Amelia Earhart I. “The stars seemed near enough to touch and never before have I seen so many. I always believed the lure of flying is the lure of beauty, but I was sure of it that night.” (“Biography - The Official Licensing Website of Amelia Earhart”) Amelia Earhart was a skilled flyer, although it did not help her when she got lost at sea. However, her skills did help her set many records. Having established herself, she disappeared during her trip around the world. Amelia Earhart was born to Amy and Edwin Earhart, her first sighting of a plane in 1907, led her to receiving awards from President Herbert Hoover and Congress for her flying skills, but her career untimely ended when she went missing in her attempt to fly around the world. II. …show more content…
When Amelia was ten years old, she saw a plane for the first time. She was not very impressed. ‘“It was a thing of rusty wire and wood and looked not at all interesting.”’ (“Amelia Earhart - Found, Death & Plane”) A year after graduating from Chicago's Hyde Park High School in 1915, Amelia enrolled in the Ogontz School for Young Ladies near Philadelphia. During her sophomore year, after visiting her sister Muriel in Toronto over Christmas, she decided not to return to Ogontz School but instead to stay and join the war efforts. “‘Unfortunately, I lived at a time when girls were still girls,’ said Amelia Earhart, in her autobiography, The Fun of It, 1932” (Romero 15.) She took courses as a nurse’s aide and worked in various hospitals until the war ended. After the war ended, Amelia enrolled at Columbia University to study medicine. III. Amelia signed up for flying lessons with Neta Snook, the only female instructor in Southern California, and attended her first session on January 3, 1921. Six months later, right before her 24th birthday, she had saved enough money to buy her first …show more content…
The flight plane had to be altered due to weather patterns and global wind changes. Earhart and Noonan took off on June 1 from Miami without the rest of the team. “At 7:42 a.m., the Itasca picked up the last message from Earhart: ‘We must be on you, but we cannot see you. Fuel is running low on the car. Been unable to reach you by radio. We are flying at 1,000 feet.”’ (“Amelia Earhart: Biography, Pilot, Aviator, Disappearance.”) Sixty-six aircraft, nine ships, and an estimated $4 million in resources were used to search for the two flyers when they never arrived. The official search ended on July 18, 1937. Putnam financed additional search efforts in the last attempt to find his wife, but in October 1937, he gave up, accepting they could not have survived. On January 5, 1939, Earhart was declared legally dead by the Superior Court in Los Angeles. V. Amelia Earhart’s parents Amy and Edwin, watched her make her many achievements. Her awards from Congress and President Herbert Hoover were a tremendous accomplishment. Her life ended during her attempt to accomplish her most important