There was/is a parlor organ in the Earhart mansion in Atcheson, whether she played this is not known. there was considerable more musical action in America prior to the invention and spread of mass-music such as radio, record players, Tv, etc. There was a lot of amateur theatrical stuff in the (Gay nineties) such as Ragtime.
Amelia Earhart played football,baseball,and pretty much every boy activity.
The title of the book is The Fun of It, no Just in the title. It was published circa l929-3l by her Husband-publisher George Putnam. The book has been reprinted several times and can be found in the old bookstore beat.
As a child Amelia Earhart was considered a tomboy. She was disinterested in the games her sisters would play and instead engaged in rough games.
Amelia seems to have been what we today would call a "tomboy." She loved to build things, and while she studied the subjects girls of her era were supposed to study, the museum devoted to her life notes that she enjoyed playing sports with the boys. In a 1927 interview with a Boston newspaper, she said she enjoyed horseback riding, and she also enjoyed golf and tennis. She also had tried sailing. (In fact, newspapers of that time referred to her as not just a "flyer", as it was then spelled, but as a "sportswoman.") She told the interviewer she began flying airplanes almost as if that too was a sport; she said she enjoyed trying new things and she loved adventure.
trombone
Amelia Earhart played football,baseball,and pretty much every boy activity.
Amelia was not known for playing any instruments
Amelia Earhart was a tomboy when she was young and enjoyed doing boy type activities. As an adult Amelia liked to hike and play the banjo.
Photography, flying, fashion
what instrument does Jacqueline wilson play
The title of the book is The Fun of It, no Just in the title. It was published circa l929-3l by her Husband-publisher George Putnam. The book has been reprinted several times and can be found in the old bookstore beat.
Amelia's parents let her play all types of games and then she became interested into planes, and she loved riding horses and it gave her a taste of flying when they jumped and she liked the feeling and then she started saving up money to buy an airplane.
i don't know but one of them played an instrument
Was there music in your home? Did you play an instrument? Carter The only instrument I ever played was the ukulele source:http://newsgroups.derkeiler.com/Archive/Rec/rec.music.opera/2005-11/msg01265.html
As a child Amelia Earhart was considered a tomboy. She was disinterested in the games her sisters would play and instead engaged in rough games.
Amelia Earhart became Mrs. Amelia Earhart Putnam in l93l when she married the well-known and well-heeled publisher- his company is still in business. They were married in l93l in a very low-key ceremony. What is not generally publicized is that Mr. Putnam was married previously, his former wife was still alive- so in the eyes of the churchmen, this was not a valid, er, shall we say mid-air rendezvous. The wedding took place on the ground, of course, I just introduced that as a pun, lilke getting hitched or locking couplers. An interesting analog is that Ronnie Bennett Spector was NOT the first Mrs. Spector! and she knew about this! The Amelia movie seems to in an interlinear fashion, play up the paralels between George and Amelia, and Phil and Ronnie- without being too obvious. The paralells are there- but Veronic survived, got out of the Spector House- and is alive and well.
One woman who inspired Amelia Earhart was her mother, Amy Earhart, who instilled in her a sense of independence and determination. Amy Earhart was a suffragist and social worker, and her progressive views likely influenced Amelia's own beliefs in gender equality and pursuing her dreams. Amelia's friendship with pilot Neta Snook, who taught her to fly, also played a significant role in shaping her aviation career.