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Amelia Earhart

Aviator / Missing Person

Aviation legend Amelia Earhart is most famous for the mysterious circumstances of her death: she disappeared in 1937 somewhere in the South Pacific, near the end of an attempted round-the-world flight. Despite extensive searches, no clear evidence has ever been found of Earhart, her navigator Fred Noonan, or their plane. Before her disappearance Earhart was one of the most famous women in America. She had set many flight records, including becoming the first woman to fly solo across both the Atlantic Ocean (in 1932) and the Pacific Ocean (in 1935). She also was the first woman to fly across the Atlantic in a multi-person plane, making the crossing in 1928 with pilot Wilmer Stultz and Lou Gordon. She authored the books 20 Hours, 40 Minutes (1928, about her first trans-Atlantic flight) and The Fun of It (1932).

Extra credit: Earhart was married to publisher George Putnam... She was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross by Congress in 1932 (the DFC was later restricted to military recipients only)... She was sometimes called "Lady Lindy," a reference to famous flier Charles Lindbergh, the first man to fly solo across the Atlantic.

Earhart appears with Jimmy Hoffa in our loop on famous Disappearing Acts. She also joins Sally Ride in our loop on Female First Flights.

Blog posts mentioning Amelia Earhart:

Four Good Links

Amelia Earhart

Good graphical history from a Dallas fan

The Earhart Project

Fabulous inquiry into Earhart's disappearance

American Aviatrix

Basic Earhart bio with good Amelia and Aviation links

The Official Amelia Earhart Site

Includes a biography and many portraits

Vital Stats

Birth

24 July 1897

Birthplace

Atchison, Kansas

Death

2 July 1937
(presumed dead in plane crash at sea, age 39)

Best Known As

The pioneering female pilot who disappeared in the South Pacific