Amelia Earhart went to fly around the world in the year of 1937. She was then never found or seen again. People think that maybe the japanesse had found and captured Amelia and Fred Noonan. I believe that that answer is true. Because she was lost around where the japanesse was told to have captured them and then she had lost signal and had not been seen or heard since. Fred noonan has not been seen or heard from since they lost signal before they went missing.
Amelia Earhart's Fokker seaplane "Friendship" landed in the Burry Inlet, a few miles east of Burry Port in Carmarthenshire, South Wales at 12.40pm on June 18, 1928.
NO. Amelia flew across the Atlantic in 1928 in an aircraft piloted by Wilber Stutz. It was essentially a publicity stunt. - Amelia did fly solo from Hawaii to Oakland in 1935 in the 'Little red bus' .
Amelia Earhart has NO connection- dead, alive, missing, whatever- with the Bermuda Triangle. It is true some Aviatrix ( woman pilot) did do some mapping survey of the area in 1935- so says a book put out by the Edgar Cayce organization but it does not state Amelia by name. There were many Aviatrixes out in l935. Amelia has NOTHING TO DO with the Bermuda Triangle. Caroline CASCIO, a modern aviatrix- did go missing in the triangle while operating a Cessna l72 in l969, on or around June 6 ( D-Day) this is a good Thirty- something years AFTER the Electra project.
Amelia never had an aircraft called 'Friendship'. -You may be thinking of her 1928 flight across the Atlantic in a Fokker Friendship flown by Wilmer Stultz. This was NOT Amelia's aircraft and as far as I know it did not have a name. Sounds like you need to pay more attention to detail in your reading.
June 1st, 1937.
June 1, 1937
Amelia is not foolish she just lived her dreams. June
In Search of--- - 1976 Amelia Earhart 1-15 was released on: USA: 1 June 1977
June of 1920
Yes. Amelia,s grandma died.I don't know when sh died. June
Amelia Earhart went to fly around the world in the year of 1937. She was then never found or seen again. People think that maybe the japanesse had found and captured Amelia and Fred Noonan. I believe that that answer is true. Because she was lost around where the japanesse was told to have captured them and then she had lost signal and had not been seen or heard since. Fred noonan has not been seen or heard from since they lost signal before they went missing.
Amelia Earhart's Fokker seaplane "Friendship" landed in the Burry Inlet, a few miles east of Burry Port in Carmarthenshire, South Wales at 12.40pm on June 18, 1928.
The first transatlantic flight by a woman was completed by Amelia Earhart in June 1928. However, for this journey, she was a passenger because at this time she had no training for the instruments in the aircraft that was flown by Wilmer Stultz. The first solo transatlantic flight by a woman was also completed by Amelia Earhart on May 20, 1932. The first transatlantic flight by a woman that was flown from Europe to America (instead of the other way, as Earhart had done) was completed by Beryl Markham on September 4-5, 1936.
NO. Amelia flew across the Atlantic in 1928 in an aircraft piloted by Wilber Stutz. It was essentially a publicity stunt. - Amelia did fly solo from Hawaii to Oakland in 1935 in the 'Little red bus' .
Amelia Earhart has NO connection- dead, alive, missing, whatever- with the Bermuda Triangle. It is true some Aviatrix ( woman pilot) did do some mapping survey of the area in 1935- so says a book put out by the Edgar Cayce organization but it does not state Amelia by name. There were many Aviatrixes out in l935. Amelia has NOTHING TO DO with the Bermuda Triangle. Caroline CASCIO, a modern aviatrix- did go missing in the triangle while operating a Cessna l72 in l969, on or around June 6 ( D-Day) this is a good Thirty- something years AFTER the Electra project.
Amelia Mary Earhart was born on July 24, 1887. She had her first flight on December 28, 1920 with Frank Hawks. She took her first flying lesson on January 3, 1921. She bought her first plane in July 1921. She set an altitude record for women on October 22, 1922. She flew across the Atlantic on June 17, 1928.