a crash site southwest of
Rabaul
.
Billings has speculated Earhart turned back from Howland and tried
to reach Rabaul for fuel. Ground searches have been
unsuccessful.
Assuming another identity
In
November 2006, the National
Geographic Channel aired episode two of the Undiscovered History series about
a claim that Earhart survived the world flight, moved to New Jersey
, changed her name, remarried and became Irene Craigmile Bolam. This
claim had originally been raised in the book
Amelia Earhart
Lives (1970) by author Joe Klaas, based on the research of
Major Joseph Gervais. Irene Bolam, who had been a banker in New
York during the 1940s, denied being Earhart, filed a lawsuit
requesting $1.5 million in damages and submitted a lengthy
affidavit in which she refuted the claims. The
book's publisher,
McGraw-Hill, withdrew
the book from the market shortly after it was released and court
records indicate that they made an out of court settlement with
her. Subsequently, Bolam's personal life history was thoroughly
documented by researchers, eliminating any possibility she was
Earhart. Kevin Richlin, a professional criminal forensic expert
hired by National Geographic, studied photographs of both women and
cited many measurable facial differences between Earhart and
Bolam.
Strippel 1995, pp.
52–53.
Legacy
Amelia Earhart was a widely known international
celebrity during her lifetime. Her shyly
charismatic appeal, independence, persistence, coolness under
pressure, courage and goal-oriented career along with the
circumstances of her disappearance at a young age have driven her
lasting
fame in
popular culture. Hundreds of articles and
scores of books have been written about her life which is often
cited as a motivational tale, especially for
girls. Earhart is generally regarded as a
feminist icon.
Amelia Earhart's accomplishments in aviation inspired a generation
of female aviators, including the more than 1,000 women pilots of
the
Women Airforce Service
Pilots (WASP) who ferried military aircraft, towed gliders,
flew target practice aircraft, and served as transport pilots
during World War II.
The home where Earhart was born is now the Amelia Earhart
Birthplace Museum and is maintained by the
Ninety-Nines, an international group of female
pilots of whom Amelia was the first elected president.
Records and achievements
- Woman's world altitude record: 14,000 ft (1922)
- First woman to fly the Atlantic (1928)
- Speed records for 100 km (and with cargo) (1931)
- First woman to fly an autogyro
(1931)
- Altitude record for autogyros: 15,000 ft (1931)
- First person to cross the U.S. in an autogyro (1932)
- First woman to fly the Atlantic solo (1932)
- First person to fly the Atlantic twice (1932)
- First woman to receive the Distinguished Flying
Cross (1932)
- First woman to fly non-stop, coast-to-coast across the U.S.
(1933)
- Woman's speed transcontinental record (1933)
- First person to fly solo between Honolulu, Hawaii and Oakland,
California (1935)
- First person to fly solo from Los Angeles, California to Mexico
City, Mexico (1935)
- First person to fly solo nonstop from Mexico City, Mexico to
Newark, New Jersey (1935)
- Speed record for east-to-west flight from Oakland, California
to Honolulu, Hawaii (1937)
Books by Earhart

Cover of a 1977 reprint of Earhart's
The Fun of It, first published in 1932
Amelia Earhart was a successful and heavily promoted
writer who served as aviation editor for
Cosmopolitan magazine from 1928
to 1930. She wrote magazine articles, newspaper columns, essays and
published two books based upon her experiences as a flyer during
her lifetime:
- 20 Hrs., 40 Min.
(1928) was a journal of her experiences as the first woman
passenger on a transatlantic flight.
- The Fun of It (1932) was
a memoir of her flying experiences and an essay on women in
aviation.
- Last
Flight (1937) featured the periodic journal entries she
sent back to the United States during her world flight attempt,
published in newspapers in the weeks prior to her final departure
from New
Guinea
. Compiled by her husband GP Putnam after she
disappeared over the Pacific, many historians consider this book to
be only partially Earhart's original work.
Memorial flights
Two notable memorial flights by female aviators subsequently
followed Earhart's original
circumnavigational route.
- In 1967, Ann Dearing Holtgren
Pellegreno and a crew of three, successfully flew a similar
aircraft (a Lockheed 10A
Electra) to complete a world flight that closely mirrored
Earhart's flight plan. On the 30th anniversary of her
disappearance, Pellegreno dropped a wreath in Earhart's honor over
tiny Howland Island and returned to Oakland, completing the
commemorative flight on July 7, 1967.
- In 1997, on the 60th anniversary of Amelia Earhart's world
flight, San Antonio businesswoman Linda
Finch retraced the final flight path flying the same make and
model of aircraft as Earhart, a restored 1935 Lockheed Electra 10E. Finch
touched down in 18 countries before finishing the trip two and a
half months later when she arrived back at Oakland Airport on May
28, 1997.
In 2001, another commemorative flight retraced the route undertaken
by Amelia Earhart in her August 1928 trans-continental record
flight. Dr. Carlene Mendieta flew an original Avro Avian, the same
type that was used in 1928.
Other honors
- Amelia Earhart Centre And Wildlife Sanctuary
was established at the site of her 1932 landing in Northern
Ireland, Ballyarnet Country Park, Derry.
- The
"Earhart Tree" on Banyan Drive
in Hilo, Hawaii was planted by Amelia Earhart in
1935.
- The Zonta
International Amelia Earhart Fellowship Awards were
established in 1938.
- Earhart Light (also known
as the Amelia Earhart Light), a navigational day
beacon on Howland
Island
(has not been maintained and is crumbling)
.
- The Amelia Earhart Memorial Scholarships
(established in 1939 by The
Ninety-Nines), provides scholarships to women for advanced
pilot certificates and ratings, jet type ratings, college degrees
and technical training.
- In
1942, a United
States
Liberty ship named
SS Amelia
Earhart was launched (it was wrecked in
1948).
- Amelia Earhart Field
(1947), formerly Masters Field and Miami
Municipal
Airport, after closure in 1959, the Amelia Earhart Regional
Park was dedicated in an area of undeveloped federal
government land located north and west of the former Miami
Municipal Airport and immediately south of Opa-locka
Airport.
- The Purdue University Amelia Earhart
Scholarship is based on academic merit and leadership and
is open to juniors and seniors enrolled in any school at the West
Lafayette campus. After being discontinued in the 1970s, a donor
resurrected the award in 1999.
- Amelia Earhart Commemorative Stamp (8¢ airmail
postage) was issued in 1963 by the United States
Postmaster-General.
- The Civil Air Patrol
Amelia Earhart Award (since 1964) is awarded to
cadets who have completed the first 11 achievements of the cadet
program along with receipt of the General Billy Mitchell
Award.
- Member of National
Women's Hall of Fame (1973).
- The Amelia Earhart Birthplace, Atchison,
Kansas (a museum and National
Historic Site, owned and maintained by The Ninety-Nines).
- Amelia Earhart Airport,
located in Atchison,
Kansas
.
- Amelia Earhart Bridge
, located in Atchison, Kansas
.
- The
Amelia Earhart General Aviation Terminal, a
satellite terminal at Boston's Logan Airport
(formerly used by American Eagle, now unused)
- Amelia Earhart Dam on the
Mystic River in eastern Massachusetts
.
- Schools named after Amelia Earhart are found
throughout the United States including the Amelia Earhart
Elementary School, in Alameda, California
, Amelia Earhart Elementary School,
in Hialeah,
Florida
, Amelia Earhart Middle School,
Riverside,
California
and Amelia Earhart International
Baccalaureate World School, in Indio,
California
.
- Amelia Earhart Hotel,
located in Wiesbaden,
Germany
, originally used as a hotel for women, then as
temporary military housing is now operated as the U.S.
Army Corps
of Engineers, Europe District Headquarters with offices for the
Army Contracting Agency and
the Defense Contract
Management Agency.

- Amelia Earhart Road,
located in Oklahoma City , Oklahoma
.
- Earhart Road, located next
to the Oakland International Airport
North Field in Oakland, California
.
- Crittenton Women’s Union (Boston) Amelia Earhart
Award recognizes a woman who continues Earhart’s
pioneering spirit and who has significantly contributed to the
expansion of opportunities for women. (since 1982)
- UCI Irvine Amelia Earhart Award (since
1990).
- Amelia Earhart Intermediate
School, located in Kadena Air Base
, Okinawa, Japan
.
- Member of Motorsports Hall of Fame of
America (1992).
- Earhart Foundation, located
in Ann Arbor,
MI
. Established in 1995, the foundation funds
research and scholarship through a network of 50 "Earhart
professors" across the United States.
- Amelia Earhart Festival
(annual event since 1996), located in Atchison, Kansas
.
- Amelia Earhart Pioneering Achievement Award,
Atchison, Kansas: Since 1996, the Cloud L. Cray Foundation provides
a $10,000 women’s scholarship to the educational institution of the
honoree’s choice.
- Amelia Earhart Earthwork in
Warnock Lake Park, Atchison, Kansas
. Stan Herd created the landscape mural from
permanent plantings and stone to celebrate the 100th anniversary of
Earhart's birth. Located at and best viewed from the air.
- Earhart Corona, a corona on Venus was named by the (IAU).
- Greater Miami Aviation Association Amelia Earhart
Award for outstanding achievement (2006); first recipient:
noted flyer Patricia "Patty"
Wagstaff.
- On December 6, 2006, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and First Lady
Maria Shriver inducted Amelia Earhart
into the California Hall of
Fame located at The
California Museum for History, Women and the Arts.
- USNS
Amelia Earhart was named in her honor in May
2007.
- Amelia Earhart full size bronze
statue was placed at the Spirit of Flight Center located in
Lafayette,
Colorado
in 2008.
Popular culture
Amelia Earhart's life has spurred the imaginations of many writers
and others:
Literature
- Earhart was referenced in a 1962 play written by Arthur Kopit entitled "Chamber Music." Set in a
mental hospital, several women each believe themselves to be famous
personages from history, including Earhart.
- Earhart appears as a character in David Lippincott's 1970 novel, E
Pluribus Bang!.
- Patti Smith published two poems
dedicated to Earhart: "Amelia Earhart I" and "Amelia Earheart II"
in her 1972 poetry collection Seventh Heaven.
- Earhart is referenced in Clive
Cussler's 1992 book Sahara.
- I Was Amelia Earhart (1996) is a faux autobiography by
Jane Mendelsohn in which "Earhart"
tells the story of what happened to her in 1937, complete with
heavy doses of romance with her navigator.
- Flying Blind
(1999) by Max Allan Collins is a
detective novel in which the intrepid Nathan Heller is hired to be a bodyguard for
Amelia Earhart. Before long they become lovers (her marriage to
Putnam being described as being a union in name only) and later
Heller helps her to try to escape from the Japanese following her
ill-fated flight.
- In Christopher
Moore's 2003 novel, Fluke,
Earhart survived her wreck and appears as the mother of one of the
characters.
Music
- "Amelia Earhart's Last
Flight," by "Yodelling Cowboy" Red River Dave McEnery, is thought
to be the first song ever performed on commercial television (at
the 1939 World's Fair). He recorded it in 1941 and it was
subsequently covered by artists including Kinky Friedman and the Country
Gentlemen.
- Possibly the first tribute album dedicated to the legend of
Amelia Earhart was by Plainsong, "In Search of Amelia Earhart,"
Elektra K42120, released in 1972. Both the album and the Press Pak
released by Elektra are highly prized by collectors and have
reached cult status.
- Singer Joni Mitchell wrote a song
called "Amelia" on her 1976 album, Hejira, based on Amelia Earhart's
legacy.
- In 1979, Bachman-Turner
Overdrive (BTO) released a song called "Amelia Earhart" on
their album, Rock n' Roll
Nights.
- Erik Frandsen's musical: Song of Singapore, that
opened May 23, 1991, features a lounge singer with amnesia, recovering to discover she's Amelia
Earhart.
- Alternative country band The
Handsome Family's 1996 album Milk and Scissors
includes the song "Amelia Earhart vs. the Dancing Bear", a
fictionalized account of Earhart's death in a hypothetical
crash.
- The disappearance of Earhart is one of the many mysteries
mentioned in the song "Someday We'll
Know" (1999) by the New Radicals,
later covered by Mandy Moore and
Jonathan Foreman for the movie
A Walk to Remember. The
lyrics are: "Whatever happened to Amelia Earhart? Who holds the
stars up in the sky?"
- Singer/songwriter Deb Talan's second
album, "Something Burning" (2000), begins with a song called
"Thinking Amelia." The song goes on to suggest that Earhart had a
"one-in-a-million bad day."
- The song "Aviator" by Nemo, which
appears on their 2004 debut LP Signs
of Life, was written about Amelia Earhart's last
flight.
- The song "I Miss My Sky," written by Heather Nova for her 2005 album Redbird, is dedicated to Earhart,
suggesting that she survived on an island after her
disappearance.
- Banjo player Curtis Eller of
Curtis Eller's American Circus has also written a song
about Earhart's disappearance, "Amelia Earhart" in his "Taking Up
Serpents Again" release (2005). One of the lyrics poignantly states
that she, "disappeared in a cloudbank and the static never
cleared."
- The Canadian Hip Hop artist Buck 65
links Amelia Earhart and other iconic women Neko Case and Frida
Kahlo in the song "Blood of a Young Wolf" (2006) from the album
Secret House Against
The World.
- English singer/songwriter Tom McRae's
fourth album King of Cards (2007)
features a song called "The Ballad of Amelia Earhart."
- Pop/rock singer-songwriter Jon
Mclaughlin wrote a song titled "Amelia's Missing" (2007); the
lyrics state: "and Amelia's missing somewhere out at sea."
- The song "Amelia" from the 2009 album Blue Lights on the Runway by Irish
band Bell X1 contemplates the last
moments and fate of Earhart.
Movies and television
- The
1943 Rosalind Russell film
Flight for Freedom
derived from a treatment, Stand by
to Die, was a fictionalized treatment of Earhart's life,
with a heavy dose of Hollywood
World War II
propaganda.
- A 1976 television bio production titled Amelia Earhart starring Susan Clark and John
Forsythe included flying by Hollywood stunt pilot Frank Tallman whose late partner in Tallmantz
Aviation, Paul Mantz, had tutored Earhart
in the 1930s.
- In the climax of the 1977 science
fiction film Close Encounters of the Third
Kind, Amelia Earhart is seen walking out of the
Mothership, along with a crowd of a hundred other alien abduction survivors. Director Steven Spielberg has acknowledged that this
was specifically a nod to the legacy of Earhart and other flyers
who mysteriously vanished at sea.
- Amelia Earhart:
The Final Flight (1994) starring Diane Keaton, Rutger
Hauer and Bruce Dern was initially
released as TV movie and subsequently released as a theatrical
feature.
- Earhart is portrayed by Sharon
Lawrence in the Star Trek:
Voyager episode "The 37's" (first
aired 1995).
- Stock footage of Earhart is shown in the opening sequence for
the full broadcast run of Star
Trek: Enterprise (2001-2005)
- Actress Jane Lynch was cast as Amelia
Earhart in the 2004 film The
Aviator, but her scenes were cut.
- Academy Award nominee Amy Adams portrayed Earhart in Night at the
Museum 2: Battle of the Smithsonian (2009).
- In Amelia (2009), Amelia
Earhart is portrayed by Hilary Swank,
who also served as co-executive producer of the biopic.
Advertising
- The Gap khaki pants ad campaign
(1993) featured Amelia Earhart's likeness as did ads for Apple
computers.
- Earhart's likeness was included among the
icons in Apple
Computer
's
"Think Different" advertising
campaign (2002) and is now a sought-after collectible. (See:
studio portrait, c. 1932 above)
See also
References
Notes
- Morey
1995, p. 11. Quote: "She was a pioneer in aviation... she led
the way so that others could follow and go on to even greater
achievements." and quote: Charles Kuralt said on CBS television
program Sunday Morning, referring to Earhart, he wanted
everyone to know about her and he stated,"Trailblazers prepare the
rest of us for the future."
- Oakes
1985
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997, pp.
111, 112.
- Pearce 1988, p. 95.
- Lovell
1989, p. 152.
- The Mystery of Amelia Earhart. Social Studies School
Service. [1] Quote: "She vanished nearly 60 years ago,
but fascination with Amelia Earhart continues through each new
generation."
- Harvard University Library: A/E11/M-129, Earhart, Amy
Otis, 1869–1962. Papers, 1944, n.d.: A Finding Aid
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997, p.
8.
- The Ninety-Nines Grace Muriel Earhart Morrissey
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997, pp.
8–9.
- Randolph 1987, p. 16. Quote: "...the judge nevertheless adored
his brave and intelligent granddaughter and in her (Amelia's) love
of adventure, she seemed to have inherited his pioneering
spirit."
- Rich 1989,
p. 4.
- Lovell
1989, p. 14.
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997, p.
9.
- Amelia Earhart: Celebrating 100 Years of
Flight
- Randolph 1987, p. 18.
- Lovell
1989, p. 15.
- Hamill 1976, p. 51.
- Garst 1947, p. 35.
- Blau 1977, pp. 10–11.
- Rich 1989,
p. 11.
- Kerby 1990, pp. 18–19. Note: Although a good student, Amelia
cut short her time at Ogontz when she became a nursing assistant in
Canada.
- Popplewell, Brett. "The city Amelia loved." Toronto Star, June 29,
2008. Retrieved: June 30, 2008.
- Lovell
1989, p. 27.
- Earhart 1932, p. 21.
- Backus 1982, pp. 49–50.
- Rich 1989,
pp. 31–32.
- Earhart
1937, p. 2.
- Earhart
1937, p. 3.
- Thames 1989, p. 7.
- Earhart
1937, p. 4.
- "Lady Lindy, Amelia Earhart's Life History."
aviationhistory.org. Retrieved: 12 October 2009.
- Marshall 2007, p. 21.
- Blau 1977, pp. 15–16.
- Long 1999,
p. 36.
- U-S-History.com: Aerospace Amelia Earhart
1897–1937
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997, p.
40.
- Lovell
1989, p. 37.
- Hamill 1976, p. 67. Quote: "Amelia was reduced to being a judge
of a model-airplane contest."
- Gillespie 2006. Note: A modern observer,
Ric Gillespie, states: "Earhart’s piloting skills were average at
best."
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997, p.
34.
- Lovell
1989, pp. 40–42.
- Long 1999,
p. 46.
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997, p.
33.
- "Amelia Earhart Biographical Sketch", George
Palmer Putnam Collection of Amelia Earhart Papers, Purdue
University.
- Chaisson, Stephanie. "Squantum has a hold on its residents."
The Patriot Ledger newspaper,
Quincy, Massachusetts, July 12, 2007.
- Rich 1989,
p. 43.
- Long 1999,
p. 38.
- Randolph 1987, p. 41.
- Bryan 1979, p. 132.
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997, p.
54.
- Southampton: A pictorial peep into the past. Southern
Newspapers Ltd, 1980.
- 1927 Avro Avian
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997, p.
55.
- Glines
1997, p. 44. Note: Putnam himself may have coined the term
"Lady Lindy."
- Rich 1989,
p. 177.
- Pearce 1988, p. 76.
- Lovell
1989, p. 135.
- Amelia Earhart costume kit
- Searching for Amelia Earhart
- Amelia Earhart Museum: Biography
- Glines
1997, p. 45.
- Boston and Maine Railroad Employees Magazine, Volume
8, Number 10, July 1933, copy in Purdue University Special
Collections
- Rich 1989,
p. 73.
- Mendieta, Carlene. Amelia Earhart's Flight Across America:
Rediscovering a Legend Amelia Earhart's Flight Across America: Rediscovering a
Legend Retrieved: May 21, 2007.
- Rich 1989,
p. 85.
- Lauber 1989, p. 47.
- Van Pelt 2008, pp. 20–21.
- Corn 1983, p. 75.
- Oakes
1985, p. 31.
- Lovell
1989, pp. 130, 138.
- Pearce 1988, p. 81. Quote: "Amelia eventually said yes – or
rather nodded yes – to GP's sixth proposal of marriage.
- Lovell
1989, pp. 165–166. Quote: "It was pencilled longhand...a slip
or two in spelling meticulously corrected." The later typewritten
note has the word medieval incorrectly spelled. The original note
has some slight variances in the header, use of commas and the
salutation but is spelled correctly.
- Wireles Flash News: Newly Discovered Amelia Earhart
Letter Shows Her Wild Side
- Purdue News: Public to get first look at Amelia
Earhart's private life
- Pearce 1988, p. 82.
- St. Lucie Historical Society, Inc.: Dorothy Binney
Putnam Upton Blanding Palmer 1888–1982
- St. Lucie Historical Society, Inc.:Edwin Binney
1866–1934
- Lovell
1989, pp. 154, 174.
- Sloate 1990, p. 64. Note: Amelia preferred the more benign
weather of the west coast for flying and based her later years'
operation from California rather than the east coast.
- Butler 1997, p. 263. Note: Balchen had been instrumental in
other transatlantic and Arctic record-breaking flights during that
period.
- Space & Aviation Retrieved: March 2,
2008.
- Goddard, Seth. "Life Hero of the Week Profile—Amelia Earhart—First
Lady of the Sky." www.life.com, May 19, 1997. Retrieved: March
29, 2008.
- "Amelia Earhart Centre." Derry City Council
Heritage and Museum Service. Retrieved: October 23, 2009.
- Glines
1997, p. 47. Note: Franklin D. Roosevelt was not in favor of
his wife becoming a pilot. Eleanor Roosevelt would later feature
prominently in another aviation-related cause when she took a
famous flight with a young Black aviator that helped establish the
credentials of the "Tuskegee Airmen".
- Leder 1987, p. 49.
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997, p.
132.
- Lovell
1989, p. 218.
- Oakes
1985, p. 35.
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997, p.
145.
- Earhart
1937, p. 37.
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997, p.
145. Note: Her job at Purdue was outlined by Edward C. Elliott, the
President of Purdue University.
- Long 1999,
p. 65.
- Post, Wiley and Gatty, Harold. Around the World in Eight
Days. New York: Rand McNally & Company, 1931, Chapter III,
"Driving from the back seat" pp. 45–56.
- Grooch 1936, p. 177.
- Grooch 1936, p. 189. Note: Noonan also navigated the China
Clipper on its first flight to Manila, departing Alameda under the
command of Captain Ed Musick, on November 22, 1936.
- Rich 1989,
p. 245.
- Leder 1987, p. 48.
- "The inaccuracies of direction finding bearings can be very
definitely cataloged: twilight effects, faint signals, wide splits
of minima and inaccurate calibration."Noonan, Fred. Memo to
Operations Manager, Pacific Division, Pan American Airlines,
April 29, 1935.
- Hoversten 2007, pp. 22–23.
- Jacobson, Randall S., Ph.D. "The Final Flight. Part 3: At Howland Island."
tighar.org, 2009. Retrieved: July 2, 2009.
- "Earhart Navigation FAQ." tighar.org.
Retrieved: July 2. 2009.
- American Radio Relay League 1945, p. 453. Quote: "Frequencies
between 2,504 to 3,497.5 kc were allocated to "Coastal harbor,
government, aviation, fixed, miscellaneous."
- Long 1999,
p. 20.
- Everette, Michael. "Electric Radio Communications Equipment Installed
on Board Lockeed Electra NR16020." tighar.org, 2009.
Retrieved: July 2, 2009.
- American Radio Relay League 1945, pp. 196–199. Note: The height
of the antenna is important, a horizontally polarized antenna
operating at a small fraction of its wavelength above the ground
will be less efficient than that same antenna operating at cruising
altitude.
- Safford et al. 2003, p. 145. Note:
Safford disputes a "sun line" theory and proposes that Noonan asked
Earhart to fly 157–337 magnetic or to fly at right angles to the
original track on north-south courses.
- Brandenberg, Bob. "Probability of Betty Hearing Amelia on a Harmonic
Gardner Sunset: 0538Z Sunrise: 1747Z," tighar.org,
2007. Retrieved: July 2, 2009. Note: A teenager in the northeastern
United States claims to have heard post-loss transmissions from
Earhart and Noonan but modern analysis has shown there was an
extremely low probability of any signal from Amelia Earhart being
received in the United States on a harmonic of a frequency she
could transmit upon.
- Gillespie 2006, p. 115.
- Strippel 1995, p. 18.
- Gillespie 2006, diagram p. 190. Note: The
essential components were all mounted low, including the generator,
batteries, dynamotor and transmitter.
- Gillespie 2006, p. 140. Note: In order to
operate the radio for any length of time, the aircraft would have
had to be standing more or less upright on its landing gear with
the right engine running in order to charge the 50-watt
transmitter's battery, which would have consumed six gallons of
fuel per hour.
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997, p.
241. Note: The first two days were marked by rumors and
misinformation regarding radio transmission capabilities of the
Lockheed L10 Electra that were finally resolved by the aircraft
company.
- Gillespie 2006, p. 146.
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997 p.
251.
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997, p.
248.
- Memo from Senior Aviator, USS Colorado, to The Chief
of the Bureau of Aeronautics, "Aircraft Search of Earhart Plane."
Finding Amelia DVD, Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute
Press, 2006. DVD: Contents: Reports: Lambrecht.pdf, p. 3. Their
commander Capt Friedell made no note of "recent habitation" in his
official summary.
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997, p.
254.
- Safford et al. 2003, pp. 61–62,
67–68.
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997, pp.
254–255. Note: FDR himself had to respond to accusations that the
search was justified.
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997, pp.
245–254.
- King et al. 2001, pp. 32–33.
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997, p.
257.
- Van Pelt 2006, p. 205.
- Long, Elgen. "'Crash and Sink' Theory." elgenlong.com,
2006. Retrieved: July 2, 2009.
- Strippel 1995, p. 20.
- Strippel 1995, p. 58.
- Strippel 1995, pp. 58, 60.
- Kleinberg, Eliot. "Amelia Earhart's disappearance still haunts her
stepson, 83." Palm Beach Post, December 27, 2004 via
lincolnshirepostpolio.org.uk. Retrieved: July 19,
2007.
- Hoversten 2007, p. 23.
- Rich 1989,
pp. 272–273.
- "The end of Amelia Earhart (2): several
theories." Avio News (WAPA), July 16, 2007. Retrieved:
July 17, 2007.
- Jacobson, Randall S., Ph.D. "The Final Flight. 4: The Airplane Returns to
Earth." tighar.org, 2009. Retrieved: July 2,
2009.
- "Common Earhart Myths." tighar.org,
Copyright date of 2009 on page. Retrieved: November 28, 2009.
- "The TIGHAR Hypothesis." tighar.org,
Summer 2009. Retrieved: November 28, 2009.
- Pyle, Richard. "Diary a clue to Amelia Earhart mystery."
AP, April 1, 2007. Retrieved: July 2, 2009. Note:
According to records, Noonan was tall and Earhart was and wore a
size 6 shoe according to her sister.
- Cruikshank, Joe. "The Search for Earhart's Plane Continues."
Treasure County Palm News, November 4, 2006. Retrieved:
April 1, 2007.
- Pyle, Richard. "New search begins in Earhart mystery."
AP, July 12, 2007. Retrieved: July 2, 2009.
- Pyle, Richard. "Group Ends Island Search for
Earhart."AP, August 2, 2007. Retrieved: July 2,
2009.
- Note: Some authors have speculated that Earhart and Noonan were
shot down by Japanese aircraft as she thought to be spying on
Japanese territory so America could supposedly plan an attack.
- Cochran 1954, p. 160.
- "Obituary: Fred Goerner, Broadcaster, 69."
New York Times, September 16, 1994.
- "Sinister Conspiracy?" Time Magazine,
September 16, 1966. Retrieved: July 2, 2009. Note: Goerner’s book
was immediately challenged, but the Time Magazine article
on it does include a quote from Admiral Chester W.
Nimitz, who allegedly told Goerner in March 1965: "I
want to tell you Earhart and her navigator did go down in the
Marshalls and were picked up by the Japanese."
- Goerner 1966, p. 304. Note: Goerner disclosed in his book that
Nimitz refused permission to be quoted.
- Henley, David C. "Cousin: Japanese captured Amelia Earhart."
Nevada Appeal, October 31, 2009. Retrieved: November 7,
2009.
- Thomas E. Devine: What Really Happened to Amelia
Earhart
- "Amelia Earhart FAQ." tighar.org. Retrieved:
July 2, 2009.
- "TIGHARS on Tinian." tighar.org,
November 7, 2004. Retrieved: July 2, 2009.
- Goldstein and Dillon 1997, p.
282.
- "The Enduring Mystery of Amelia Earhart's Disappearance Maybe
Finally Coming To an End." The Atlantic Flyer, September
2007, p. 3.
- Gillespie, Ric. "Amelia Earhart Survived by Colonel Rollin Reineck,
USAF (ret.), 2003." tighar.org. Retrieved: July 2,
2009.
- Gillespie, Ric. "Is This Amelia Earhart?" tighar.org,,
2009. Retrieved: 2 July 2009.
- Hamill 1976, p. 49.
- Regis 2008, pp. 102–105.
- Haynsworth and Toomey 1998
- "The Yellow Brick Road Trip."
theyellowbrickroadtrip.blogspot.com. Retrieved: July 2,
2009.
- Sloate 1990, pp. 116–117.
- Amelia Earhart's Flight Across America:
Rediscovering a Legend
- The Amelia Earhart Birthplace Museum
- Buck, Anita. "Taking the pulse of theater: a sometimes
exhausting array of local talent at this year's festival."
Cincinnati (magazine), December 1985, p. 29.
- In Search of Amelia Earhart/Now We Are Three
- Lyrics: Amelia Earhart
- Hewitt, Bill. "The Sea Yields Its Lost Squadron."
People, Vol. 35, No. 21, June 03, 1991. Retrieved: August
3, 2009.
- Internet Movie Database
- "Opening Credits". startrek.com.
Retrieved: November 13, 2009.
- Fleming, Michael. "Hilary Swank to play Amelia Earhart: Mira Nair to
direct biopic from Ron Bass script." Variety, February
7, 2008. Retrieved: December 8, 2008.
- Lubben and Barnett 2007, pp. 9, 146, 162.
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History March 2008.
- Ware, Susan. Still Missing: Amelia Earhart and the Search
for Modern Feminism. New York: W.W. Norton & Company,
1993. ISBN 0-393-03551-4.
- Wright, Monte Duane. Most Probable Position, A History of
Aerial Navigation to 1941. Lawrence, Kansas: University Press
of Kansas, 1972. ISBN 0-7006-0092-2.
Additional resources
- Barker, Ralph. Great Mysteries of the Air. London: Pan
Books, 1966. ISBN 0-330-02096-X.
- Cady, Barbara. They Changed the World: 200 Icons Who Have
Made a Difference. New York: Black Dog & Leventhal
Publishers, 2003. ISBN 1-57912-328-7.
- Chapman, Sally Putnam, with Stephanie Mansfield. Whistled
Like a Bird: The Untold Story of Dorothy Putnam, George Putnam and
Amelia Earhart. New York: Warner Books, 1997. ISBN
0-446-52055-1.
- Haynsworth, Leslie and David Toomey. Amelia Earhart's
Daughters: The Wild and Glorious Story of American Women Aviators
from World War II to the Dawn of the Space Age. New York:
Harper Collins Publishers Inc., 1998. ISBN 0-380-72984-9.
- Landsberg. Alan. In Search of Missing Persons. New
York: Bantam Books, 1978. ISBN 0-553-11459-X.
- Moolman, Valerie. Women Aloft (The Epic of Flight
series). Alexandria, Virginia: Time-Life Books, 1981. ISBN
0-8094-3287-0.
- Purdue University Libraries, "George Palmer Putnam Collection of Amelia Earhart
Papers"
- Thurman, Judith. "Missing Woman: Amelia Earhart’s flight."
The New Yorker magazine,
September 14, 2009. Retrieved: September 18, 2009.
- Turner, Mary. The Women's Century: A Celebration of
Changing Roles 1900–2000. Kew, Richmond, Surrey, UK: The
National Archives, 2003. ISBN 1-903365-51-1.
External links
- A 1930's American Hope, Amelia Earhart,
Essay by Mariette Vermeulen, April 3, 1997
- Amelia Earhart Birthplace Museum
- Amelia Earhart Collection of Papers, Memorabilia and
Artifacts The world's largest collection of Earhart photographs,
artifacts and correspondence. More
than 600 photos are now online
- Amelia Earhart's Flight Across America:
Rediscovering a Legend
- Amelia
Earhart Official Web site
- Amelia Earhart: On The Future Of Women In Flying
(listen online)
- Museum of Women Pilots
- Amelia Earhart Memorial flight Recreation
- Transcript of interview with Earhart biographer
Susan Butler, 1997
- Amelia Earhart interview following the 1932
transatlantic flight
- General Correspondence: Earhart, Amelia,
1932–1934 The Wilbur and Orville
Wright Papers at the Library of Congress
.
- Speech by Amelia Earhart from the collection
American English Dialect Recordings, Library of Congress
.
- CG cutter Itasca and the search for Earhart