Women's History Month: Amelia Earhart
Born on July 24, 1897, in Atchison, Kansas, Amelia Earhart moved often
with her family and completed high school in Chicago in 1916. She worked
as a military nurse in Canada during World War I and as a social worker
in Denison House, Boston, after the war. She learned to fly (against her
family's wishes) in 1920-21 and in 1922 bought her first plane, a Kinner
Canary. On June 17-18, 1928, she became the first woman to fly across the
Atlantic, although she was only a passenger. The same year, her reflections
on that flight were published as 20 Hrs., 40 Min. She married the publisher
George P. Putnam in 1931 but continued her career under her maiden name.
Determined to justify the renown that her 1928 crossing had brought her, Earhart crossed the Atlantic alone on May 20-21, 1932. Her flight in her Lockheed Vega from Newfoundland to Ireland was completed in the record time of 14 hours 56 minutes. After that flight, she wrote The Fun of It (1932). This soon led to a series of flights across the United States and drew her into the movement that encouraged the development of commercial aviation. She also took an active part in efforts to open aviation to women and end male domination in the new field.
In January 1935 she made a solo flight from Hawaii to California, a longer distance than that from the United States to Europe. Earhart was the first person to fly that hazardous route successfully; all previous attempts had ended in disaster. She set out in 1937 to fly around the world, with Fred Noonan as her navigator, in a twin-engine Lockheed Electra. After completing more than two-thirds of the distance, her plane vanished July 2, 1937, near Howland Island in the central Pacific Ocean, near the international date line. Although her mysterious disappearance has since raised many questions and much speculation about the events surrounding it, the facts remain largely unknown. Earhart's Last Flight was published in 1937, and Soaring Wings, a biography written by her husband, in 1939.
Bibliography. Amelia Earhart, Last Flight, arranged by George Palmer Putnam (1937, reissued 1988), contains journal entries and messages sent home, selected and arranged by her husband. Biographies include George Palmer Putnam, Soaring Wings (1939, reissued 1972); Doris L. Rich, Amelia Earhart (1989); Mary S. Lovell, The Sound of Wings (1989); Susan Butler, East to the Dawn (1997); and Donald M. Goldstein and Katherine V. Dillon, Amelia (1997). Randall Brink, Lost Star: The Search for Amelia Earhart (1994), examines her disappearance.
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