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Biography
When 10-year-old Amelia Mary Earhart saw her
first plane at a state fair, she was not impressed. "It was a thing
of rusty wire and wood and looked not at all interesting," she
said. It wasn't until Earhart attended a stunt-flying exhibition,
almost
a decade later, that she became seriously interested in aviation.
A pilot spotted Earhart and her friend, who were watching from
an
isolated clearing, and dove at them. "I am sure he said to himself,
'Watch me make them scamper,'" she said. Earhart, who felt a mixture
of fear and pleasure, stood her ground. As the plane swooped
by,
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." On December 28, 1920, pilot Frank Hawks
gave her a ride that would forever change her life. "By the time
I had got two or three hundred feet off the ground," she said, "I
knew I had to fly."
Although Earhart's convictions were strong, challenging prejudicial
and financial obstacles awaited her. But the former tomboy was no
stranger to disapproval or doubt. Defying conventional feminine
behavior, the young Earhart climbed trees, "belly-slammed" her sled
to start it downhill and hunted rats with a .22 rifle. She also
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.
After graduating from Hyde Park High School in 1915, Earhart worked as
a nurse's aide in a military hospital in Canada during WWI, attended college,
and later became a social worker. Earhart took her first flying lesson
on January 3, 1921, and in six months managed to save enough money to
buy her first plane. The second-hand Kinner Airster was a two-seater biplane
painted bright yellow. Earhart named the plane "Canary," and used it to
set her first women's record by rising to an altitude of 14,000 feet.
One afternoon in April 1928, a phone call came for Earhart at work.
"I'm too busy to answer just now," she said. After hearing that
it was important, Earhart relented though at first she thought it
was a prank. It wasn't until the caller supplied excellent references
that she realized the man was serious. "Would you like to fly the
Atlantic?" he asked, to which Earhart promptly replied, "Yes!" After
an interview in New York with the project coordinators, including
book publisher and publicist George P. Putnam, she was asked to
join pilot Wilmer "Bill" Stultz and co-pilot/mechanic Louis E. "Slim"
Gordon. The team left Trepassey harbor, Newfoundland, in a Fokker
F7 named Friendship on June 17, 1928, and arrived at Burry Port,
Wales, approximately 21 hours later. Their landmark flight made
headlines worldwide, and when the crew returned to the United States
they were greeted with a ticker-tape parade in New York and a reception
held by President Calvin Coolidge at the White House.
From then on, Earhart's life revolved around flying.
She placed third at the Cleveland Women's Air Derby, later nicknamed
the "Powder Puff Derby" by Will Rogers. As fate would have it, her
life also began to include George Putnam. The two developed a friendship
during preparation for the Atlantic crossing and were married February
7, 1931. Intent on retaining her independence, she referred to the
marriage as a "partnership" with "dual control."
Together they worked on secret plans for Earhart to make a solo
flight across the Atlantic. On May 20, 1932, she started the trek
from Harbor Grace, Newfoundland, to Paris. Strong north winds,
icy conditions and mechanical problems plagued the flight and
forced
her to land in a pasture near Londonderry, Ireland. "After scaring
most of the cows in the neighborhood," she said, "I pulled up
in a farmer's back yard." As word of her flight spread, the media
surrounded her, both overseas and in the United States. President
Herbert Hoover
presented Earhart with a gold medal from the National Geographic
Society. Congress awarded her the Distinguished Flying Cross-the
first ever given to a woman. At the ceremony, Vice President Charles
Curtis praised her courage, saying she displayed "heroic courage
and skill as a navigator at the risk of her life." Earhart felt
the flight proved that men and women were equal in "jobs requiring
intelligence, coordination, speed, coolness and willpower."
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