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Fast Facts
| Birth
Name: |
Amelia
Mary Earhart |
| Born: |
July 24,
1897 |
| Birthplace:
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Atchison,
Kansas |
| Died:
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July 2, 1937,
en route from Lae, New Guinea to Howland Island |
| Married: |
February 7,
1931, to George Putnam |
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Despite having to attend six different high schools, she
was able to graduate on time.
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Earhart was called "Lady Lindy" because her slim build
and facial features resembled that of Charles Lindbergh.
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Earhart refused to don typical flying gear -she wore a
suit or dress instead of the "high-bread aviation togs,"
a close-fitting hat instead of a helmet, didn't put on her
goggles until she taxied to the end of the field and removed
them immediately upon landing.
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She developed a friendship with Eleanor Roosevelt, who
wanted to learn how to fly. Earhart had planned to teach
her, for which the First Lady even got her student permit.
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Earhart met Orville Wright at the Franklin Institute in
Philadelphia in 1937, the same year she disappeared.
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Earhart had such an impression on public that people often
wrote and told her about naming babies, lakes and even homing
pigeons "Amelia."
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The United States government spent $4 million looking for
Earhart, which made it the most costly and intensive air
and sea search in history at that time.
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She was the 16th woman to receive a pilot's license from
the FAI (License No. 6017).
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