Amelia Earhart: How a girl from Kansas became an aviation icon —and enduring mystery
Amelia Earhart had already established herself as an American icon when she vanished over the Pacific Ocean 87 years ago attempting to circumnavigate the globe at the height of her fame.
While her disappearance remains an unsolved riddle, potentially groundbreaking sonar images of a hazy plane-shaped mass in the Pacific has interest in the trailblazing girl from a tiny Kansas town soaring to new heights among experts and the public alike — including at her childhood home.
“We’ve had people calling in … I had someone come in yesterday who said the news motivated him to come in,” Mika Schrader, assistant director of the Amelia Earhart Birthplace Museum in Atchison, told The Post.
“Even people who have written books about her are getting in touch with us again. It’s interesting. It’s fun to talk about her legacy and all the things she did,” Museum Director Heather Roesch added.
“There’s a connection to Amelia here,” she said of the museum, which was Earhart’s maternal grandparents’ home and where she was born to Edwin Stanton Earhart and Amy Otis Earhart on July 24, 1897 — six years before the Wright Brothers made their first flight.
