Earhart Exhibit Examines Various Theories
As the mystery continues
surrounding the disappearance of Amelia Earhart seven decades ago,
The 99s Museum of Women Pilots has unveiled a new Earhart exhibit
that includes a compilation of significant theories that have
developed during those 70 years.
Through the contributions of David Bowman, author of
Legerdemain - Deceit, Misdirection and Political Sleight of Hand
in the Disappearance of Amelia Earhart, the exhibit concludes
with a synopsis of several theories that have added to the mystery
more than in solving it.
The 99s takes no position on the disappearance of their first
president, but according to current President Patricia Prentiss,
"An exhibit on Amelia would be incomplete without addressing the
one question that everyone asks - what do you think happened." Like
Bowman's book, the exhibit does not endorse any theory, instead
reviewing the elements of each. Prentiss adds, "Ultimately, it's up
to the readers to answer that question for themselves."

The official US government position is that Earhart ran out of
gas and crashed into the sea about 40 miles from her destination,
Howland Island. Proponents maintain that stronger-than-forecast
headwinds led to higher fuel consumption, and near Howland Island
she ran out of fuel and crashed into the sea, drowning both she and
navigator Fred Noonan. However, radio messages were heard for
several days after her disappearance, discrediting this official
government version.
There is significant evidence to indicate that Earhart either
ditched or was forced down in the Marshall Islands but was rescued
by the Japanese and either died in custody or was executed on the
island of Saipan. Many US soldiers on Saipan after the end of World
War II reported seeing Earhart's Lockheed Electra and some personal
items, and one claims to have been shown Earhart's grave though the
site was never excavated. Interestingly, there is credible evidence
that the Office of Naval Intelligence placed one
soldier-turned-researcher under surveillance during his 1961 visit
to Earhart's sister.
Another theory concludes that through navigational error,
Earhart overshot Howland Island and continued southeast to Gardner
Island, now called Nikumaroro Island, and that she ditched on the
north shore of the island, broadcasting SOS messages for several
days until the Electra was washed into deep water by a storm.
Earhart and Noonan, supplies exhausted, perished from heat, thirst
and starvation. Multiple expeditions to Nikumaroro have not
uncovered any hard evidence and unlike the Marshall Island
scenario, there are no witness statements to validate these
claims.

Yet another researcher claims Earhart bypassed Howland Island in
favor of Hull Island, but she was bracketed by Japanese fighters
which forced her down near Sidney Island where she was picked up
and held in captivity until the end of WWII. The originator of this
theory claims to have befriended Earhart who told him that she was
on a mission for the government. He reported seeing Earhart's plane
fitted with ping-pong balls for increased buoyancy, to have heard
Earhart's post-loss radio messages, and to have met with Earhart,
who was living under the assumed name of Irene Bolam a short while
before her death in 1982. While there are indications from various
sources that Earhart was flying a mission for the government, there
is no corroboration of the content of the reported radio
transmissions.
One of the more controversial theories follows that Earhart ran
out of gas or was forced down, probably in the Marshall Islands
near Mili Atoll and that she was later taken to Saipan, Japan or
China. At this point though, the theory develops its own identity,
claiming that Earhart survived her captivity and was repatriated to
the United States at the end of World War II. A preponderance of
circumstantial evidence, including recently commissioned forensic
studies and interviews with family members, maintains that Earhart
assumed the identity of an old friend, Irene Bolam, but no hard
evidence has been uncovered.
Research isn't confined to the United States. From Australia,
one theory proposes that Earhart flew back in the direction from
which she came and crashed on the island of New Britain, perishing
with Noonan. What gives this theory credence is an Australian Army
patrol map, discovered in 1993, on which was written a partial
engine model number and a possible construction number, both of
which match Earhart's Electra. However, Earhart would not have had
enough fuel to have flown nearly to Howland Island then back almost
to New Guinea. After several expeditions, no aircraft wreckage has
been found.

And so the mystery continues. Bowman has now written a second
edition of Legerdemain which contains exclusive new
disclosures regarding Earhart's fate. It is scheduled to be
launched at the Amelia Earhart Festival in Atchison, KS, where The
99s also owns and operates The Amelia Earhart Birthplace
Museum.
The 99s is the world's oldest organization for women pilots with
chapters and sections around the world.