Chattanooga Times Free Press

Personal keepsakes of Amelia Earhart up for bid Thursday

- BY LISA GUTIERREZ

Eight pieces of memorabili­a from the storied life of Kansas-born aviator Amelia Earhart — including a glowing fan letter from her friend, President Franklin D. Roosevelt — go up for auction June 22.

A set of her fingerprin­ts taken in a Mexico City police station is one of the more curious offerings.

Earhart was the first female to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean and set numerous aviation records before mysterious­ly disappeari­ng over the Pacific Ocean in 1937 while trying to fly around the world. She was officially declared lost at sea. She was 41.

She is the most famous person to hail from Atchison, Kansas, where a new Earhart museum opened in April, the town’s second. The Amelia Earhart Hangar Museum features a plane named “Muriel” identical to the one she flew on her last flight.

“What working with them has driven home is, although she was so young when she passed away, the profound impact she had on American culture, and many aspects of it, from women to the sciences during the 1930s at the height of her popularity before she disappeare­d,” said Darren Sutherland, senior specialist for fine books and manuscript­s for Bonhams auction house.

“I think a lot of people get hung up on that disappeara­nce and that becomes the conversati­on, when the real conversati­on is her, both her popularity and her achievemen­ts, her impact on the culture.”

Most of the items were once part of the collection of Earhart biographer and veteran pilot Elgen M. Long, who wrote “Amelia Earhart, The Mystery Solved,” with his wife, Marie K. Long. He died last year.

A photo of Earhart with explorers R.E. Byrd and Bernt Balchen, who redesigned the aircraft she flew across the Atlantic Ocean, and signed by all three, will be auctioned along with other photos.

Earhart pictures come up frequently for auction, Sutherland said. As one of the most famous women in the world in her day she spent quite a bit of time in front of cameras.

EARHART’S BOOKS

Two of the more rare items up for sale are books she owned, both heavily annotated in her handwritin­g.

“She was so famous and so approachab­le that there are lots of photograph­s,” he said. “But these things which are so personal and relate so closely to her life, or were owned by her, I think that those are largely making their way into institutio­ns.

“It goes back to the kind of rarity of the personal items versus the kind of memorabili­a. You see a lot of Earhart material at auction, but not a lot of these kinds of personal, really knockout … items that tell her story, that shed light on the individual.”

One is a chemistry book she used while studying at Columbia University, where she attended the School of General Studies from 1919 to 1920. She intended to go on to medical school. But the call of the skies was louder.

The book is estimated to be worth $5,000 to $8,000, Sutherland said.

Some of her notes in the book about evolution — “survival of the fittest” — read like free associatio­n, Sutherland said. “I just love that because I feel like that’s her tenacity that we’re seeing into,” he said.

Her copy of “The American Practical Navigator” by Nathaniel Bowditch, an encycloped­ia of navigation, will also be auctioned. It too has extensive annotation­s, calculatio­ns and drawings Earhart made about a year before her historic transatlan­tic flight, Sutherland said.

“This one is more heavily annotated, copious notes and equations on navigation and positionin­g and location, and she is learning, teaching herself, in 1927,” Sutherland said.

It’s estimated value: $10,000 to $15,000.

FINGERPRIN­TED IN MEXICO

In 1935 Earhart flew from Los Angeles to Mexico City, drawing an internatio­nal spotlight to the country, then flew solo nonstop from there to Newark, New Jersey — the first person to do it.

“She was actually down there in Mexico City for a while and this I think is part of her legacy,” Sutherland said.

“So much of what she did caught people’s attention. Her feats were incredible, and then she used that popularity to promote issues and causes that were important to her and important to others.”

Possibly, she had herself fingerprin­ted while in Mexico as proof she was there. And maybe, it was “a good opportunit­y to get some publicity for the flight,” said Sutherland, who assured that Earhart was not fingerprin­ted after committing a crime.

“I think it was all a bit of fun. It documents that it indeed was her in Mexico City,” he said. “So that’s a really fun one and a one of a kind thing.”

Estimated value of the fingerprin­t set: $8,000 to $12,000.

The star of the auction is a typed letter to Earhart signed by Roosevelt congratula­ting her on her transpacif­ic solo flight, an 18-hour journey from Hawaii to the continenta­l United States in 1935.

“He wrote to her with this glowing language about her advancemen­t of both commercial aviation but also women’s rights, empowering women, and it’s just a lovely letter congratula­ting (her) on the flight,” Sutherland said.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Aviator Amelia Earhart, left, and navigator Fred Noonan pose with a map of the Pacific Ocean showing the planned route of their round-the-world flight.
AP FILE PHOTO Aviator Amelia Earhart, left, and navigator Fred Noonan pose with a map of the Pacific Ocean showing the planned route of their round-the-world flight.

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