Amelia Earhart's Fokker seaplane "Friendship" landed in the Burry Inlet, a few miles east of Burry Port in Carmarthenshire, South Wales at 12.40pm on June 18, 1928.
She is famed as being the first woman to fly across the Atlantic although being part of a bigger crew on the plane (friendship). She landed in the town of Burry Port in South Wales although wanting to land in Ireland.
Amelia landed in Ireland on that flight.
She landed in Ireland.
Her navigation was off and winds blew her north of her estimated flight line.
She was trying to find Gardner Island and land on it so she could refuel.
yes i think she did. just watched a video and it said, AMELIA EARHART CRASHES IN WALES OFF OF AUSTRALIA... that is ya answer
She is famed as being the first woman to fly across the Atlantic although being part of a bigger crew on the plane (friendship). She landed in the town of Burry Port in South Wales although wanting to land in Ireland.
Amelia landed in Ireland on that flight.
in konoha
She landed in Ireland.
It was found in Florda and she land there safe but it was so hot she died
Her navigation was off and winds blew her north of her estimated flight line.
On that flight in 1932 she landed in northern Ireland.
She was trying to find Gardner Island and land on it so she could refuel.
One challenge Amelia Earhart faced before her crash was that fact that weather was terrible at her destination (where she was supposed to land) so instead she had to land in Howard Island. Another challenge she faced was way before she even started flying. Amelia was diagnosed with a spanish flu pandemic in 1918, which forced her to be in a hospital for about a year.
Amelia Mary Earhart, daughter of Samuel "Edwin" Stanton Earhart (March 28, 1867) and Amelia "Amy" Otis Earhart (1869-1962), was born on July 24, 1897, in Atchison, Kansas, in the home of her maternal grandfather, Alfred Gideon Otis.The family home, now a museum in Atchison, Kansas. Amelia"s father worked for the A.T.S.F. railway line in a legal capacity. This may explain her orientation with the color and gem turquoise.
No. The French ( as one might guess with the land of Joan of Arc) had their share of Aviatrices- such as Helene Boucher, Maryse Bastie, Maryse Hilsz, etc.