Difference between revisions of "Charles Lindbergh"

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[[Image:Lindbergh.jpg‎ |right|250px|thumb|Charles Lindbergh]]
 
[[Image:Lindbergh.jpg‎ |right|250px|thumb|Charles Lindbergh]]
'''Charles Lindbergh''' was an aviation pioneer.  In 1927 he became the first to fly solo, non-stop, from [[New York]] to [[Paris]]. This feat created a sensation and he was welcomed by enormous crowds in France and, on his return, in New York. He was known as "Lucky Lindy" and inspired a dance, the "Lindy Hop."
+
'''Charles Lindbergh''' (1902-1974) was an aviation pioneer and the world's most famous hero in the 1920s.  In 1927 he became the first to fly alone, non-stop, from New York to Paris. This solo feat created a sensation and he was welcomed by enormous crowds in France and, on his return, in New York. He was a hero to conservatives for his exploits and his leadership of the "isolationists" in opposition to [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]]'s foreign policy in the late 1930s.
  
 +
 +
==The flight==
 
Lindbergh was bold in using a single-engine plane and in flying solo. He argued that aircraft engines were now reliable enough to be counted on, and that the loss of a single engine in a multi-engine aircraft would be so serious that having several engines increased, rather than reduced, the risk. Bolder, perhaps, was his decision to fly alone, meaning that he needed to remain awake for 33 hours.  
 
Lindbergh was bold in using a single-engine plane and in flying solo. He argued that aircraft engines were now reliable enough to be counted on, and that the loss of a single engine in a multi-engine aircraft would be so serious that having several engines increased, rather than reduced, the risk. Bolder, perhaps, was his decision to fly alone, meaning that he needed to remain awake for 33 hours.  
 +
===Celebrity===
 +
Myron T. Herrick, US ambassador to France, used Charles Lindbergh's solo flight across the Atlantic in 1927 to improve relations between the United States and France. Rescuing him from the crowd at Le Bourget airport, Herrick sheltered Lindbergh, gave him a "crash course in modesty," and presented him to the world in a manner designed to make the best use of his hero status to build good relations between the two nations. To a significant degree, Herrick helped make Lindbergh into an American icon with lasting fame.
  
Lindbergh's life was touched with tragedy when his twenty-month-old baby was kidnapped, and ultimately killed, by Bruno Richard Hauptmann.
+
Writers were mesmerized by the flight. Over 10,000 poems about it appeared in local newspapers. Across the globe people projected on the flight their own emotions, which typically involved two themes. Looking to the past. the achievement was a brief escape from the course of history, an emergence into a new and open world with the self-sufficient individual at its center. Looking to the future the flight represented a new and higher stage in historical evolution and that its fulfillment lay in the development of society. For some Americans, the American ideal was an escape from institutions, from the forms of society, and from limitations put upon the free individual; for others, the American ideal was the elaboration of the complex institutions which made modern society possible, an acceptance of the discipline of the machine, and the achievement of the individual within a context of which he was only a part. The two views were contradictory but both can be seen in the public reaction to Lindbergh's flight.<ref> Ward (1958)</ref>
  
Lindbergh visited Germany in 1938 and was impressed by and spoke favorably of the German air force. He accepted a medal from [[Hermann Goering]] for his services to aviation. He attracted criticism and some regarded him as a [[Nazi]] sympathizer. Lindbergh strongly opposed U.S. entry into the [[Second World War]], and suggested that if the U.S. did enter, it should be on the side of Germany.
+
Lindbergh's years in the public spotlight illustrate the power of the press to shape images of celebrities to suit its own agendas. Between 1927 and the late 1930s, the mainstream media depicted Lindbergh as rising above the hazards of celebrity. Lindbergh's rude behavior in front of crowds and even in dealing with the press was dismissed as a need for privacy. This image reflected the middle-class ideal of true success. Tabloids pioneered an alternative version of Lindbergh as a boorish, ungrateful cad. The dominant media adopted this critical image after Lindbergh returned to the United States and advocated isolationism at a time when the dominant media supported Roosevelt's interventionism. Lindbergh had become a pariah, but his ideas had not changed since the 1920s. What had changed was his usefulness to the media.<ref>Charles L. Ponce De Leon, "The Man Nobody Knows: Charles A. Lindbergh and the Culture of Celebrity." ''Prospects'' 1996 21: 347-372. </ref> 
  
Lindbergh worked as a civilian consultant to aviation companies, particularly Pan American Airways. He flew all over the world scouting possible routes that Pan Am could fly. In later years, he served on the Board of Directors of the Lockheed Corporation.
+
He was known as "Lucky Lindy" and inspired a dance, the "Lindy Hop."
 +
==Family life vs. fame==
 +
In 1929 Lindbergh married Anne Morrow (1906-2001), daughter of a wealthy diplomat.
 +
She became a famous author in her own right.
 +
Anne Morrow Lindbergh became a popular poet and writer. In her best-seller ''North to the Orient'' (1935), she narrates the 1931 pioneering flight she and Charles made from New York over Canada and across the Arctic to Japan and China.
 +
 
 +
She desired a degree of privacy impossible to find. The more the couple tried to avoid reporters, the more they were hounded.<ref name=marriage>  [http://books.google.com/books?id=TT7nSy5BNQYC&pg=PA139&lpg=PA139&dq=a+%22good+marriage%22+is+not+something+you+find,+it%27s+something+you+work+for&source=bl&ots=fLq9RjrUBX&sig=HYprKgTRzBNWMT_NP4Tje5OfwWg&hl=en&ei=467DSfOcHoyqMrD-lYsK&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=4&ct=result#PPA139,M1 ''Sacred Marriage'', Pp. 136-142]</ref>
 +
 
 +
They had six children.
 +
 
 +
===Son murdered===
 +
In 1932 their first son was kidnapped for ransom, but died when the kidnapper's ladder broke.  Bruno Richard Hauptmann was executed for the crime.  The crime and investigation dominated national attention for years.  The Lindberghs left the country and settled in France, returning when World War II broke out. In his later years, Lindbergh lived quietly in Hana, Hawaii where he died of cancer August 26, 1974.
 +
 
 +
==Germany ==
 +
Lindbergh visited Germany in 1938 on a mission for the U.S. Air Corps. he studied and was impressed by the "Luftwaffe", the German air force, warning Americans it had the best equipment in the world. He accepted a medal from [[Hermann Goering]] for his services to aviation. Roosevelt supporters vehemently denounced him as a Nazi sympathizer, a charge he strongly denied and which historians generally reject.  [[Image:Spirit-stlouis.jpg|thumb|370px|The Spirit of St. Louis]]
 +
 
 +
==America First==
 +
Lindbergh was the leading isolationist of the day, and the hero to conservatives opposing Roosvelt's foreign policies. He strongly opposing American entry into [[World War II]] as an unnecessary war that would help Britain and the Jews, but not serve American interests and would lead to a dictatorship at home. He made a major speech on 11 September 1941 at an America First rally in Des Moines, Iowa, that led ex-New York governor and presidential candidate [[Al Smith]] to charge Lindbergh with being an anti-Semite. Previous speeches had hinted at Jewish control of the government, but it was in this speech that Lindbergh named Jews as a group of "war agitators."
 +
 
 +
==World War II==
 +
Lindbergh was an outspoken opponent of President [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]], who used the [[Internal Revenue Service]] and the [[FBI]] to spy on him, and refused to allow him to play any role in the war.<ref> Douglas M.  Charles, “ Informing FDR: FBI Political Surveillance and the  Isolationist-Interventionist Foreign Policy  Debate, 1939-1945.”  ''Diplomatic History'' 2000 24(2): 211-232; Douglas M. Charles, and John P. Rossi, "FBI Political Surveillance and the Charles Lindbergh Investigation, 1939-1944", ''Historian'' 1997 59(4): 831-847</ref>
 +
 
 +
Nevertheless Lindbergh worked as a civilian consultant to aviation companies during the war and even flew combat missions. He worked for [[Pan American Airways]] (Pan Am), scouting possible routes all over the world that Pan American could fly. In later years, he served on the Board of Directors of the [[Lockheed Corporation]].
  
 
Lindbergh wrote two books about his flight: ''We'' and ''The [[Spirit of St. Louis]].''
 
Lindbergh wrote two books about his flight: ''We'' and ''The [[Spirit of St. Louis]].''
 +
==Environment==
 +
Lindbergh strongly promoted aviation, but came to question the peaceful uses of aviation after viewing Germany's Luftwaffe in 1936. After World War II Lindbergh again visited Germany and saw the destruction caused by Allied bombing, which he blamed on the Germans' obsession with science and technology. Lindbergh's world had been one in which technology was equated with progress, but he slowly realized that technological progress did not necessarily mean social progress. He lent his name to numerous environmental causes, particularly wildlife protection. He consulted throughout his life on aircraft development, including the Supersonic Transport program (SST), but with increasing ambivalence. His ultimate opposition to the SST became a deciding factor in defeating its development in the United States.<ref> Leonard S. Reich, "From The Spirit of St. Louis to the SST: Charles Lindbergh, Technology, and Environment." ''Technology and Culture'' 1995 36(2): 351-393. </ref>
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==
  
 
*[[Alexis Carrel]]
 
*[[Alexis Carrel]]
 
+
==Further Reading==
 +
* Berg, A. Scott. ''Lindbergh'' (1999), the best biography [http://www.amazon.com/Lindbergh-Scott-Berg/dp/0425170411/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1229819245&sr=8-1 excerpt and text search]
 +
* Cole,  Wayne S. '' Charles A. Lindbergh and the Battle Against American Intervention in World War II'' (1974) 298pp
 +
* Milton, Joyce. ''Loss of Eden: A Biography of Charles and Anne Morrow Lindbergh.'' (1993). 520 pp.
 +
* Mosely, Leonard. ''Lindbergh: A Biography'' (2000) [http://www.amazon.com/Lindbergh-Biography-Leonard-Mosley/dp/0486409643/ref=pd_bbs_sr_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1229819245&sr=8-2 excerpt and text search]
 +
* Ward, John William. "The Meaning of Lindbergh's Flight," ''American Quarterly'' 10, no. 1 (Spring 1958) pp 3-16 [http://www.h-net.org/~hst203/readings/ward.html online]
 +
*[http://www.charleslindbergh.com/history/index.asp "Charles Lindbergh, An American Aviator"]Spirit of St. Louis 2 Project
 +
===Video===
 +
* "Lindbergh". produced by Stephen Ives; 58min. Insignia Films, 1990. Distributed by PBS Video,
 +
====Notes====
 +
<references/>
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lindbergh, Charles}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lindbergh, Charles}}
 
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[[Category:Pilots]]
[[Category:Aviation]]
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[[Category:United States History]]
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[[Category:1920s]]
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[[Category:New Deal]]
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[[Category:Conservatives]]
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[[Category:Environmentalism]]
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[[category:Anti-Semitism]]

Revision as of 15:37, March 15, 2011

Charles Lindbergh

Charles Lindbergh (1902-1974) was an aviation pioneer and the world's most famous hero in the 1920s. In 1927 he became the first to fly alone, non-stop, from New York to Paris. This solo feat created a sensation and he was welcomed by enormous crowds in France and, on his return, in New York. He was a hero to conservatives for his exploits and his leadership of the "isolationists" in opposition to Franklin D. Roosevelt's foreign policy in the late 1930s.


The flight

Lindbergh was bold in using a single-engine plane and in flying solo. He argued that aircraft engines were now reliable enough to be counted on, and that the loss of a single engine in a multi-engine aircraft would be so serious that having several engines increased, rather than reduced, the risk. Bolder, perhaps, was his decision to fly alone, meaning that he needed to remain awake for 33 hours.

Celebrity

Myron T. Herrick, US ambassador to France, used Charles Lindbergh's solo flight across the Atlantic in 1927 to improve relations between the United States and France. Rescuing him from the crowd at Le Bourget airport, Herrick sheltered Lindbergh, gave him a "crash course in modesty," and presented him to the world in a manner designed to make the best use of his hero status to build good relations between the two nations. To a significant degree, Herrick helped make Lindbergh into an American icon with lasting fame.

Writers were mesmerized by the flight. Over 10,000 poems about it appeared in local newspapers. Across the globe people projected on the flight their own emotions, which typically involved two themes. Looking to the past. the achievement was a brief escape from the course of history, an emergence into a new and open world with the self-sufficient individual at its center. Looking to the future the flight represented a new and higher stage in historical evolution and that its fulfillment lay in the development of society. For some Americans, the American ideal was an escape from institutions, from the forms of society, and from limitations put upon the free individual; for others, the American ideal was the elaboration of the complex institutions which made modern society possible, an acceptance of the discipline of the machine, and the achievement of the individual within a context of which he was only a part. The two views were contradictory but both can be seen in the public reaction to Lindbergh's flight.[1]

Lindbergh's years in the public spotlight illustrate the power of the press to shape images of celebrities to suit its own agendas. Between 1927 and the late 1930s, the mainstream media depicted Lindbergh as rising above the hazards of celebrity. Lindbergh's rude behavior in front of crowds and even in dealing with the press was dismissed as a need for privacy. This image reflected the middle-class ideal of true success. Tabloids pioneered an alternative version of Lindbergh as a boorish, ungrateful cad. The dominant media adopted this critical image after Lindbergh returned to the United States and advocated isolationism at a time when the dominant media supported Roosevelt's interventionism. Lindbergh had become a pariah, but his ideas had not changed since the 1920s. What had changed was his usefulness to the media.[2]

He was known as "Lucky Lindy" and inspired a dance, the "Lindy Hop."

Family life vs. fame

In 1929 Lindbergh married Anne Morrow (1906-2001), daughter of a wealthy diplomat. She became a famous author in her own right. Anne Morrow Lindbergh became a popular poet and writer. In her best-seller North to the Orient (1935), she narrates the 1931 pioneering flight she and Charles made from New York over Canada and across the Arctic to Japan and China.

She desired a degree of privacy impossible to find. The more the couple tried to avoid reporters, the more they were hounded.[3]

They had six children.

Son murdered

In 1932 their first son was kidnapped for ransom, but died when the kidnapper's ladder broke. Bruno Richard Hauptmann was executed for the crime. The crime and investigation dominated national attention for years. The Lindberghs left the country and settled in France, returning when World War II broke out. In his later years, Lindbergh lived quietly in Hana, Hawaii where he died of cancer August 26, 1974.

Germany

Lindbergh visited Germany in 1938 on a mission for the U.S. Air Corps. he studied and was impressed by the "Luftwaffe", the German air force, warning Americans it had the best equipment in the world. He accepted a medal from Hermann Goering for his services to aviation. Roosevelt supporters vehemently denounced him as a Nazi sympathizer, a charge he strongly denied and which historians generally reject.
The Spirit of St. Louis

America First

Lindbergh was the leading isolationist of the day, and the hero to conservatives opposing Roosvelt's foreign policies. He strongly opposing American entry into World War II as an unnecessary war that would help Britain and the Jews, but not serve American interests and would lead to a dictatorship at home. He made a major speech on 11 September 1941 at an America First rally in Des Moines, Iowa, that led ex-New York governor and presidential candidate Al Smith to charge Lindbergh with being an anti-Semite. Previous speeches had hinted at Jewish control of the government, but it was in this speech that Lindbergh named Jews as a group of "war agitators."

World War II

Lindbergh was an outspoken opponent of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who used the Internal Revenue Service and the FBI to spy on him, and refused to allow him to play any role in the war.[4]

Nevertheless Lindbergh worked as a civilian consultant to aviation companies during the war and even flew combat missions. He worked for Pan American Airways (Pan Am), scouting possible routes all over the world that Pan American could fly. In later years, he served on the Board of Directors of the Lockheed Corporation.

Lindbergh wrote two books about his flight: We and The Spirit of St. Louis.

Environment

Lindbergh strongly promoted aviation, but came to question the peaceful uses of aviation after viewing Germany's Luftwaffe in 1936. After World War II Lindbergh again visited Germany and saw the destruction caused by Allied bombing, which he blamed on the Germans' obsession with science and technology. Lindbergh's world had been one in which technology was equated with progress, but he slowly realized that technological progress did not necessarily mean social progress. He lent his name to numerous environmental causes, particularly wildlife protection. He consulted throughout his life on aircraft development, including the Supersonic Transport program (SST), but with increasing ambivalence. His ultimate opposition to the SST became a deciding factor in defeating its development in the United States.[5]

See also

Further Reading

  • Berg, A. Scott. Lindbergh (1999), the best biography excerpt and text search
  • Cole, Wayne S. Charles A. Lindbergh and the Battle Against American Intervention in World War II (1974) 298pp
  • Milton, Joyce. Loss of Eden: A Biography of Charles and Anne Morrow Lindbergh. (1993). 520 pp.
  • Mosely, Leonard. Lindbergh: A Biography (2000) excerpt and text search
  • Ward, John William. "The Meaning of Lindbergh's Flight," American Quarterly 10, no. 1 (Spring 1958) pp 3-16 online
  • "Charles Lindbergh, An American Aviator"Spirit of St. Louis 2 Project

Video

  • "Lindbergh". produced by Stephen Ives; 58min. Insignia Films, 1990. Distributed by PBS Video,

Notes

  1. Ward (1958)
  2. Charles L. Ponce De Leon, "The Man Nobody Knows: Charles A. Lindbergh and the Culture of Celebrity." Prospects 1996 21: 347-372.
  3. Sacred Marriage, Pp. 136-142
  4. Douglas M. Charles, “ Informing FDR: FBI Political Surveillance and the Isolationist-Interventionist Foreign Policy Debate, 1939-1945.” Diplomatic History 2000 24(2): 211-232; Douglas M. Charles, and John P. Rossi, "FBI Political Surveillance and the Charles Lindbergh Investigation, 1939-1944", Historian 1997 59(4): 831-847
  5. Leonard S. Reich, "From The Spirit of St. Louis to the SST: Charles Lindbergh, Technology, and Environment." Technology and Culture 1995 36(2): 351-393.