Lindbergh did it! Fly to Paris for 33 hours and a half, flying 1000 miles in snow and snow, the French who shouted cheers took him away
On the morning of May 20, 1927, Charles A. Lindbergh took off the spirit of St. Louis from the Roosevelt Stadium near New York. He flew northeast along the coast and after that day he flew above Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. He departed from the Atlantic Ocean from Newfoundland's St. John's, using only magnetic compasses, airspeed gauges, and luck to Ireland. This flight, like some historical events, caught the imagination of American citizens. The citizens were nervous at their radio and were waiting and heard the flight news. When I saw Lindbergh crossing the Irish coast, the world cheered him and was eagerly waiting to arrive in Paris. A group of over 100,000 crazy people gathered at the Le Bourget Field to see him. When he landed within 34 hours of leaving New York, Lindbergh became the first person to fly across the Atlantic Ocean. More
Amoro Lindbergh: Women, Speech, Life and Heritage. To celebrate the 100th anniversary of Anne Morrow Lindbergh's birthday, the 2006 Lindbergh seminar will introduce her life through her words and sentences. More
It is an urgent matter to capture the memory and verbal history of the people who met Charles Lindbergh, along with related Lindbergh story, photos, family movies, or other Lindberg related information and projects. Please share your Lindbergh history with others! Please email your information and images to webmaster@charleslindbergh.com. See what others posted to My Lindbergh Story Archive
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On March 1, 1932, the world famous pilot, Charles Lindbergh's son, 20 months of Charles Augustus Lindbergh was taken away from the second story at his home in New Jersey State Hopewell. Around 10 p.m., a child's nurse learned that he was missing and reminded his parents. After further examination of the nursery school, ransom memos were found in the window frame. A rough written request is to pay $ 50,000 to the disclosed location. During the investigation of the primary crime scene, footprints with some misclassification with mud were found on the nursery floor. Part of a temporary wooden ladder used to reach the 2 nd day nursery was also discovered. At 10:30 that night, the news station was broadcasting the whole story. New Jersey State Police is in charge of investigations led by Col. H. Schwarzkopf, father of General H. Norman Schwarzkopf, the leader of the Gulf War.
On the evening of March 1, 1932, John Augustus Lindbergh (Jr.), a famous pilot of Anne Morrow Lindbergh and a son of twenty months old, from the nursery school on the second floor of Lindbergh's house near Hopewell, New Jersey 9: 00 was kidnapped. It was discovered that there were no children and was reported to parents who were at home at 10 PM. Child nurse Bettigou. The facility was searched immediately and a ransom of fifty thousand dollars was found in the nursery window frame. After being reported to the Hopewell police, the report was sent to the New Jersey police for investigation.
On the evening of 1 March 1932, the 20-year-old Charles Augustus Lindbergh Jr. was in a rural house in Lindberg, East Amwell, New Jersey. Highfields baby bed was kidnapped. A man claiming to be a kidnapper received a cash ransom of 50,000 dollars on April 2, but a part of it was a gold certificate, but this has quickly stopped circulating and attracting attention; The serial number of the invoice is also recorded. On 12th May the widow of the child was found in the forest not far from Lindberg's house.