A newly-discovered photo suggests legendary US pilot Amelia Earhart might have died in Japanese custody - and not in a plane crash in the Pacific. If true, it would solve one of aviation history's ...
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Could a grainy, black-and-white photo, long buried in the National Archives, offer new evidence to solve the Amelia Earhart mystery? The famous Kansas-born aviatrix disappeared on ...
The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery believes that Earhart died as a castaway on an island in the Pacific Ocean You can save this article by registering for free here. Or sign-in if ...
As America endured the drab years of the Great Depression, Amelia Earhart's exploits were a bright spot. She broke gender barriers by completing solo flights most male pilots hadn't accomplished and ...
A lost photo may shed new light on the mysterious death of famous aviator Amelia Earhart. After becoming the first female pilot to fly a plane across the Atlantic Ocean, Earhart set off to ...
That’s the opinion of researchers who have been probing her mysterious disappearance for 22 years. The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery (TIGHAR) has long believed Earhart and her ...
Gillespie never intended, though, to search for one of the most famous pilots of all time. Like many people, he had believed that on a long flight around the world, Amelia Earhart and her copilot, ...
Some were heard by members of the military and others looking for Earhart. Others caught the attention of people who just happened to be listening to their radios You can save this article by ...
Despite recent claims to the contrary, there's no doubt in Ric Gillespie's mind that Amelia Earhart died as a castaway after her plane crashed on a desolate island in the Pacific Ocean in July 1937.
Charlotte Gray is the author of 10 biographies and books on Canadian history. Her latest, Murdered Midas: A Millionaire, His Gold Mine and a Strange Death on an Island Paradise, will be published next ...
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