
JULY 2

Amelia Earhart
Born July 24, 1897, in Atchison, Kansas
Died July 2, 1937
Aviator, the
first woman to fly across the Atlantic
Amelia Earhart
Original Name - Amelia Mary Earhart
Aviator. Born on July 24, 1897, in Atchison,
Kansas. Inspired by her first ride in an airplane
in 1920, Amelia Earhart became one of the
greatest female pilots of the twentieth century.
She was the first woman to fly across the
Atlantic in 1928.
It was in Los Angeles that Amelia Earhart took
that fateful first ride at an air show, and she
worked odd jobs to help pay for flying lessons
and to buy her first plane. By 1922, Earhart was
flying solo. Still flying was her hobby until her
historic trip of 1928. At the invitation of
publisher George Putnam, she became the first
woman to flying across the Atlanticas a
passenger. On June 3, 1928, Earhart joined pilot
Wilmer Bill Stultz and co-pilot Louis
E. Slim Gordon across the Atlantic.
They left from Newfoundland and landed at Burry
Port, Wales, more than 20 hours later. After the
flight, Earharts achievement made headlines
around the world. When she returned home, she was
treated like a celebrity and even received a
parade in New York City. Earhart then made flying
her life.
Amelia Earhart crossed the Atlantic again in
1932all on her own. On May 20, she left
from Harbor Grace, Newfoundland. Earhart had
intended to land in Paris, but technical problems
forced her to land earlier than expected. Landing
in a field near Londonderry, Northern Ireland,
she made the trip in close to 15 hours. Earhart
became the first woman to fly solo across the
Atlantic. For her courageous feat, Earhart
received many honors, including a medal from the
National Geographic Society and the Distinguished
Flying Cross from the U.S. Congress.
Hungry for new challenges, Amelia Earhart set the
solo record for flying coast to coast that same
year. She continued to set more records for her
brave journeys. And in 1937, Earhart set out on
her most daring adventure of all. After one
failed attempt, she started to make her way
around the world on June 1. Leaving from Miami,
Florida, Earhart with navigator Bill Noonan made
it to New Guinea on June 30. On July 2, they took
off for their next stop, which was supposed to be
tiny Howland Island in the Pacific Ocean, but
they never made it there. The last radio contact
with Earhart was on the morning of July 3.
An extensive search was made of the area, but no
traces of Earhart, Noonan, or their plane were
found. The world mourned the disappearance of the
great aviatrix called Lady Lindy by
some after Charles Lindbergh, another aviation
pioneer. The mystery of what happened to Earhart
on her final flight has never been solved. She
was survived by her husband George Putnam. He
published her autobiography, Last Flight (1937),
after her disappearance.
Today, Amelia Earhart is remembered for her
bravery and determination. She took on many
challenges that no oneman or womanwas
willing to do. Earhart showed the world that a
woman can be as good of a pilot as any man.
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