Browse Items (143 total)

AE33.jpg
Here Earhart poses for a portrait that has been cut-out and pasted on a scrapbook page by her secretary and avid admirer, Margot DeCarie.

AE34.jpg
Earhart watches men as the work to renovate her and her husband's new house in Taluca Lake, North Hollywood, California.

AE35.jpg
In 1935, Earhart and husband George Putnam bought a house in Taluca Lake, North Hollywood, CA. Here we see the couple (right) standing in front of their new home, which was in the process of being extensively renovated.

AE46a.jpg
Here Earhart sits next to a bust statue of herself. The artist responsible for the statue, Brenda Putnam sits to the right. Putnam is the cousin of Earhart's husband, George Putnam.

AE46b.jpg
Amelia Earhart flies over Pennsylvania in the Beech-Nut Autogyro during her transcontinental flight.

AE47.jpg
Amelia Earhart is standing with the Laughlin family who were the first to greet her in Culmore, Ireland after she landed from her solo, transatlantic flight. In her hands she holds a sheaf of congratulatory telegrams.

AE50.jpg
Amelia stands in front of her Lockheed Vega in Ireland after her first solo transatlantic flight.

AE51.jpg
Earhart reads congratulatory telegrams while wearing her leather flight suit in Ireland. She had just completed her first solo transatlantic flight.

AE52.jpg
Earhart stands looking at the scenery at the Mission Inn in Riverside, California. The beautiful hotel is still in operation.

AE53.jpg
Earhart looks through binoculars while standing on her Lockheed Electra with Harry Manning, captain of the S.S. United States.

AE54.jpg
George Putnam (left) and Navy captain Harry Manning (center) stand with an unknown man on Amelia Earhart's Lockheed Electra.

AE67a.jpg
Earhart stands with an unknown woman with her plane close by.

AE67b.jpg
Earhart spends time tending to her garden at her home in North Hollywood, California.

AE67c.jpg
Earhart poses next to a speed limit sign on a seemingly windy, cold day.

AE67d.jpg
Earhart relaxes with a book.

AE67e.jpg
Earhart sits on the ground next to a plane talking to two men. A third man is visible inside the plane, possibly doing some mechanical work.

AE67g.jpg
Commander Williams assisted in navigating and preparing charts for Amelia Earhart’s attempt to fly around the world.

AE70A.jpg
This newspaper clipping shows Earhart's cousin receiving a photograph of the Rocketdyne Mountaineering Club of Pasadena, California. The club had dedicated a plaque to be placed at the top of Mount Amelia Earhart on 3 July 1966.

AE70b.jpg
U.S.A.F. Command Pilot Major Joe Gervais researched Earhart’s disappearance. He eventually proposed the theory that she had survived, moved to New Jersey, and adopted the name Mrs. Irene Craigmile Bolam.

AE71a.jpg
Mount Amelia Earhart was dedicated to the record-breaking pilot on 3 July 1966. The mountain is in Yosemite National Park and reaches a height of 12,000 feet.

AE71b.jpg
The Rocketdyne Mountaineering Club of Pasadena dedicated the bronze plaque atop Mount Amelia Earhart on 3 July 1966. The plaque is inscribed with the first two versus of a poem written by Earhart called "Courage is the Price."

AE72.jpg
On 2 July 1966 a bronze plaque inscribed with the first two versus of Earhart's poem "Courage is the Price" was placed at the top of a mountain in Yosemite National Park. Rocketdyne Mountaineering Club member Gordon Palmer had chosen this mountain…

AE83.jpg
This cut-out of Amelia Earhart's portrait was affixed to card stock by the pilot's secretary and avid admirer, Margot DeCarie.

AE84.jpg
Earhart stands gazing off in her flying gear in New York, New York.

AE85.jpg
This cut-out of Amelia Earhart's profile portrait was affixed to card stock by the pilot's secretary and avid admirer, Margot DeCarie.
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