This is another great episode of the life and the flight of Charles Lindbergh flight across the Atlantic in the Spirit of St Louis showing pres Calvin Coolidge pinning a medal on him and the tragic kidnapping and death of Lindbergh son by Bruno hauaptmann and the way they dress and socialize with each during Lindbergh life
On Lindbergh's WW2 Pacific consulting tour, he test flew a twin boom p38 lightning. A great aircraft, it was hindered by high fuel consumption, limiting its trans pacific combat range. Lindbergh recommended throttling down the engine during flight to just 40%, a 60% fuel savings, extending the plane's range by over 1000 miles, a huge game changer if it worked. The Army air force personal scoffed, claiming the manufacturer, North American aviation, claimed it would wear out and damage the engines at that reduced speed. Charles offered to prove it himself, which the military took him up on. Shockingly, to the government's surprise, it worked. Factory technicians, flown out, took the engines apart and found no issues. Turns out, you can throttle back to just 40% on these planes, extending their range by 100%, a huge gift to the desperate Pacific war effort. Lindbergh could tell, just by listening and feeling the aircraft, it was capable of doing it.
I saw this on TV when I was a kid about ten years old, which would have been around 1971. I had heard of Lindbergh before and knew who he was an what he'd done, since I was into the space program & aviation, but seeing this was the first time I ever heard of the Lindbergh kidnapping.
His greatest accomplishment was speaking out about America not getting involved in a war with Germany. A new TH-cam video is based on a book which the narrator says he did not read, only pieces. How fair is that? And, the author of the book is one of THEM!
Charles Lindbergh taught himself how to fly he bought an old Jenny with used in World War I as a trainer for a couple hundred bucks and he bounced down the field and took off and landed and bounced and bounced but he felt that if he could live a month before he killed himself in the plane it would be worth it worth it it it
Lindbergh wouldn’t have stood a chance of courting, let alone marrying, miss Morrow if he had not become famous for his endeavour, an unknown airmail pilot being allowed to even speak to the daughter of an ambassador, but as they say “who dares, wins”, and he certainly dared and won, but such an awful event that took his sons life, how anyone could endure that heartbreak 💔 and sorrow 😢😭 only someone who has experienced the loss could possibly know. Lindbergh was, and still is, an aviation hero to me, alongside people like the Wright brothers, Louis Bleriot, Alcock and Brown, Capt Eric “Winkle” Brown, Guy Gibson, Chuck Yagger, Sqn Ldr Andy Green, and many many more, far too many to list, but Charles “Lucky” Lindbergh will always have a very special place in my heart as the man who was not only the first person to fly solo across the Atlantic but also gave aviation another shot of enthusiasm that, at the time, was needed to keep its popularity too the fore and ensure that by 1939 the aviation industry was able to keep pace with the Nazis, Italian and Japanese, American aviation industry was way behind everyone else, but once awoken they soon caught up, thank goodness.. 🤗😀👍🇬🇧🏴
@@michaelreilly1310esq 'Fine American'? He was a racist and an anti-Semitic and worse of all, he murdered his own son because of his beliefs in eugenics. The child was born with ailments and Lindbergh couldn't accept that, referring to the baby as 'it'.😱😱 I'm sorry to tell you this but he was a complete demon.
@@Musicradio77Network I also watched it on WPIX and remember it being on in the morning. They probably had it on all over the schedule since I'm sure it wasn't a big ratings winner.
It boggles my mind to think that the people of that time were so taken aback by his accomplishment. I mean 33 hours in a cockpit, probably very uncomfortable, but not really much skill is there? I mean I guess you have to stay awake which isn't straight forward hmm...
Many are unaware that Hitler declared war on us, not the other way around! The isolationists missed the point that if England, or Russia had fallen, it would have been disastrous for us! Germany had 200 divisions in Russia, that would have been turned around to America, Great Britain, and the other Allied nations.
A lot of it had to do with the fact, never mentioned and hardly remembered, that about two weeks before Lindbergh's flight, the very famous French aviator Charles Nungesser, a flyer much more famous than Lindbergh at the time, attempted the flight, only from Paris-to-New York, and disappeared, never to be heard from again. The day Nungesser was expected to arrive in New York, a big reception was set up for him, with the mayor waiting, an array of ships in the harbor, and a parade up Broadway planned, and Nungesser never showed up. This was very much in everyone's mind when Lindbergh made his flight, and was probably a reason for the hysterical reception he got in France, where they were still mourning a national hero. Things don't happen in history as the isolated events they seem to be when we look at them years later.
@@RRaquello Thank you, that is an excellent comment and one of the reasons I posted my initial comment. Actually now that I think of it, 33 hours of flying *is* pretty damned amazing in terms of the stamina involved.
In 1931, James Thurber wrote a savage satire of the Lindbergh flight for THE NEW YORKER {"The Greatest Man in the World"}- concerning Jackie "Pal" Smurch's July 1937 flight around the world [the story is written "from the vantage point of 1940", later adjusted to "1950" in reprints]- only Smurch is a despicable, thoroughly self-centered and vicious man who's only in it for the glory and the rewards from his successful flight. He's so despised, they have to throw him out of his hotel window and make it appear it was an "accident". 😏
His aircraft was overloaded with fuel but well stocked with knowledge and common sense. He hated being called ''Lucky Lindy."
Magnífico 🎉🎉🎉
This frickin guy, absolute legend, man and pilot.
MY GRANDPA HAD HIM IN HIS CAR IN 27' AS HE LANDED IN BELIZE
This is another great episode of the life and the flight of Charles Lindbergh flight across the Atlantic in the Spirit of St Louis showing pres Calvin Coolidge pinning a medal on him and the tragic kidnapping and death of Lindbergh son by Bruno hauaptmann and the way they dress and socialize with each during Lindbergh life
Did they ever asked why that guy had to kill the little boy despite getting the ransam?
Read Lise Pearlman's book on Lindbergh. Quite a shocker, indeed.
Thanks for helping me with a school project
On Lindbergh's WW2 Pacific consulting tour, he test flew a twin boom p38 lightning. A great aircraft, it was hindered by high fuel consumption, limiting its trans pacific combat range. Lindbergh recommended throttling down the engine during flight to just 40%, a 60% fuel savings, extending the plane's range by over 1000 miles, a huge game changer if it worked. The Army air force personal scoffed, claiming the manufacturer, North American aviation, claimed it would wear out and damage the engines at that reduced speed. Charles offered to prove it himself, which the military took him up on. Shockingly, to the government's surprise, it worked. Factory technicians, flown out, took the engines apart and found no issues. Turns out, you can throttle back to just 40% on these planes, extending their range by 100%, a huge gift to the desperate Pacific war effort. Lindbergh could tell, just by listening and feeling the aircraft, it was capable of doing it.
Wonderful enlightening comment. Thank you
it"s amazing how often the 'experts' are wrong
I saw this on TV when I was a kid about ten years old, which would have been around 1971. I had heard of Lindbergh before and knew who he was an what he'd done, since I was into the space program & aviation, but seeing this was the first time I ever heard of the Lindbergh kidnapping.
His greatest accomplishment was speaking out about America not getting involved in a war with Germany. A new TH-cam video is based on a book which the narrator says he did not read, only pieces. How fair is that? And, the author of the book is one of THEM!
The war with Japan was an entirely different affair than that with Germany.
Forever my childhood hero
Read Lise Pearlman's book on Lindbergh. Your 'hero' will fall right before your very eyes as you read this book. No doubt.
11:02- "We will continue with the second half of 'BIOGRAPHY' in a moment."
Charles Lindbergh taught himself how to fly he bought an old Jenny with used in World War I as a trainer for a couple hundred bucks and he bounced down the field and took off and landed and bounced and bounced but he felt that if he could live a month before he killed himself in the plane it would be worth it worth it it it
Lindbergh wouldn’t have stood a chance of courting, let alone marrying, miss Morrow if he had not become famous for his endeavour, an unknown airmail pilot being allowed to even speak to the daughter of an ambassador, but as they say “who dares, wins”, and he certainly dared and won, but such an awful event that took his sons life, how anyone could endure that heartbreak 💔 and sorrow 😢😭 only someone who has experienced the loss could possibly know. Lindbergh was, and still is, an aviation hero to me, alongside people like the Wright brothers, Louis Bleriot, Alcock and Brown, Capt Eric “Winkle” Brown, Guy Gibson, Chuck Yagger, Sqn Ldr Andy Green, and many many more, far too many to list, but Charles “Lucky” Lindbergh will always have a very special place in my heart as the man who was not only the first person to fly solo across the Atlantic but also gave aviation another shot of enthusiasm that, at the time, was needed to keep its popularity too the fore and ensure that by 1939 the aviation industry was able to keep pace with the Nazis, Italian and Japanese, American aviation industry was way behind everyone else, but once awoken they soon caught up, thank goodness.. 🤗😀👍🇬🇧🏴
Have you read Lise Pearlman's book on Lindbergh?😲😳💯
Beautifully summarized. There will always be naysayers but to me Lindbergh was a figure larger than life and a fine American
@@michaelreilly1310esq 'Fine American'? He was a racist and an anti-Semitic and worse of all, he murdered his own son because of his beliefs in eugenics. The child was born with ailments and Lindbergh couldn't accept that, referring to the baby as 'it'.😱😱
I'm sorry to tell you this but he was a complete demon.
@@soso8824 Sorry to say no, but I think I will now, I like books recommended to me as they are usually a good recommendation, thanks.
@@michaelreilly1310esq Thank you, nice to know that my words are appreciated.
He looks like Amelia Earhardt, like they could have been brother and sister
So many fabrications have been accepted as fact and evidence. Hauptmann would never been convicted but for these fabrications.
The Flight was Easy for Him .
Take off Cruise ,
Eat a Sandwich, Drink , Land.
Like Jimmy Stewart Movie.
No Problem, just Bordem.
He use to fly to Jamaica for Pan Am.
Originally syndicated in 1962.
And later shown on WPIX-TV (channel 11) back in the 1970’s and 1980’s when it was on during the overnights.
Channel 11 started airing repeats in 1964, during the day.....and ended up scheduling them at 5am through 1986.
@@Musicradio77Network I also watched it on WPIX and remember it being on in the morning. They probably had it on all over the schedule since I'm sure it wasn't a big ratings winner.
It boggles my mind to think that the people of that time were so taken aback by his accomplishment.
I mean 33 hours in a cockpit, probably very uncomfortable, but not really much skill is there? I mean I guess you have to stay awake which isn't straight forward hmm...
Cheesy comment meant to diminish
Many are unaware that Hitler declared war on us, not the other way around! The isolationists missed the point that if England, or Russia had fallen, it would have been disastrous for us! Germany had 200 divisions in Russia, that would have been turned around to America, Great Britain, and the other Allied nations.
A lot of it had to do with the fact, never mentioned and hardly remembered, that about two weeks before Lindbergh's flight, the very famous French aviator Charles Nungesser, a flyer much more famous than Lindbergh at the time, attempted the flight, only from Paris-to-New York, and disappeared, never to be heard from again. The day Nungesser was expected to arrive in New York, a big reception was set up for him, with the mayor waiting, an array of ships in the harbor, and a parade up Broadway planned, and Nungesser never showed up. This was very much in everyone's mind when Lindbergh made his flight, and was probably a reason for the hysterical reception he got in France, where they were still mourning a national hero.
Things don't happen in history as the isolated events they seem to be when we look at them years later.
@@RRaquello Thank you, that is an excellent comment and one of the reasons I posted my initial comment.
Actually now that I think of it, 33 hours of flying *is* pretty damned amazing in terms of the stamina involved.
@@smoothbeak That endurance is one of the benefits of being 25 years old. Sometimes we forget just how young Lindbergh was when he did his flight.
The first antisemite to cross The Atlantic.
In 1931, James Thurber wrote a savage satire of the Lindbergh flight for THE NEW YORKER {"The Greatest Man in the World"}- concerning Jackie "Pal" Smurch's July 1937 flight around the world [the story is written "from the vantage point of 1940", later adjusted to "1950" in reprints]- only Smurch is a despicable, thoroughly self-centered and vicious man who's only in it for the glory and the rewards from his successful flight. He's so despised, they have to throw him out of his hotel window and make it appear it was an "accident". 😏
That’s utter nonsense
On a plane I assume you mean haha