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Home / Lifestyle / Amelia Earhart's Last Flight: New Files Spark Theories

Amelia Earhart's Last Flight: New Files Spark Theories

10 Dec

•

Summary

  • New archives detail Japan's search efforts for Amelia Earhart.
  • President Roosevelt cited $4 million cost for the Earhart search.
  • Earhart's mother believed her daughter died on a secret government mission.
Amelia Earhart's Last Flight: New Files Spark Theories

Recent declassifications offer new insights into Amelia Earhart's mysterious 1937 vanishing. The National Archives released thousands of pages, including a memo detailing Japan's cooperation in the search effort, with two Japanese ships actively involved. This information adds a new dimension to the international response at the time.

Further documents reveal President Franklin D. Roosevelt's perspective on the costly search, estimated at $4 million. He rationalized the expenses by noting that Navy planes needed to log flight hours regardless. First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt also played a role, securing crucial radio logs for pilot Paul Mantz, which contained the last known contact with Earhart's flight.

Adding to the intrigue, a statement from Earhart's mother, Amy Otis Earhart, expressed her conviction that her daughter perished in Japan on a government mission, rejecting theories of a crash at sea. These newly surfaced details continue to fuel the enduring mystery surrounding the pioneering aviator's fate.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Thousands of pages of documents have been released, detailing Japan's search efforts and communications surrounding Earhart's vanishing.
Yes, newly released documents confirm Japan had two ships involved in the search effort and provided assistance.
Her mother believed Amelia Earhart died in Japan on a secret United States government mission, not in the Pacific.

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