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She was a superstar, the most famous woman in the world. She was a pilot, “it” girl, author, adventurer, fashion designer, ...
Amelia Earhart’s incredible feats in the amateur stages of American aviation are likely the first things about the early 20th century icon that come to mind. Related: Ditch The Traditional Veil ...
The Aviator and the Showman,' Laurie Gwen Shapiro's vibrant account of Amelia Earhart's union with a publicity-seeking ...
Amelia Earhart (1897–1937) loved to fly. How she felt about other things in her life is harder to say. After becoming the first woman to fly across the Atlantic, she was rarely out of public view.
Early on, Earhart wore these things, too, but she had a lifelong interest in fashion so many of the more stylish, more feminine adaptations came from her. At one point, she had her own clothing ...
Amelia Earhart's life was interesting for more than just her mysterious death as scientists think they've found new evidence ...
The Amelia Earhart Hangar Museum in Atchison, ... "Amelia was a fashion designer for cosmopolitan and a book writer. She was a nurse in World War 1 and a pilot and mechanic." ...
Turns out Amelia Earhart was at the height of fashion with her aviation ensemble. Her leather jacket - cuffed at the waist and sleeves to protect her from the cold air at high altitudes - was ...
Earhart poses in a Pitcairn PCA-2 Autogiro in 1931. Courtesy Stephen Pitcairn. Seventy years after she went missing, dedicated investigators remain fixated on Amelia Earhart and her disappearance.
Golf became an even more important part of Earhart’s life in 1934 when she and her husband, George Palmer Putnam, moved from Rye, N.Y. to Burbank, Calif. They purchased a home bordering Lakeside Golf ...