Orlando Sentinel

Is photo proof Earhart survived?

- Los Angeles Times

The decades-old black and white photo, pulled from obscure files at the National Archives, shows the back of a woman sitting on a dock on an atoll in the Marshall Islands, wearing pants and sporting tousled hair. Off to the side is a blurry figure of a man with a distinctiv­e hairline. Maybe. As evidence that Amelia Earhart and her navigator Fred Noonan survived a crash in the Pacific Ocean, it’s hardly compelling. But the fascinatio­n with the legendary aviator is.

Earhart, the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic, was already famous when she vanished on July 2, 1937, while attempting a grueling round-theworld flight in her Lockheed Electra 10E. But the unsolved mystery of her disappeara­nce over the Pacific has made her mystique endure. She has become a story, alternatel­y researched and romanticiz­ed. Was she on a spy mission for the U.S. government? Did she survive and live out her days in the captivity of the Japanese? (The Japanese have always said they have no record of this.)

Researcher­s will cite this latest photo as possible proof of her survival in a History Channel documentar­y this coming weekend, just after the 80th anniversar­y of her vanishing. That may just exchange one mystery about her fate for another, however. And Earhart deserves to be remembered simply for who she was: a pioneer who set off on dangerous flights at a time when flying itself was rare, popularizi­ng the notion of air travel and inspiring generation­s of girls and women. About this, there is no mystery.

 ?? ALBERT BRESNIK/AP ?? This May 20, 1937, photo, provided by The Paragon Agency, shows aviator Amelia Earhart at her Electra plane cabin, taken by Albert Bresnik at Burbank Airport in Burbank, Calif.
ALBERT BRESNIK/AP This May 20, 1937, photo, provided by The Paragon Agency, shows aviator Amelia Earhart at her Electra plane cabin, taken by Albert Bresnik at Burbank Airport in Burbank, Calif.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States