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==Did Lindbergh sympathize with Nazis?==
==Did Lindbergh sympathize with Nazis?==


Because of his numerous scientific expeditions to Nazi Germany, combined with a belief in [[eugenics]] which infused much of his rhetoric, Lindbergh was tarred by many in his own time and since as a Nazi sympathizer. However, his much acclaimed and [[Pulitzer Prize]] winning biographer [[A. Scott Berg]] contends that Lindbergh was never a very politically minded figure, taking most of his cues in politics from his [[progressive]] [[United States Republican Party|Republican]] father, and that in his support for the America First Committee was merely giving voice to the heartfelt, if arguably misguided, sentiments of the majority of Americans.
Because of his numerous scientific expeditions to Nazi Germany, combined with a belief in [[eugenics]] which infused much of his rhetoric, Lindbergh was tarred by many in his own time and since as a Nazi sympathizer. However, his much acclaimed and [[Pulitzer Prize]] winning biographer [[A. Scott Berg]] contends that Lindbergh was never a very politically minded figure, taking most of his cues in politics from his [[progressive]] [[United States Republican Party|Republican]] father, and that in his support for the America First Committee was merely giving voice to the sentiments of the majority of Americans.


[http://www.jewishtimes.com/scripts/edition.pl?SubSectionID=2&now=5/21/04&ID=296 The American Axis], written by [[Holocaust]] researcher and investigative journalist [[Max Wallace]], takes a harsh view of Lindbergh's pre-war actions, essentially agreeing with FDR's assesment that Lindbergh was pro-Nazi. This book is considered controversial and of poor scholarship.
[http://www.jewishtimes.com/scripts/edition.pl?SubSectionID=2&now=5/21/04&ID=296 The American Axis], written by [[Holocaust]] researcher and investigative journalist [[Max Wallace]], takes a harsh view of Lindbergh's pre-war actions, essentially agreeing with FDR's assesment that Lindbergh was pro-Nazi. This book is considered controversial and of poor scholarship.

Revision as of 07:38, 29 March 2006

Charles Lindbergh

Charles Augustus Lindbergh, Jr. (February 4, 1902August 26, 1974), known as "Lucky Lindy" and "The Lone Eagle", was a pioneering United States aviator famous for piloting the first solo non-stop flight across the Atlantic Ocean in 1927. Lindbergh is thought by some to have a tarnished reputation because of his leadership in the movement to keep the US out of World War II.

Early life

Lindbergh was born in Detroit, Michigan, the son of Swedish immigrants. He grew up in Little Falls, Minnesota. His father, Charles Lindbergh Sr., was a lawyer and later a U.S. congressman who opposed the entry of the U.S. into World War I; his mother was a chemistry teacher. Early on he showed an interest in machines. In 1922 he quit a mechanical engineering program, joined a pilot and mechanics training program with Nebraska Aircraft, bought his own airplane, a WW1-surplus Curtiss JN-4 "Jenny", and became a stunt pilot. In 1924, he started training as a pilot with the United States Army Air Corps. During this time he also held a job as an airline mechanic in Billings, Montana working at the Logan International Airport.

After finishing first in his class, Lindbergh took his first job as lead pilot of an airmail route operated by Robertson Aircraft Co. of Lambert Field in St. Louis, Missouri. He flew the mail in a DeHaviland biplane known as the Spirit of St. Louis to Springfield, Peoria, and Chicago, Illinois. During his tenure on the mail route, he was renowned for delivering the mail under any circumstances. He even salvaged stashes of mail from his burning airplane and immediately phoned Alexander Varney, Peoria's airport manager, to advise him to send a truck.

In April 1923, while visiting friends in Lake Village, Arkansas, Lindbergh made his first ever night-time flight over Lake Village and Lake Chicot.

First solo flight across the Atlantic Ocean

The Spirit of St. Louis on display at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.

Lindbergh gained sudden great international fame as the first pilot to fly solo and non-stop across the Atlantic Ocean, flying from Roosevelt Airfield (Nassau County, Long Island), New York to Paris on May 20-May 21, 1927 in his single-engine airplane The Spirit of St. Louis which had been designed by Donald Hall and custom built by Ryan Airlines of San Diego, California. He needed 33.5 hours for the trip. (His grandson Erik Lindbergh repeated this trip 75 years later in 2002.) The President of France bestowed on him the French Legion of Honor and on his arrival back in the United States, a fleet of warships and aircraft escorted him to Washington, D.C. where President Calvin Coolidge awarded him the Distinguished Flying Cross.

Although Lindbergh was the first to fly from New York to Paris nonstop, he was not the first aviator on a Transatlantic heavier-than-air aircraft flight. That had been done first in stages by the crew of the NC-4 in May 1919 although their flying boat broke down and had to be repaired before continuing. The NC-4 flights took 19 days to cross the Atlantic Ocean.

The first truly non stop Transatlantic flight was achieved nearly seven years previously by two British fliers, John Alcock and Arthur Whitten Brown in their Vickers Vimy IV modified bomber on June 14/15th 1919. They flew from Lester's Field near St. Johns, Newfoundland to Clifden, Ireland and in doing so won the London Daily Mail prize of 10,000 pounds sterling which was presented to them by Winston Churchill. A statue celebrating this first non stop Transatlantic flight is to be seen at London's Heathrow airport. It has been estimated that 81 people had flown across the Atlantic before Lindbergh did.

Lindbergh's accomplishment won him the Orteig Prize of $25,000 on offer since 1919. A ticker-tape parade was held for him down 5th Avenue in New York City on June 13, 1927.[1] His public stature following this flight was such that he became an important voice on behalf of aviation activities until his death. He served on a variety of national and international boards and committees, including the central committee of the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics in the United States. On March 21, 1929 he was presented the Medal of Honor for his historic trans-Atlantic flight.

Lindbergh is recognized in aviation for demonstrating and charting polar air-routes, high altitude flying techniques, and increasing aircraft flying range by decreasing fuel consumption. These innovations are the basis of modern intercontinental air travel.

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Marriage, children, kidnapping

Main article: Lindbergh kidnapping

According to a Biography Channel profile on Lindbergh, Anne Morrow Lindbergh, the daughter of diplomat Dwight Morrow, was the only woman he had ever asked out on a date. He taught her how to fly and did much of his exploring and charting of air-routes with her. They had six children: Charles, Jr. (1930-1932), Jon (1932), Land (1937), Anne (1940), Scott (1942) and Reeve (1945).

Charles Augustus, 20 months old, was abducted on March 1, 1932, from their home. The boy was found dead on May 12 in Hopewell, New Jersey, just a few miles from the Lindbergh's home, after a nation-wide ten week search and ransom negotiations with the kidnappers. More than three years later, a media circus ensued when the man accused of the murder, Bruno Hauptmann, went on trial. Tired of being in the spotlight and still mourning the loss of their son, the Lindberghs moved to Europe in December 1935. Hauptmann, who maintained his innocence until the end, was found guilty and was executed on April 3, 1936.

Pre-war activities

In Europe during the pre-war period, Lindbergh traveled to Nazi Germany several times at the behest of the U.S. military, where he reported on German aviation and the Luftwaffe (air force). Lindbergh was intrigued, and stated that Germany had taken a leading role in a number of aviation developments, including metal construction, low-wing designs, dirigibles, and Diesel engines. Lindbergh also undertook a survey of aviation in the Soviet Union in 1938. Full reports were made to the United States military upon his return from each of these trips.

The Lindberghs lived in England and Brittany, France during the late 1930s in order to find tranquility and avoid the celebrity that followed them everywhere in the United States after the kidnapping trial.

While living in France, Lindbergh worked with Nobel prize winning French surgeon Dr. Alexis Carrel, with whom he had collaborated on earlier projects when the latter lived in the United States. In 1930, Lindbergh's sister-in-law developed a fatal heart condition. Lindbergh began to wonder why no one could repair hearts with surgery. He discovered it was because organs could not be kept alive outside the body, and set about working on a solution to the problem with Carrel. Lindbergh's invention, a glass perfusion pump, was credited with making future heart surgeries possible. [2] The device in this early stage was far from perfected, however. Although perfused organs were said to have survived surprisingly well, all showed progressive degenerative changes in a few days. [3]

In 1938, Lindbergh and Carrel collaborated on a book, The Culture of Organs, which summarized their work on perfusion of organs outside the body. Lindbergh and Carrel discussed an artificial heart [4] but it would be decades before one was actually built.

Since 2002, the annual Lindbergh-Carrel Prize is awarded at a Charles Lindbergh Symposium for an outstanding contribution to development of perfusion and bioreactor technologies for organ preservation and growth.

But it was his involvement with German aviation brought Lindbergh back into the American limelight once again. In 1938, the American ambassador to Germany, Hugh Wilson, invited Lindbergh to a dinner with Hermann Göring at the American embassy in Berlin. The dinner included diplomats and three of the greatest minds of German aviation, Ernst Heinkel, Adolf Baeumaker, and Dr. Willy Messerschmitt. Göring decorated Lindbergh with German medal of honor (the Verdienstkreuz Deutscher Adler) for his services to aviation and particularly for his 1927 flight. Lindbergh's decoration later caused an outcry in the United States.

Lindbergh declined to return the medal to the Germans because he claimed that to do so would be "an unnecessary insult" to the German Nazi government. He returned to the United States soon after World War II broke out in Europe.

Lindbergh and the Munich Crisis

Lindbergh went to Germany at the urgent request of the US Military Attaché in Berlin, who was charged with learning everything possible about Germany's new warplanes. Thus Lindbergh travelled repeatedly to Germany, touring German aviation facilities, where the Luftwaffe Chief tried to convince Lindbergh that the Luftwaffe was far more powerful than it actually was. Lindbergh used his prestige to gain far more knowledge of German warplanes than any American. As historian Wayne Cole explains:

"Of particular importance were the Junkers 88 and, again, the Messerschmitt 109. With the approval of Goering and Udet, Lindbergh was the first American permitted to examine the Luftwaffe's newest and best bomber, the JU-88. And he got the unprecedented opportunity to pilot its finest fighter, the ME-109. He was highly impressed by both airplanes and knew "of no other pursuit plane which combines simplicity of construction with such excellent performance characteristics" as the ME‐ 109. In his visits to Germany from 1936 through 1938, Colonel Lindbergh closely inspected all the types of military aircraft that Germany was to use against Poland, Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, and England in 1939 and 1940. The ME-109 and JU-88 were first-line German combat planes throughout World War II. And Lindbergh's findings about those various planes found their way into American air intelligence reports to Washington long before the European war began." [Cole p 39-40]

At the urging of US Ambassador Joseph Kennedy, Lindbergh wrote a secret memo for the British arguing that if England and France attempted to stop Hitler's aggression, it would be military suicide. Most military historians argue that Lindbergh was basically accurate and that his warnings helped save Britain from likely defeat in 1938.

Outbreak of war

As World War II began in Europe, Lindbergh became a prominent speaker in favor of non-intervention, going so far as to recommend that the United States negotiate a neutrality pact with Germany during his January 23, 1941 testimony before Congress. He joined the antiwar America First Committee and soon became its most prominent public spokesman, speaking to overflow crowds in Madison Square Garden in New York City and Soldier Field in Chicago, Illinois.

In a speech at an America First rally on September 11, 1941 in Des Moines, Iowa entitled "Who Are the War Agitators?", Lindbergh claimed that three groups had been "pressing this country toward war" - the Roosevelt Administration, the British, and the Jews - and complained about what he insisted was the Jews' "large ownership and influence in our motion pictures, our press, our radio and our government." However, he made clear his opposition to anti-Semitism, stating that "All good men of conscience must condemn the treatment of the Jews in Germany", further advising "Instead of agitating for war, the Jewish groups in this country should be opposing it in every possible way for they will be among the first to feel its consequences. Tolerance is a virtue that depends upon peace and strength. History shows that it cannot survive war and devastation." [5]

There was widespread negative reaction to the speech, and Lindbergh was forced to defend and clarify his comments by noting again that he was not anti-semitic, but he did not back away from his words. Lindbergh resigned his commission in the U.S. Army Air Corps when President Roosevelt openly questioned his loyalty. After the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, Lindbergh attempted to return to the Army Air Corps, but was denied when several of Roosevelt's cabinet secretaries registered objections.

He went on to assist with the war effort by serving as a civilian consultant to aviation companies and the government, as well as flying about 50 combat missions (again as a civilian) in 1944 in the Pacific War. His contributions include engine-leaning techniques that Lindbergh showed P-38 Lightning pilots. This improved fuel usage while cruising, enabling aircraft to fly longer-range missions such as the one that killed Admiral Yamamoto. He also showed Marine F4U pilots how to take off with twice the bomb load that the aircraft was rated for. He is credited with shooting down one enemy aircraft [6].

Did Lindbergh sympathize with Nazis?

Because of his numerous scientific expeditions to Nazi Germany, combined with a belief in eugenics which infused much of his rhetoric, Lindbergh was tarred by many in his own time and since as a Nazi sympathizer. However, his much acclaimed and Pulitzer Prize winning biographer A. Scott Berg contends that Lindbergh was never a very politically minded figure, taking most of his cues in politics from his progressive Republican father, and that in his support for the America First Committee was merely giving voice to the sentiments of the majority of Americans.

The American Axis, written by Holocaust researcher and investigative journalist Max Wallace, takes a harsh view of Lindbergh's pre-war actions, essentially agreeing with FDR's assesment that Lindbergh was pro-Nazi. This book is considered controversial and of poor scholarship.

Later life

After World War II he lived quietly in Connecticut as a consultant both to the chief of staff of the U.S. Air Force and to Pan American World Airways. His 1953 book The Spirit of St. Louis, recounting his non-stop transatlantic flight, won the Pulitzer Prize in 1954. Dwight D. Eisenhower restored his assignment with the Army Air Corps and made him a Brigadier General in 1954. In that year, he served on the congressional advisory panel set up to establish the site of the United States Air Force Academy. In the 1960s, he became a spokesman for the conservation of the natural world, speaking in favor of the protection of whales, against super-sonic transport planes and was instrumental in establishing protections for the primitive Filipino group the Tasaday.

File:Time-magazine-cover-charles-lindberg.jpg
In 1927, Lindbergh was named the inaugural Time Man of the Year for his solo transatlatic flight.

From 1957 until his death in 1974, Lindbergh had an affair with a woman 24 years his junior, German hat maker Brigitte Hesshaimer. On November 23, 2003, DNA tests proved that he fathered her three children: Dyrk (born 1958), Astrid (born 1960), and David (born 1967). The two managed to keep the affair completely secret; even the children did not know the true identity of their father, whom they saw when he came to visit one or twice per year. Astrid later read a magazine article about Lindbergh and found snapshots and more than a hundred letters written from him to her mother. She disclosed the affair after both Brigitte and Anne Morrow Lindbergh had died.

It is speculated that Lindbergh may have also fathered two children by Brigitte’s sister Marietta (Vago, born 1962; and Christoph, born 1966), and two more children with his private secretary Valeska (a son, born 1959, and a daughter, born 1961). This has been connected with his statement after the murder of his son, that "there will still be many Lindberghs".

In his final years, Lindbergh became troubled that the world was out of balance with its natural environment, and sought to stress the need to regain that balance. In the early 1960s, he began working to help primitive Philippine and African tribes, campaigned to protect endangered species like humpback and blue whales, and supported the establishment of a national park.

His speeches and writings later in life emphasized his love of both technology and nature, and a lifelong belief that "all the achievements of mankind have value only to the extent that they preserve and improve the quality of life." In a 1967 Life magazine article, he said, "The human future depends on our ability to combine the knowledge of science with the wisdom of wildness."

In honor of Charles and his wife Anne Morrow Lindbergh's vision of achieving balance between the technological advancements they helped pioneer, and the preservation of the human and natural environments, every year since 1978, the Lindbergh Award has been given by the Lindbergh Foundation to recipients whose work has made a significant contribution toward the concept of "balance."

His final book, Autobiography of Values, was published posthumously.

Lindbergh spent his final years on the Hawaiian island of Maui, where he died of cancer on August 26, 1974. He was buried on the grounds of the Palapala Ho'omau Church in Hana Maui. His epitaph on a simple stone which quotes Psalms 139:9, reads: Charles A. Lindbergh Born: Michigan, 1902. Died: Maui, 1974. If I take the wings of the morning, and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea. — CAL

File:Charles-lindberg-grave-close.jpg
Close image of Charles Lindbergh tombstone
Overall image of Charles Lindbergh grave

The Lindbergh Terminal at Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport was named after him and a replica of The Spirit of St. Louis hangs there. There is also a replica of his plane at Lambert-Saint Louis International Airport. He also lent his name to San Diego's Lindbergh Field, which is also known now as San Diego International Airport. The airport in Winslow Arizona has been renamed Winslow-Lindbergh Regional. Lindbergh himself had designed the airport in 1929 when it was built as a refueling point for the first coast to coast air service. The airport in Little Falls Minnesota where he grew up has been named Little Falls/Morrison County-Lindbergh Field.

In 1952, Grandview High School in St. Louis County was renamed Lindbergh High School. The school newspaper is the Pilot, the yearbook is the Spirit, and the students are known as the Flyers. The school district was also later named after Lindbergh. The stretch of U.S. 67 that runs through most of the St. Louis metro area is called "Lindbergh Blvd."

Lindbergh is a recipient of the Silver Buffalo Award, the highest adult award given by the Boy Scouts of America.

Lindbergh has a star on the St. Louis Walk of Fame.

References

Lindbergh in fiction

A fictional version of Lindbergh is a major character in Philip Roth's 2004 alternative history novel, The Plot Against America. In Roth's narrative, Lindbergh successfully runs against Roosevelt in the 1940 US presidential election, and aligns his country with the Nazis. This portrayal engendered great controversy.

Another alternative history novel, Robert Harris' Fatherland, published in 1992, has Lindbergh as the American Ambassador in 1964 Nazi Germany.

The Agatha Christie book and movie Murder on the Orient Express begin with a fictionalized depiction of the Lindbergh baby kidnapping.

James Stewart played Lindbergh in the biographical The Spirit of St. Louis, directed by Billy Wilder. The film begins with events leading up to the flight before giving a gripping and intense view of the flight itself.

Shortly after Lindbergh made his famous flight, the Stratemeyer Syndicate began publishing the Ted Scott Flying Stories by Franklin W. Dixon wherein the hero was closely modeled after Lindbergh.

More recently, British Sea Power wrote, recorded and released (in 2002) a song in his honor entitled "Spirit of St Louis", a live favorite.

See also

Sources

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