Daughter of the Sky
Snoozecast
Snoozecast
4.4 • 1.5K Ratings
🗓️ 13 May 2024
⏱️ 32 minutes
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Summary
Tonight, we’ll read the opening to “Daughter of the Sky: The Story of Amelia Earhart” written by Paul L. Briand and published in 1960. As the New York Times wrote in their review of the book when it was published “While so many were struggling to keep themselves or their business intact, this fine, calm young woman from 1928 to 1937, experienced a whole series of spectacular successes.”
Earhart was an American pioneer of aviation. In 1937 she disappeared over the Pacific Ocean while attempting to become the first female pilot to circumnavigate the world. During her life, she embraced celebrity culture and women's rights, and since her disappearance has become a cultural icon. Earhart was the first female aviator to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean and she set many other records.
Recently, in 2024, a company that operates unmanned underwater vehicles found via sonar what appears to be the remains of an airplane on the ocean floor near Howland Island. The object, shaped like her particular plane, was located along the path she had been expected to fly in the Pacific Ocean. More exploration, however, is necessary to confirm whether this is indeed Earhart's missing aircraft.
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| 0:00.0 | Music Welcome to Snewscast, the podcast designed to hope you fall asleep. Find us at snoozecast.com and if you enjoy our show, please share us with a friend. This episode is brought to you by cruising altitude. |
| 0:49.4 | Tonight. show, please share us with a friend. This episode is brought to you by Cruising Altitude. Tonight we'll read the opening to Daughter of the Sky, the story of Amelia Earhart written by Paul L. Breond and published in 1960. As the New York Times wrote in their review of the book when it was published, while so many were struggling to keep themselves or their businesses intact, this fine, calm, young woman from 1928 to 1937 experienced a whole series of spectacular successes. Airheart was an American pioneer of aviation. In 1937, she disappeared over the Pacific Ocean while attempting to become the first female pilot to circumnavigate the world. During her life, she embraced celebrity culture and woman's rights, and since her disappearance has become a cultural icon. Earhart was the first female aviator to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean, and she set many other records. Recently, in 2024, a company that operates unmanned underwater vehicles found via Sonar would appear to be the remains of an airplane on the ocean floor near Howland Island. The object, shaped like her particular plane, was located along the path she had been expected to fly in the Pacific Ocean. |
| 2:27.0 | More exploration, however, is necessary to confirm whether this is indeed |
| 2:34.0 | air-harts missing aircraft. |
| 2:42.0 | Let's get cozy. Close your eyes. Relax your body into the softness of your bed. Now, take a few deep breaths. A low-slang yellow, kissle roadster with top down, a grinning, tussle-haired girl at the wheel, rounded the corner, sped down Tyler Street in Boston, and screeched to a stop in front of Denison House. Before the girl could get a leg out of the car, a swarm of children from the settlement house gathered about their favorite teacher. Jumbled greetings accosted her on all sides. Miss Earhart said one of the older boys. You been flying? His black eyes sparkled. Gee, I wish I could fly. Amelia Earhart smiled at the boy and pulled his cap down over his eyes. Your mother would send you back to Italy if you did. The others laughed and followed the tall and slender English teacher into the front door. A polyglot wake of Armenian, Syrian, Greek, Chinese, Jewish, and Italian childhood. She herded them down the hall and corraled them into one of the classrooms. Finally settled down in the classroom, the children listened to simplified explanations of English grammar. They screwed their faces in disbelief and squinted their eyes in helpless confusion. The Italian boy of the cap looked at his little brother to see if he understood. He didn't. The older boy raised his hand. Miss Earhart recognized him. Me and Gino, he said, fingering his tight black curly hair. We don't…Gino and I, Amelia corrected him. Gino and you? Amelia pushed back her hair with a quick sweep of the hand. No, no. You and your brother, you should say. In the middle of that afternoon in April, 1928, Amelia was called to the telephone. I'm too busy to answer just now. She said, tell whoever it is to call me back later. But he says it's important. Unwillingly Amelia went to the telephone and picked up the receiver. Hello? The voice said, at the other end. My name is Rayleigh. Captain Hilton Rayleigh. Yes, Captain Railey? She could not place the name. I wonder if I could speak to you on a very important matter. His voice was low and strong. What could that be? Amelia answered, matter, effectively. You are interested in flying, are you not? Yes, sir. Her interest quickened. Would you like to do something for the cause of aviation? That sounds like a big order. Well, Maudu, there was a challenge in Rayleigh's inflection. Amelia twisted the long string of beads that hung from her neck. Yes, she said. It might be hazardous. Captain Rayleigh refused to tell over the telephone the exact nature of the risk involved and asked Miss Earhart to call at his office at 80 Federal Street in downtown Boston. Amelia asked him for references. She wanted to make sure that this was not somebody's hoax. Rayleigh gave first Army headquarters and the name of Commander Bird. She was satisfied for the moment. As an added precaution, Amelia asked Marion Perkins, the head worker at Denison House, to accompany her to Rayleigh's office as Shaperone and Ed Pfizer. Late that afternoon, nearly bursting with curiosity, Amelia drove her yellow peril faster than usual. She was annoyed at having to trail even one car through the narrow streets of the city. Miss Perkins, rigid, solidity beside her, cautioned against speeding with matronly authority. The Kisselparked, Amelia tucked her hair under the rarely worn hat and hurried to Rayleigh's office, but only at the pace which Marion Perkins decorum allowed. Upon meeting Captain Rayleigh, the two women discovered that he was a civilian who had been a captain in the army during the war. He was now the president of a public relations firm with offices in Boston, New York, and Philadelphia. numbered among his clients such aviation notables as Richard Bird, Clarence Chamberlain, Sir Hubert Wilkins, Lincoln Ellsworth, and Ruth Nichols. A dark haired handsome man, Hilton Rayley seated the two women off to the side of his desk. He was pleased with the appearance of the humble social worker who he had learned had a private pilot's license and had locked more than 500 solo hours. What he liked above all was her striking resemblance to the greatest of American heroes, Charles Lindbergh. Here before him, if his eyes were not deceiving him, was a lady Lindy. Like Lindbergh, she was shy and modest. She didn't know it, but she had been discovered. Miss Airheart, Rayleigh asked, have you ever heard of Mrs. Frederick guest? No, I'm afraid not, Amelia answered. She sat on the edge of the chair, her back straight, her legs pressed firmly together. |
| 10:13.0 | A short time ago, Mrs. Gast bought a trimotard fokker from Commander Bird. She wanted to be the first woman to fly the Atlantic. |
| 10:18.0 | Rayleigh looked for initial stirring from the girl. |
| 10:22.0 | However, although she is courageous, she's also a mother and her children have talked her out of it. Marion Perkins suspicious as a protective aunt, unbending as a ramrod, eyed Rayleigh coldly. Guessing the direction of the interview, Amelia warmed to the thought crossing her mind. She eased back in the chair. "'That's too bad for her,' she said. Hilton Rayleigh gave the young woman a heart look. Then he stole a glance at her long, straight legs.' Amelia blushed. Miss Earhart, he continued, Mrs. Gas still wants a woman to be a passenger on that flight. Would you like to be the first woman to fly across the Atlantic? Amelia flushed an excitement. Despite the hazard involved, she resented. This was a rare opportunity. There were no more than a dozen women in the country with flying licenses. And that seemed to be one of the requirements. Perhaps her chances were good. She made up her mind. Yes, sir, she said finally, I certainly would." Captain Rayleigh rose to shake her hand. He was delighted that he had found such a charming candidate. He left to go to New York with me, he told her to meet the backers of the flight. Other women flyers are being considered too. He paused, then added, by the way Miss Earhart, has anyone ever told you that you look like Lindbergh? In New York, plans for the flight were being completed. George Palmer Putnam had been commissioned by Mrs. Gast to find a woman flyer to take her place. He had called everyone he knew who could possibly find a likely candidate. Had been the intention of the Honorable Mrs. Frederick Gast of London, formerly Amy Fips of of Pittsburgh, to do for English-American relations what Charles Lindbergh had done for French-American relations. Among the several women who had already been considered for the flight was Ruth Nichols of Rye New York, who became a famous woman flyer. In her career, she paced Amelia all the way. Waiting in New York to interview Amelia was an all-male jury. It was composed of George Palmer Putnam, the publisher, David T. Layman, Jr., Mrs. Guest Attorney, and a brother of Mrs. Guest, John S. Fips. Amelia had never seen such a stern-looking group. After Captain Rayleigh introduced her to each of them in turn, they began to question her. Was she willing to fly the Atlantic? Would she release them from responsibility in the events of whatever may happen? What was her education? How strong was she? How willing? What flying experience did she have? What would she do after the flight? Was she prepared not to be paid, although the two men in the flight would be? The Demura Boston social worker survived the examination. Recalling the experience, Amelia said later, I found myself in a curious situation. If they did not like me at all, or found me wanting in too many respects, I would be deprived of the trip. If they liked me too well, they might be loath to drown me. It was therefore necessary for me to maintain an attitude of impenetrable mediocrity. Apparently I did, because I was chosen. Impenetrable mediocrity to the contrary, the committee discovered in the girl much of what they were looking for. She was tall and slender and boyish looking. She was humble and soft-spoken. The men could not help but agree with Rayleigh. She did indeed look and act like Charles Lindbergh. Amelia was thrilled because she had been selected for the flight. With unbounded enthusiasm, she followed the preparations. It had been decided to make the take-off from Boston Harbor. For if news of the project should leak out to the press, then everyone could say that Boston's own commander, Bird, was preparing another Arctic expedition and that the plane was his. By the time Amelia returned to Denison House, much had already been done. Acting for Mrs. Gast, Commander Bird had picked the pilot. He was Wilmer L. Bill Stoltz, who in turn could make his choice of mechanics. Stoltz decided on Lou Slim Gordon, who was working in Monroe, Louisiana. In the event of an emergency, Bird had also chosen an alternate pilot, Lou Gauer. Stolts, however, an exceptional pilot never had to be replaced, although there were times when he might have been. The plane, named the friendship by Mrs. Gast, was brought to a hangar in East Boston to undergo alterations. Because of the risks involved in a long, overwater flight and the ever-present possibility of having to make a forced landing, it was decided to replace the wheels of the Falker with pontoons for added range to large gas tanks which could hold 900 extra gallons of gasoline were fitted to the forward bulk heads in the cabin of the plane. As an extra precaution, new flight instruments and radio equipment were installed. The work done, stilts and Gordon took the plane up for many test flights before they pronounced it ready. The press never discovered what was a foot. According to the agreement, everyone connected with the flight kept quiet about it. Amelia did not tell even her family who were living in nearby Medford. She did, however, tell Samuel Chapman, a good friend who was in turn supposed to tell her family after the takeoff. Little is known about Samuel Chapman. He was a lawyer who worked in the Boston office of the Edison Company. According to some reports, Amelia met him in Los Angeles when she was first learning to fly. Some claim that Amelia was engaged to him. If there was an engagement, something happened before, during, or after the friendship flight to break it. After the flight, whenever Amelia was asked about Chapman, she was vague and elusive. She would say that she didn't know where he was, that she hadn't seen him, that she didn't plan to see him. She managed to be as secretive about Samuel Chapman as she had been about the friendship preparations. By the middle of May 1928, the plane was declared ready by Stoltz and Gordon. Weather information was gathered, coordinated and plotted. It came in from ships at sea to the weather bureau. British reports were digested and cabled to New York. Dr. James H. Kimball, the great friend of flyers, collected, studied, and advised from his New York office of the United States Weather Bureau. Weather became the great obstacle. Three weeks of waiting for the right weather drew nerves taught. Because she was so well-known about the local airports, Amelia Voidetti-Sposten and the Hanger. She and George Palmer Putnam, known to everyone as GP, often visited with the birds on Brimmer Street, looking over the vast preparations for the commander's forthcoming expedition to the Antarctic. On good days, Amelia and either Hilton Rayleigh or GP would take long drives into the country in the yellow castle. Each night, they would eat at a different restaurant specializing in foreign dishes, and after dinner, they would attend one of Boston's legitimate theaters. Bill Stoltz and Slim Gordon stayed at the Copley Plaza where they shared a room. Stoltz, the man of action, the rear combination of great pilot, navigator, instrument flyer, and radio operator grew more restless with the passing days. A somber melancholy began to creep into his waiting hours. Spirit stamp been during the long, gray. When the weather was favorable in Boston, the mid-Atlantic was forbidding. When the mid-Atlantic was favorable, Boston was shrouded in fog. When the Atlantic and Boston favorably agreed, the harbor offered only a peaceful calm that made it impossible for the heavy plane to take off. Amelia wrote what she called popping off letters, one for her father in Los Angeles, and one for her mother in Medford. The one was gay and stoically resigned. The other was serious and somewhat grim. The letter to her father read, May 20th, 1928, Dearest Dad, hooray for the last grand adventure. I wish I had won, but it was worthwhile anyway. You know that. I have no faith we'll meet anywhere again, but I wish we might. Anyway, goodbye and good luck to you. Affectionately, your doter. |
| 22:49.4 | To her mother, she wrote, |
| 22:52.8 | even though I have lost, |
| 22:54.8 | the adventure was worthwhile. |
| 22:57.8 | Our family tends to be too secure. |
| 23:01.0 | My life has really been very happy |
| 23:03.8 | and I didn't mind contemplating its end in the midst of it. Toward the end of May, everything seemed ready, but two attempted take-offs were unsuccessful, two little wind and too much fog mutinied against human will and sea-bound craft. At 3.30 in the morning of still another day, the group left the Kapli Plaza and entered the grey of still another dawn. Once more sandwiches had been made, their mospod bottles filled with coffee and cocoa, gear readyed and packed. Again, they climbed into waiting cars and drove through the wet, deserted streets to tea-warf and clambered aboard the tugboat Sadie Ross. They chugged once more out to the Jeffrey yacht club in East Boston and out to the anchored plane. The friendship seemed a desultary bird. Its golden wings and red body bubbled over with morning dew. It was Sunday, the third of June. The fog was not too thick. The wind was reasonably right, blowing in from the southeast, and churning up waves that pounded the pontoons and splashed over the outboard motors. There were no good buys. |
| 24:49.1 | There had been too many before. Slim Gordon took the tarpoline covers off the three motors. Bill checked the radio and the cockpit instruments. Slim jumping from pontoon to pontoon cranked the motors and then climbed into the co-pilot seat. The plane started to taxi out of the harbor. Amelia stood between the two large tanks in the cabin and glued her eyes on the air-speed indicator. Lou Gauer crouched in the aft end of the plane, hoping the added weight of his body would help bring up the nose of the plane for takeoff. The attempt failed. A five-gallon can of gasoline was cast overboard, but that did not help. The plane was still too heavy. Lou Gower had hoped to go as far as Newfoundland, but realizing the inevitable, he gathered his gear and signaled for a boat from the tug. He wished the crew good luck and left the plane. The friendship taxied again down the harbor, propellers wereying in the spray, pontoons cutting the white caps. The tug trailed the plane in the churning wake of foam. Inside the falker, Amelia watched the airspeed needle while they tried for the take off. The hand on the instrument moves slowly to 30 to 40, then beyond the necessary 50 to 55 and finally to 60. The three motors roared and snarled and strained. The pontoons rose on the steps, then quickly lifted from the sea. At last, they were off. Amelia glanced at her watch. It was 6.30 a.m. She looked out the window in the side door. Boston and the tugs and fishing boats began to disappear in the fog as the plain climbed to cruising altitude. The sun broke over the rim of the harbor. They were on their way straight up the New England coast, bound for Nova Scotia and New Finland. As official recorder for the flight, Amelia pulled out her stenographer's pad that served as a log book. She sat on the water can and wrote, 96 miles out, 1 hour, 730, 2,500 feet. Bill shows me on the map that we are near cash's ledge. We cannot see anything if there is anything to see, as the haze makes visibility poor. The sun is blinding in the cockpit and will be for a couple of hours. Bill is crouching in the hatch way, taking science. One hour and 15 minutes later, they sighted Nova Scotia. The plane dropped to 2,000 feet for a closer look. The haze had lessened. White gals flew over the clustered houses on the Greenland and headed out over the waves, rocking a lone |
| 29:27.5 | door on the shore. A rocky ledge ruffled the edge of the island. Pobnico Harbor was directly below. The friendship motors motors humming sweetly, had averaged 114 miles per hour since it left Boston. Amelia changed her seat to a gas can and looked down through the hatchway. A green, dappled shore came into view. The plain raced, fast-gudding clouds and churned through the reappearing haze. |
| 30:29.4 | Board with nothing more to see, |
| 30:34.6 | Amelia now lay on the floor of the fuselage |
| 30:40.6 | and pulled up the fur collar of her oversized leather flying suit. |
| 30:45.6 | She felt snug and warm. Beside her, along the bulkhead, the gas cans squeaked against the heavy rope ties. a squeaking good time, Amelia said to herself, and remember those other squeaking |
| 31:12.2 | good times she once had in Atchison, Kansas. Yn yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n y |
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