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On This Day In History: Amelia Earhart, Most Famous Female Pilot – Disappeared Over The Pacific Ocean – On July 2, 1937

MessageToEagle.com – On July 2, 1937, Amelia Earhart,  the most famous female pilot– – disappeared without a trace over the Pacific Ocean.

Earhart’s last communication was at 8:43 a.m.:

“We are running north and south.”

Amelia Earhart was born in Atchison, Kansas, on July 24, 1897, before was 12 years old before she ever saw an airplane, and she did not take her first flight until 1920.

“We are running north and south.”

Her first airplane ride was a wonderful sensation and she quickly began to take flying lessons. She wrote, “As soon as I left the ground, I knew I myself had to fly.”

Earhart borrowed money from her mother to buy a two-seat plane. She got her U.S. flying license in December 1921, and by October 1922, she set an altitude record for women of 14,000 feet. In 1923, Earhart received her international pilot’s license – only the 16th woman to do so. She was becoming famous for her aviation achievements.

After flying across the Atlantic as a passenger in 1928, Amelia Earhart’s next goal was to achieve a transatlantic crossing alone.

In 1932, exactly five years after Charles Lindbergh’s fantastic solo nonstop flight, Earhart became the first woman to repeat the feat, but she still wanted to achieve more

In one of Amelia Earhart’s last transmissions, the U.S. Navy Radio in Honolulu heard a garbled Morse code: “281 north Howland – call KHAQQ – beyond north … won’t hold with us much longer … above water … shut off.”

She decided that her next trip would be to fly around the world. In March 1937, she flew to Hawaii with fellow pilot Paul Mantz to begin this flight. Earhart lost control of the plane on takeoff, however, and the plane had to be sent to the factory for repairs.

In June, she went to Miami to again begin a flight around the world, this time with Fred Noonan as her navigator.

No one knows why, but she left behind important communication and navigation instruments. Was it because she wanted to make room for additional fuel for the long flight?

The pair Earhart/Noonan reached New Guinea in 21 days, but Earhart was tired and ill.

Last flight….

During the next leg of the trip, they departed New Guinea for Howland Island, a tiny island in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. July 2, 1937, was the last time Earhart and Noonan communicated with a nearby Coast Guard ship.

They were never heard from again.

The U.S. Navy conducted a massive search for Earhart and Noonan that continued for more than two weeks. Unable to accept that Earhart had simply disappeared and perished, some of her admirers believed that she was a spy or was captured by enemies of the United States.

The Navy submitted a report following its search, which included maps of search areas.

Neither the plane nor Earhart nor Noonan were ever found. No one knows for sure what happened, but many people believe they got lost and simply ran out of fuel and died.

Amelia Earhart was less than a month away from her 40th birthday.

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