• Amelia Earhart (1898-1937). A strong individual since childhood, Earhart once chose her high school in a new city by interviewing various principals. As a nurse’s aide in Canada in World War I, she developed an interest in medical science, social work, pacifism—and aviation. In California during her twenties, she worked at the phone company to pay for flying lessons. Later, as a social worker in Boston, she was approached by a group of public relations specialists to be the first woman to fly the Atlantic (1928). On that trip, she was a passenger, but she was the first woman to solo the trip in 1932. She twice broke the transcontinental speed record and was first to solo from Honolulu to the mainland (1935). She disappeared in 1937 flying around the equator. Earhart and navigator Fred Noonan were presumed dead, but the disappearance has never been explained. Earhart was a scholar, sportswoman, and author. Her publisher and promotional manager was George Putnam, whom she married in 1931, with the option of dissolving the marriage in a year if either wished to and the household expenses to be split.

Amelia Earhart by Propeller postcard

From Women Making History: The Revolutionary Feminist Postcard Art of Helaine Victoria Press by Julia M. Allen and Jocelyn H. Cohen

  • Jumbo 5 ½” x 7¼” postcard, printed letterpress in sepia with silver border Two more printings offset in blue in 1977 and another run in 1978 in purple with poppy border. Amelia Earhart postcards continued to be popular, and, in 1978, Helaine Victoria Press added a postcard of her with Eleanor Roosevelt. In 1980, the press introduced another postcard of Earhart standing next to an autogiro, a precursor to the helicopter.
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  • HISTORY / Women
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