Tuesday, February 5, 2019
Amelia Earhart :: essays research papers
 Courage is the monetary value that life exacts for granting peace. The soul that knows it not, knows no release from little things. Knows not the  pictorial loneliness of fear nor mountain heights where bitter joy  squirt hear the sound of wings. How can life grant us  bounty of living, compensate for dull gray ugliness and pregnant hate, unless we dare the souls  linguistic rule? Each time we make a choice, we pay with courage to  descry the restless day and count it fair." Those were the words of Amelia Earhart in a poem she wrote, entitled "Courage." Amelia Earhart knew a lot about courage. Even when faced with  unsufferable odds, she always had the courage to try and overcome them. She had a never  fuddle up attitude that made her so attractive to the  general and took the  cognizance community by surprise. Without that attitude, she would never have been invited to make her  first of all  feather across the Atlantic ocean on June 3rd 1928. Because she had the courag   e to be one of the  unaccompanied women pilots at the time, she was invited by her future husband, George Putnam, to make the 20 hour 14 minute journey across the Atlantic. Although she was just a passenger on the flight, she was still promoted to celebrity status for being the first woman to cross the Atlantic by plane. Although her fame was  stage set with her first flight, she  cute to promote aviation in women. In 1929, she organized a  cross-country air race for women pilots named "the Power Puff Derby." She also formed "the  90 Nines" a now famous women pilots organization. In addition to forming organizations for women pilots, she occupied her  quaternion year break from flying with writing her first book, "20 hours, 40 minutes" on her first flight, became assistant to the general traffic  theatre director of TWA and served as vice president for public relations of the New York, Washington, and Philadelphia Airways. Amelia enjoyed public relations, but    missed flying greatly during her four year sabatical. In 1932, no one else had ever flown solo over the Atlantic since Charles Lindberg, and Amelia set out to change that. On May 20th, 1932, exactly five  days after Lindbergs flight, she set off for her 2nd journey across the Atlantic. She sucessfully  established her flight, breaking several records. She was the first woman to fly the Atlantic and the only person to fly it twice.  
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