Informative Essay On Amelia Earhart

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In her career, Amelia Mary Earhart flew across the world, as you may have remembered. Though she disappeared in the process, but the real question was, what was impact she made on the earth before her disappearance and well-known flight? What even inspired Amelia into doing the things she loved?
And how are people even continuing her legacy and why is there a person named Amelia Rose Earhart?
Today, as your speaker, will tell you about the life about the famous aviator, Amelia Earhart. What lead Amelia Earhart to become an aviator? Amelia Earhart always wanted to become a woman aviator, she wanted to stand out. Though her parents seemed to have different kind of ideas. For example, when Amelia was little, her parents wanted parents encouraged …show more content…

"It was a thing of rusty wire and wood and looked not at all interesting," she dismissively said. It wasn't until she attended a stunt-flying exhibition, almost a decade later, that she became seriously interested in aviation (The Official Website of Amelia Earhart BIO).
When she got older, there was an airshow in a place/city called Los Angeles, which was held in the 1920’s. At this popular airshow, her father paid about US$20 for the famous aviator, Frank Hawk, to take his daughter on her first flight ever, but it was only a 10-minute flight kind of …show more content…

Then, on July 1921, she brought first plane, Kinner Airster, which was named “The Canary” later on (The Official Website of Amelia Earhart ACHIEVE). Next, on October 22, 1922, she even broke the women's altitude record when she rose to 14,000 feet in the air! (The Official Website of Amelia Earhart ACHIEVE). Amelia Earhart achieved something else on June 17-18, 1928, which was she was able to become the first woman to fly across the Atlantic in 20 hours and 40 minutes, which all took place in a Fokker F7, also known as Friendship. In the Summer 1928 - Bought an Avro Avian, a small English plane famous because Lady Mary Heath, Britain's foremost woman pilot, had flown it solo from Cape Town, South Africa, and then to

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