Charles
Lindbergh
Born: February 4, 1902
Detroit, Michigan
Died: August 26, 1974
Maui, Hawaii
American aviator
Source: Encyclopaedia of world biography
Charles Lindbergh. Courtesy of the Library of Congress
American aviator Charles Lindbergh became famous after making
the first solo nonstop flight across the Atlantic Ocean. He was criticized for
insisting that the United States should not become involved in World War II.
Early
years
Charles Augustus Lindbergh was born on February 4, 1902, in
Detroit, Michigan, the only child of Charles August Lindbergh and Evangeline
Lodge Land Lindbergh. His father was a congressional representative from
Minnesota from 1907 to 1917, and his grandfather had been secretary to the King
of Sweden. Lindbergh spent a great deal of time alone while young, with animals
and then machines to keep him company. After attending schools in Little Falls,
Minnesota, and Washington, D.C., Lindbergh enrolled in a mechanical engineering
program at the University of Wisconsin.
Lindbergh became bored with studying; he was more interested
in cars and motorcycles at this point. He left Wisconsin to study airplane
flying in Lincoln, Nebraska, from 1920 to 1922. He made his first solo flight
in 1923 and thereafter made exhibition flights and short trips in the Midwest.
He enrolled in the U.S. Air Service Reserve as a cadet in 1924 and graduated
the next year. In 1926 he made his first flight as an airmail pilot between
Chicago, Illinois, and St. Louis, Missouri.
Famous
flight
Lindbergh wanted to compete for the $25 thousand prize that a
man named Raymond Orteig had posted for the first person to make a nonstop
flight between New York and Paris, France. With money put up by several St.
Louis businessmen, Lindbergh had a plane called the Spirit of St. Louis built.
On the first lap of his flight to New York, he traveled nonstop to St. Louis in
fourteen hours and twenty-five minutes—record-breaking time from the West
Coast.
On May 20, 1927, Lindbergh took off in his silver-winged
monoplane (a plane with only one supporting surface) from Roosevelt Field in
Long Island, New York, bound for an airport outside Paris. Better-equipped and
better-known aviators had failed; some had even crashed to their death. But
Lindbergh succeeded. He arrived on May 21, having travelled 2,610 miles in
thirty-three and one-half hours. He immediately became a hero and received many
honors and decorations, including the Congressional Medal of Honour, the French
Chevalier Legion of Honour, the Royal Air Cross (British), and the Order of
Leopold (Belgium). During a tour of seventy-five American cities sponsored by
the Daniel Guggenheim Foundation for the Promotion of Aeronautics, he was
greeted by wild demonstrations of praise.
In December 1927 Lindbergh flew nonstop between Washington and
Mexico City, Mexico, and went on a goodwill trip to the Caribbean and Central
America. During one tour he met Anne Spencer Morrow, the daughter of the U.S.
ambassador (representative) to Mexico. They were married in 1929. The
Lindberghs made many flights together. In 1931 they flew to Asia, mapping air
routes to China. Two years later, in a 30,000-mile flight, they explored
possible air routes across oceans.
Son
murdered
In March 1932 the Lindberghs were shaken when their infant son
was kidnapped. A $50,000 ransom was paid, but the baby was found dead. The
nation's concern and horror resulted in laws that expanded the role of federal
law-enforcement agencies in dealing with such crimes, including allowing the
government to demand the death penalty for kidnappers who take victims across
state lines.
The Lindberghs moved to Europe after the execution of their
son's murderer in 1935. While in France Lindbergh worked with Alexis Carrel
(1873–1944), an American surgeon (medical specialist who performs operations)
and experimental biologist who had won the Nobel Prize in medicine in 1912. The
two men perfected an "artificial heart and lungs," a pump that could
keep organs alive outside the body by supplying blood and air to them.
Criticized for political opinions
In the late 1930s Lindbergh conducted various studies of air
power in Europe. He toured German aviation centers at the invitation of Nazi (a
political party that controlled Germany from 1933–45 and that attempted to rid
the country of Jewish people) leader Hermann Göring (1893–1946), becoming
convinced that the Nazi military was unbeatable. Also in the 1930s Lindbergh
was on the Board of Directors of Pan-American World Airways. In 1939 he studied
American airplane production as special adviser on technical matters. He also
performed promotional work for aviation during this period.
Just prior to World War II (1939–45; a war fought between the
Axis powers of Germany, Italy, and Japan and the Allies of England, France, the
Soviet Union, and the United States), as a member of the America First
Organization, Lindbergh warned that United States involvement could not prevent
a German victory. President Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882–1945) criticized him
for radio broadcasts urging America not to fight in "other people's
wars." As a result, Lindbergh resigned his commission in the U.S. Air
Force. After Japan attacked the United States in 1941, Lindbergh supported the
American effort, serving as a technician for aircraft companies. After the war
he once again became a technical adviser for the U.S. Air Force, and eventually
he was again commissioned a brigadier general in the Air Force Reserve.
Later
years
Lindbergh's association with the Nazis had severely damaged
his reputation, but the popularity of the books he and his wife wrote helped
restore some of what he had lost. Lindbergh wrote several accounts of his
famous 1927 flight. We (1927) and The Spirit of St. Louis (1953), for which he
received the Pulitzer Prize for biography, are descriptions of his early life
and accomplishments. With Carrel he co-authored Culture of Organs (1938), and
in 1948 he wrote Of Flight and Life.
Lindbergh's later works included The Wartime Journals of
Charles A. Lindbergh (1970) and Boyhood on the Upper Mississippi: A Reminiscent
Letter (1972). An Autobiography of Values (1977) was published after his death.
Toward the end of his life, Lindbergh grew increasingly interested in the
spiritual world and spoke out on environmental issues. He spent his final years
with his wife in a house they had built on a remote portion of the island of
Maui. He died there on August 26, 1974.
After her husband's death, Anne Morrow Lindbergh continued to
publish books of her diaries and letters. She retired to Darien, Connecticut,
where a series of strokes weakened her. In 1992, she discovered that a woman whom
her children had hired to manage her affairs was stealing money from her. The
state of Connecticut joined with the Lindbergh children in pressing charges
against the woman.
America great celebration honors Lindbergh success fly
With affection,
Ruben
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