All I can say about this is... someone must be getting paid at USA Today to put out the press releases from this same guy. Yes, she did bring the Electra down. Yes it was in Mili atoll (Pieces of it have been positively identified by a NTSB investigator.) Yes, many saw her arrested by the Japanese (they're islanders, and they told their families - but over 200 claim to have seen her and Fred) Yes, she was picked up the Japanese - the Electra was put aboard a Japanese barge (have an interview with a Navy vet who met the stevedore who helped load it) taken to Jaluit where Amelia and Fred were taken by seaplane to Saipan, and the Electra was put aboard the Kyoshu. (as evidenced by the photo of the Electra behind the Kyoshu at EarhartOnSaipan.com see below) She was brought to Saipan, Fred was tortured and executed for being a spy, she was allowed to live in a cell on the island. She died of dystentery, her arm was recovered by US soldiers in 1944 (According to the soldiers themselves), her plane and briefcase were found - by US Marines. Her plane was guarded (and seen) by dozens of US Marine (I have filmed interviews with 6 of them) and her plane was reportedly destroyed by US forces and pushed into a pit on Aslito airfield. I have eyewitness testimony to each and every step of this path. It's beyond me that anyone pretends she was "lost" or "never found" - it's mansplaining at its finest, it's "they're islanders how could they be speaking the truth if they don't speak english?" mentality. However, like the rest of it - I can't let this one pass. They really should stop dishonoring her memory and what she actually sacrificed.
Amelia Earhart's last days: New distress call analysis provides intimate portrait of her final week
Alex Connor, USA TODAYPublished 1:57 a.m. ET July 24, 2018 | Updated 3:53 p.m. ET July 24, 2018
Amelia Earhart, in her Lockheed Electra plane, sits surrounded by knee-deep water, marooned on the reef of Gardner Island with her seriously injured navigator, Fred Noonan.
She waits for the tides to lessen before sending out yet another distress signal.
It's July 2, 1937, just hours after Earhart’s plane disappeared over the Pacific Ocean on the most challenging leg of her flight around the globe — the 2,227 nautical mile trip from Lae, New Guinea to Howland Island.
“Plane down on an uncharted island. Small, uninhabited,” she calls out, a signal, apparently only heard by Texas housewife Mabel Larremore who had stumbled upon the message from Earhart while scanning her home radio.
Then, 12 hours of silence.
For Richard Gillespie, executive director of The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery, this is a glimpse into how he believes Earhart’s last days with communication to civilization transpired — pieced together by analyzing a catalog of radio distress calls picked up by both area governmental agencies and witnesses in the immediate days after Earhart went missing.
On Tuesday — what would be Earhart's 121st birthday — Gillespie is hoping to put an end to the question of what happened to the famed aviator by releasing a 30-page report that he believes verifies, and connects, these radio signals to her disappearance.
Gillespie originally compiled his catalog in 2011 with his senior researcher Bob Brandenburg, aiming to debunk the claim by government officials who at the time dismissed the radio signals as hoaxes after searchers failed to find any trace of Earhart or her plane.
But, Gillespie said, it was still too complex. And year after year, theories continued to surface describing in detail the disappearance of Earhart, whose death 81 years ago has captivated a nation enthralled in a mystery that may never find true resolve.
Gillespie says he hopes his report on Tuesday will help put an end to the theories. In the analysis of the more than 100 calls sent the week following Earhart's disappearance — 57 of which were determined credible by Gillespie — the distress signals paint an intimate portrait of life, and later death, for Earhart and Noonan while stranded in the Pacific.
“These signals give us a glimpse into those last days before they’re really stuck [on Gardner Island],” Gillespie said.
The research also bolsters a hypothesis made public earlier this year by forensic anthropologist Richard Jantz, of the University of Tennessee, that a collection of lost bones discovered on Gardner Island, now Nikumaroro, “likely” belong to Earhart.
Contrary to the widely-held theory that Earhart crashed into Pacific Ocean, Gillespie's new report hypothesizes that Earhart and Noonan, low on fuel, landed on the reef of Gardner Island — 350 nautical miles south of Howland Island — as it was the only site substantial enough to act as a landing strip.
From there, Earhart and Noonan sent radio signals to the nearby Itasca, the Coast Guard vessel responsible for monitoring Earhart's navigation during this leg of her flight, in an attempt to verify their location.
And what Gillespie finds most credible about the radio signals made in the week following the disappearance is their alignment with the high and low tides.
Earhart and Noonan could only send out distress calls when the plane's engine could run without fear of flooding — usually late at night and into the early morning, according to the report.
Gillespie and Brandenburg tested this theory by using tidal levels and reef height data collected by his Niku V expedition team in 2007.
The correlation, according to the report, was astounding — “night after night, the credible transmissions occurred only when the water level was low enough." Solidifying for Gillespie that Gardner Island is where Earhart and Noonan landed.
But what is most telling, Gillespie says, is the depth to which private citizens knew about Earhart's radio signals, which were documented during her disappearance both in newspaper clippings and saved notebook transcriptions.
For example, two days after her plane crashed — July 4 — a San Francisco resident picks up a chilling frequency believed to be from Earhart: “Still alive. Better hurry. Tell husband all right.”
“Even though the people were totally independent — [they] didn’t know each other and didn’t know about each other — they tell a very consistent story about a deteriorating situation,” Gillespie said. “The language that Earhart uses changes over the days as things get worse.”
Five days after her crash — July 7 — Thelma Lovelace of St. John, New Brunswick, Canada, hears, “Can you read me? Can you read me? This is Amelia Earhart … Please come in.”
Gillespie believes it to be the last credible transmission by Earhart.
“We have taken in water, my navigator is badly hurt ... we are in need of medical care and must have help. We can’t hold on much longer.”
Then silence, forever.
Why Earhart's mystery lives on
Earhart was a woman of firsts.
She was the first woman to fly solo above 14,000 feet; to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean; to earn the Distinguished Flying Cross — an honor awarded by Congress for her heroism and achievement in aerial flight; and she was the first woman to make the first solo, nonstop flight across the United States.
But then, Earhart disappeared — written into history as a woman no longer famed for her skill and achievement as a female trailblazer in the field of aeronautics, but rather for her untimely fate, immortalized in one of America’s greatest mysteries.
She would become the first, and most likely last, person to ever know the complete truth of her final time on earth.
In addition to the bones and radio distress signals, Gillespie and Jantz also believe that artifacts discovered on Gardner Island bolster their hypotheses, both noting a sextant box and shoe parts that were found in the 1940s alongside the bones.
"I think you have to say that in all likelihood the bones belong to the person who is camping there, and that these artifacts belong to that person," Jantz said. "She had a navigator with her, Fred Noonan, and no remains of his have been found... but the sextant box is of American manufacture and is of the kind he was known to have carried."
But the ultimate artifact to find? Earhart's Lockheed Electra.
“Everybody says this will not be solved until you find the plane," Gillespie said. "Where is it written that a little airplane that goes into the surf 81 years ago is still there?”
Many, like Tom Crouch, a curator of aviation at the Smithsonian, are satisfied in believing that Earhart and Noonan simply crashed into the ocean.
"I don't think anybody has actually proven beyond the shadow of a doubt what happened to her," Crouch said. "It's a big ocean and they were shooting for a tiny, little target. I think they just went down at sea."
Instead of focusing on her death, Crouch focuses on who she was when she was alive.
Earhart is one of those 20th century women worth remembering and understanding what she stood for, he said, but also who she stood for.
"What Amelia was saying, essentially, is that young women shouldn't limit themselves," Crouch said. "They have the capacity to do anything they wanted to do."
Got this message today (a week old) from someone on YouTube...
"My uncle Tech Sergeant John H White of Company B, 105TH Infantry 27th Division said (he saw the Electra) at Aslito Field. He swore that AE's Lockheed (Electra and that it) was in a hangar at that airfield. The 105th was the unit that took part in the capture of that airfield. The military intelligence came by and placed that area off limits. (This is corroborated by Marine Julious Nabers) He was a platoon sergeant in that unit. There is but one survivor of (that) Company B (and then left me his name and location)." Last time I got a tip like this I jumped on a plane and went to interview the fellow.
Tom was interviewed on his death bed.
That's how I have three interviews with Tom Devine (Army Post office who saw the plane, heard people arguing over it, and saw her cell in Garapan), Robert Wallack (US Marine who found her briefcase dry as a bone) and Julious Nabers (who was the Marine code operator who was assigned to guard the planet for 24 hours, then later saw the plane flown, and after that saw them destroy the plane.)
Marine who guarded her plane watched it destroyed
Marine who found her dry as a bone briefcase.
Doug Bryce, Army Tech who drove with pals to view Earhart's Electra.
Doug Bryce, Army Radio Tower repairman, corroborated the same story as the fellow above, as well as Naber's story - Bryce drew me a map of where it was, when he and another soldier went by Jeep to see the plane when it was being guarded. As Doug said to me, "This fellow asked if I had heard they found her plane at Aslito. So we jumped in a Jeep and drove down to the field. It was being guarded, but we could clearly see it. It was the most famous plane in the world and had only been missing for 7 years. We all knew what her plane looked like." The map Doug Bryce drew coincided with the layout of the old airfield on Saipan, and was the same hangar where others claimed they saw her Electra.
Alisto field in June of 1944
Just another GI's relative coming forward to report the truth. (Doug was mocked by the Vets in Colorado Springs where he went for lunch at the VA. Imagine seeing Earhart's Electra and everyone in the room mocking you for seeing what you saw. Kind of annoying I'd guess.)
From a 16 MM still of footage taken the day they liberated Aslito airfield in June of 1944
Amelia Earhart was on Saipan. Her plane was on Saipan. Fred was executed on Saipan for being a spy. She died on Saipan and was buried there. Her body was only partially recovered. Her briefcase fully recovered. Her plane recovered and destroyed. Not my theory, belief or idea - just reporting what the eyewitnesses consistently say.
Fred Noonan and Amelia Earhart. Waiting for recognition.
Every time I post I think, "Well now maybe someone will take the next step." And no one does. Crazy.
Well, here we are again. Someone puts out a press release, the press release goes around the world, and feathers fly about Amelia Earhart.
As I just said on "Coast to Coast" - I'd love it if it were true that they found her bones at last. It would mean I wouldn't have her bugging me (for the past 30 years) about telling her story. But I can only report what I've been reporting since I began researching her story. Over 200 people claim to have seen her on Saipan after she disappeared. Their stories line up - if they were making it up, delusional, or some other reason - then we'd find some folks on islands somewhere else making the same claims. But there are none. I've interviewed 15 new eyewitnesses who either saw her or claim their relatives saw her - I've interviewed US Marines who claim they found her plane, claim they saw her plane flown, claim they found her briefcase (dry as a bone with passport and flight plans, over two witnesses) people who claim they guarded her plane and ultimately witnessed US forces destroy it - all of this lines up and is consistent in the reporting. So I ask you - if she was incarcerated, died on Saipan, apparently as late as 1944, how did her bones wind up in a grave on this other island FOUR YEARS EARLIER THAN SHE DIED? Actually the find occurred back in 1940, at the time the doctor who examined these bones said they were from a male, 5'5" - but as Tighar points out, another doctor in Fiji said they were of a European female, closer to 5' 7."And to be sure, let's not forget - these "bones" do not exist. They have no "bones." The bones are long gone. This analysis is of another man's analysis! Where the original analysis said it must have been a male this new analysis - without photographic or forensic evidence - says he's 99% certain that it's Amelia Earhart! Wow. Wonders never cease. From the report: "If the skeleton were available, it would presumably be a relatively straightforward task to make a positive identification, or a definitive exclusion. Unfortunately, all we have are the meager data in Hoodless’s report and a premortem record gleaned from photographs and clothing. From the information available, we can at least provide an assessment of how well the bones fit what we can reconstruct of Amelia Earhart. Because the reconstructions are now quantitative, probabilities can also be estimated." (Unless you're looking on an island she never, ever, ever, ever was on.) So that must be Amelia! Well hang on a second there cowboys and cowgirls. First we have to look at the facts.
Well we know she wasn't 5' 5" - she's a head taller than this car door.
How many people claim they saw her on Nikumaroro or the Phoenix island group? The answer to that is zero. However, we do have people who claim to have seen the Electra land on Mili, that pieces from that landing have been found on Mili.
Looking at pieces of the Electra in Seattle with Dick Spink, former
NTSB investigator Jim Hayton and explorer Mike Harris
I have a former NTSB investigator on camera saying "Beyond a shadow of doubt, the pieces that were found on Mili could only have come from her Electra." He demonstrates on camera how they fit on her plane. Further the paint of those pieces has been compared to an actual piece of the Electra (owned by a fellow in Seattle that was "taken" off the plane before it left) and the color is the same.
Piece that came off the Electra. Paint is the same as hers.
Jim demonstrating where it fit prefectly on his
own brake assembly from the same Electra
The wheel assembly from a rare
copy of the Electra manual. Same piece.
Then we have the over 200 islanders who claim to have seen her after the plane came down. We have them on Mili, we have them on Majuro (a stevedore who tells that to a US Navy soldier during WWII) we have them on Jaluit - (including a Marshallese congressman, who saw her plane on the back of the Kyoshu when he was a boy,) including a young man who tended to her and Fred's wounds, (and reported that to numerous investigators) including others who claim they saw both Amelia and Fred and the plane in Jaluit.
Andrew Bryce met a stevedore on Majuro in WWII who claimed he
transported the plane from Mili for the Japanese
All eyewitnesses. All saw Amelia or heard the
Japanese talking about her capture.
Then we have eyewitnesses who claim to see her come ashore on Saipan, claim to have tended to her wounds in the hospital, claim to have seen her incarcerated, claim to have heard of Fred Noonan's torture and execution, and her being incarcerated for a number of years in a cell in Garapan, Saipan. Or this fellow, who claimed he saw her on Saipan in USA Today.
Saipan vet saw the Electra in a hanger at Aslito. "It was the
most famous plane in the world, it was missing for 7 years when I saw it.
We all knew what it was, and we all talked about it." Doug Bryce.
Decoded the messages for his Marine commander that said "We
have found Earhart's Electra June 1944 Alsito airfield. Guarded
the Electra for 24 hours, decoded the message they were going to fly it,
then decoded the message and watched as it was destroyed.
Also watched it being destroyed, and corroborates
Naber's story of Navy brass trying to gain entrance to
see the plane. Quoted Nabers although he'd never met him,
and I interviewed him a month later.
Bob Wallack, interviewed by Connie Chung, found her
briefcase in a safe "dry as a bone." He corroborated what
Nabers said, as he turned over the briefcase to Naber's commanding
officer. Nabers saw the same briefcase, and described the
same one that Wallack found. Wallack kept her passport and briefcase for two weeks
before turning it over to Lewis Wallace, Marine corps Lt.Col (and Naber's boss)
Further we have the 12 GIs who claim they found the plane in a hangar on Aslito airfield, claim they recovered her briefcase, claim they found a photo book with her picture in it, claim that they saw the plane flown, then burned and destroyed.
Former congressman whose father saw AE and FN
coming ashore,the same day that others saw them.
As a boy of 12 saw her in captivity. Quoted as saying "The first
European woman you've ever seen, dressed like a man and her hands
tied behind her back? Not something you forget." His story
corroborated by another Saipanese man the same day.
This man's mother worked in the hospital,came home
in 1937 said "I treated an american woman pilot today" and told him not
to tell anyone for fear of retribution by the Japanese.
This man's father saw Amelia in prison in the cell
next to his brother, this man's uncle.
This woman was 16 years old when she saw Amelia and Fred
come ashore in Saipan. She corroborated the same details that
the other man's father told him. Japanese ordered them to
"lower their heads" but neither he nor she would do so. Her report
is what alerted CBS newsman Fred Goerner to the story in 1963.
Are all of these people lying? Well, let's ask the simple question; if they're all lying, why aren't their lying islanders on other islands? Why isn't there one sighting of her on any other island in the Marshalls or the Marianas or the Gilberts or the Phoenix islands? Why would so many concoct one story to fit only one scenario? But then we have this conclusion from the scientist looking at this skeleton's bones. I have no doubt that the scientist did his best work in examining these bones. However, the problem I have is his conclusion. What he concludes is that the bones are of a European woman who is taller than the 5' 5" - two inches taller than the previous conclusion, that these bones come from a European woman. That does not mean it was Amelia, because there's no evidence she was on this island. But there's a detail in the report that shows where else these bones might have come from. Who owned the Phoenix islands? History tells us "The name Phoenix for this group of islands seems to have been settled on in the 1840s, after an island of that name within the group. Phoenix Island was probably named after one of the many whaleships of that name plying these waters in the early 19th century." So there were ships "plying these waters" as early as 1840. The island in question, once called "Gardner" "was once the headquarters for the British colonial officer heading up the Phoenix Islands Settlement Scheme, Gerald Gallagher. Gallagher constructed a village on the western end of the atoll, with wide coral-paved streets, a parade ground, cooperative store, administrative center and residence, and radio shack." Let's see. A shop on the island with storefronts. Sounds popular. Further: "Although shelled and bombed a few times during World War II, neither Kanton nor any of the Phoenix Islands was ever occupied by Japanese forces. Between 1938 and 1940, in an effort to reduce overcrowding on the Gilbert Islands, the Phoenix Islands Settlement Scheme colonised the previously uninhabited Orona (Hull), Manra (Sydney), and Nikumaroro (Gardner) islands. By 1963, however, the three settlements had failed and the entire population was moved to the Solomon Islands." IN THE REPORT BELOW, GALLAGHER SAYS THE BODY HE FOUND IN 1940 LOOKED ABOUT "FOUR YEARS OLD." If that was correct, hmm... shall we do the math? She disappeared in 1937. He found a four year old grave in 1940. The Phoenix Islands Settlement Scheme (mentioned above) colonized Nikumaroro with a new population of people. Could they have been one of those people? According to this report, no, because this body is "european" in origin. (I.e. Caucasian) So there were a gaggle of people living in these islands, specifically repopulating Gardner. The question is - were any of them European females? Well, let's just look at the history of these islands by looking at their cemeteries of this and other islands:
This cemetery in Majuro (Marshalls) is about to be
claimed by the ocean.
Cemetery on Kirabati (Phoenix) The names are often
European descendants, from the colonists
who populated the islands.
Some European names in this cemetery on Nikumaroro.
There are many in the old cemeteries of Saipan, Tinian and other
islands in the Marianas. Europeans were like insects; everywhere.
Pics from the old cemetery on Saipan. Many
German names and Spanish names up until 1939
when this cemetery was moved.
European heritage, European parents, but native islanders
with European last names.
In other words - many of these descendants have European (German or Spanish) ancestors. Last time I looked, a skeleton doesn't know what the color of someone's skin is. But there's more: In the original finding, they claimed that alongside the bones they found a a "shoe," a bottle of Benedictine, and a sextant. (The shoe, claimed to be a woman's shoe in the report, was proven to be a man's shoe size 9 by the New York Times back in the 1980's.) Tighar tried to claim she "wore men's shoes." Whatever. The discussion of the bones has been a bone of contention for some time.
Here's what the article concludes: "To address the question of whether the Nikumaroro bones match estimates of Amelia Earhart’s bone lengths, I compare Earhart’s bone lengths with the Nikumaroro bones using Mahalanobis distance. This analysis reveals that Earhart is more similar to the Nikumaroro bones than 99% of individuals in a large reference sample. This strongly supports the conclusion that the Nikumaroro bones belonged to Amelia Earhart." Literally saying that he's found that these bones are likely to be that of a European woman - but there's no reason to assume that European woman would be Amelia. Here's why these other objects found are important.These islands were owned by Europeans since the 1840's. The Marshalls were ruled by the Germans until World War I. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marshall_Islands. Saipan, which I'm most familiar with, was ruled by Spain, sold Germany, then turned over to Japan (in 1914) then after the war became part of the United States. "Ferdinand Magellan was the first known European to visit the Mariana Islands and in 1521 he named the archipelago ‘Islas de los Ladrones’ (Islands of the Thieves) as a result of cultural misunderstandings. Over the next 40 years Spanish merchant ships passed through the region while exploring possible trade routes. During this early exploration period only one vessel is recorded lost in the Mariana Islands; in 1522 the caravel Santa Margarita was wrecked somewhere in the general vicinity of the ‘Ladrones’ (Brunal-Perry et al., 2009: 99)."http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/.../1095-9270.12140/full
So let's not pretend that because a European skeleton is found on Nikumaroro it means it has to be Amelia's. First we'd have to prove some other connection to the body, or why a European woman might have been on this island. Could it be that a descendant of a European father and an island mother died with this sextant box and a bottle of Benedictine? -By the way... a "Benedictine Bottle" is an odd tasting liqueur made by French Monks since the 16th century, it was common into the 19th century. Amelia didn't drink alcohol and Fred didn't carry around bottles of Liqueur - whisky perhaps - but not some fancy French monk "liqueurs."
BÉNÉDICTINE ESSENTIAL FACTS
In 1510, the Benedictine monk Don Bernardo Vincelli created the recipe for this French liqueur, which calls for 27 plants and spices. The three main ingredients are Angelica, Hyssop and Lemon Balm.
There are only three people on earth who know the complete recipe for making the spirit.
Benedictine is aged for up to 17 months before bottling.
The brand was first imported to the United States in 1888.
The sextant found with the bones and the bottle was commonly used by sailors prior to 1918 - where did I get that detail? From Tighar's own site: https://tighar.org/smf/index.php?topic=183.120 A sextant is used in sailing for the most part. And if it was found on Nikumaroro, chances are it came from a sailor. AE didn't have a 1918 sextant aboard the Electra either way.
The point being - whether it's a male or female is irrelevant when one looks at the objects in light of the history of the region. Germany sent missionaries, Spain created churches (all the prayerbooks circa 1940 are in Spanish) and Europeans are still there - in the tombstones present on Saipan, Tinian and other islands, as well as those in the Marshalls. Europeans mated with islanders and had children. This idea that "no one has ever been to this island before" is something perpetrated by people who want to profit from their findings. Besides the fact that there is forensic evidence the Electra landed on Mili atoll (see the History Channel program), I've examined the pieces myself, compared the color of the paint to a piece of her plane owned by a man in Seattle, I've got an interview with an NTSB investigator who proves on camera that the pieces found on Mili belonged to her plane. Eyewitnesses saw her transported to Saipan, eyewitnesses saw her on Saipan. Over 200 saw her there, and if someone has a problem with believing what islanders say (even though no other islanders say that from any other island in the Pacific) then I strongly urge them to look up the word "racism"in the dictionary: noun
prejudice, discrimination, or antagonism directed against someone of a different race based on the belief that one's own race is superior.
the belief that all members of each race possess characteristics or abilities specific to that race, especially so as to distinguish it as inferior or superior to another race or races.
Somehow these fellows have a blind spot when it comes to the actual history of the place, the actual history of the people who lived there, and the actual people who claim that they or their ancestors saw her "land" on Mili, saw her arrested, and saw her taken to Saipan, where she was seen by many more. Plus there are the above veterans and U.S. Marines who claim they found her briefcase, found the Electra and watched it destroyed and buried by US forces. Not a theory or belief - but just reporting accurately what people actually have said about her and what happened. If indeed, this fellow has proven these bones to be that of a European woman who is 5'7" - the Benedictine bottle, and the sextant would put her as someone who was aboard a Spanish ship in the 19th century who either after a wreck or some other reason made it to that island. If it was Amelia, what would she be doing with a sextant from the first World War? What would she be doing with a bottle of Benedictine? Something neither she nor Fred drank. From "the Bottle of Benedictine Found on Nikumaroro" on wikipedia. (There's a photograph of a 1930's bottle with the caption "It is most likely representative of the bottle found on Gardner Island." Hello? There's no date on the bottle, and it could have come from any time period.) "When the skull was found and buried in April, 1940, it seems that there was a bottle nearby. Teng Koata apparently took the bottle with him to Tarawa before Gallagher began the "thorough search" suggested by his superiors. Although the bottle was recovered from Koata, it apparently was not shipped to Suva with the other things collected on Niku. Telegram from Gallagher to the Acting Administrative Officer, Central Gilbert Islands District, Tarawa. Transcript September 23, 1940 Please obtain from Koata (Native Magistrate Gardner on way to Central Hospital) a certain bottle alleged to have been found near skull discovered on Gardner Island. Grateful you retain bottle in safe place for present and ask Koata not to talk about skull which is just possibly that of Amelia Earhardt. [sic] Gallagher. Here's the contents of Gallagher wrote in 1940: "Some months ago working party on Gardner discovered human skull – this was buried and I only recently heard about it. Thorough search has now produced more bones ( including lower jaw ) part of a shoe a bottle and a sextant box. I would appear that (a) Skeleton is possibly that of a woman, (b) Shoe was a womans and probably size 10, (c) Sextant box has two numbers on it 3500 ( stencilled ) and 1542 – sextant being old fashioned and probably painted over with black enamel. Bones look more than four years old to me but there seems to be very slight chance that this may be remains of Amelia Earhardt. If United States authorities find that above evidence fits into general description, perhaps they could supply some dental information as many teeth are intact. Am holding latest finds for present but have not exhumed skull. There is no local indication that this discovery is related to wrekc of the “Norwich City”. Gallagher. Telegram from the Administrative Officer, Central Gilbert Islands District, Tarawa to Gallagher. Transcript September 30, 1940 Your telegram 23rd September. Koata has handed to me one benedictine bottle. A.O.C.G.I.D. Gallagher in a telegram on October 6, 1940, says that there was "no indication of contents" found in the bottle, if any. Cf. Bones Chronology. Floyd Kilts was told that "beside the body was a cognac bottle with fresh water in it for drinking." Let's just break this down for a second. Gallagher says he finds a skeleton, says it looks like a woman. He says the shoe was probably size 10 and there was a sextant box. The sextant is reported to be from before 1918.(According to Tighar research) Alongside of that, he hears later there was an empty bottle of Benedictine that was "filled with water." Just like the scientist examining the bones that he has never seen, Gallagher is talking about a bottle he never saw. Further, in reply to some questions, Gallagher offered:(a) Skeleton was not buried – skull was buried after
discovery by natives (coconut crabs had scattered
many bones),
(b) (located) 100 feet from high water ordinary springs,
(c) ("Was body buried?" Improbable,
(d) ("What's the condition of the shoe?") Only part of sole remains,
(f) Appears to have been stoutish walking shoe or
heavy sandal,
(g) “Benedictine” bottle but no indication of
contents,
There are indications that person was
alive when cast ashore – fire, birds killed, etc., Okay, this was all covered back in 1988, this was all debunked decades ago. Now we have a scientist who claims that the bones "match that of a Caucasian female." Not sure how these are related whatsoever to Amelia, but it's the source of why these guys have been scouring this island for 30 years and have never found any other evidence. If they found a bottle of buttermilk, (her favorite) I'd have to think twice about whether it was hers or not. Or some other compelling clue - but nothing, zero, gives this any credibility to this conclusion whatsoever. But nice to see Amelia's photograph whenever I do see it.
This webpage examines the eyewitness accounts and other evidence that shows Amelia and Fred were arrested and taken to Saipan. There were over 200 individuals who claimed they saw her, this site examines who they were, and what they heard or saw. It includes details of evidence the Electra was found on Saipan, interviews with people who saw her and the Electra before and after they were taken to Saipan. Interviews with over two dozen Saipanese who claim they saw her there and over a dozen US Marines who claim they found the Electra, her passport, briefcase and other details.
EYEWITNESS REPORTS
THE EYEWITNESS REPORTS VIDEO IS NOW .99 CENTS
Eyewitness Accounts: Published
EYEWITNESS: THE AMELIA EARHART INCIDENT BY THOMAS E DEVINE WITH RICHARD M DALEY
Pg 40. “Glancing out on the runway ramp.. an area not the main part of Aslito Field, but an extended arm of the airstrip at the southwest corner… Near an embankment was (AE’s plane). (LATER) .. a muffled explosion at Aslito Field erupted into a large flash fire… I crouched and crawled toward the airfield. When I could see what was burning, I was aghast! The twin engine plane was engulfed in flames! I could not see anyone by the light of the fire… in July 1944.”
THE SEARCH FOR AMELIA EARHART BY FRED GOERNER
Goerner gathers dozens of eyewitnesses to Earhart’s incarceration and second hand info about her execution.
AMELIA EARHART: LAST FLIGHT
Amelia reveals she did not know Morse code (and neither did Fred Noonan)
AMELIA EARHART:HER LAST FLIGHT
By OLIVER KNAGSS
South African journalist gathers numerous eyewitnesses at Mili, Majuro and Jaluit. There is footage of these interviews, but it exists somewhere in Miami – still trying to locate the negative.
AMELIA EARHART: THE MYSTERY SOLVED By ELGEN M LONG AND MARIE K LONG
Elgen shows how the original plan devised by radio man Harry Manning was adhered to by the Coast Guard Itasca – they didn’t know Manning got off the plane in Hawaii and wasn’t on the electra. So 90% of all their communication was in Morse code – something neither AE or FN knew.
“WITH OUR OWN EYES – EYEWTINESSES TO THE FINAL DAYS OF AMELIA EARHART” MIKE CAMPBELL WITH THOMAS E DEVINE
PG 32. Robert Sosbe, 1st battalion 20th Marines, 4th marine division) Sosbe said he saw the Electra before and during its destruction) “on or about D+5 after our infantry had captured Alsito, the night before, then were driven off, only to capture it again, our Co was called up to fill a gap between our infantry and the 27th Army infantry. The trucks carrying us stopped off the opposite side of the runway from the hangars and tower about 3 to 5 hundred yds. This two engine airplane was pulled from the hangar to off the runway where it was engulfed in flames from one end to the other. I can still remember exactly the way it burned, how the frame and ribs because it was visible. It was about half dark. It burned approximately 15-30 minutes.”
Same page: a letter from Earskine Nabers: “I am seeking Marines who were placed on duty at Aslito to guard a padlocked hangar containing AE’s plane. The hangar was not one of those located along the runway. It was located near what may have been a Japanese administration building, and an unfinished hangar at the tarmac, in the southwest corner of the airfield.
The follow up letter (pg 33)
…”we had to get Col. Clarence R Wallace to sign all the messages that came through the message center.) Hq 8th moved back to bivouac area. I was dropped off at the Hangar for guard duty at the main road that went by west side of hangar. The road that went out to hangar, I was placed on the right side, just as it left the main road….
Pg 34 The best I can recall the plane was pulled on the field by a jeep.. the plane was facing north after the plane was parked and jeep moved. A plane came over real low and on the next pass he strafed the plane and it went up in a huge fireball. (We were sitting on the west side of the airfield about one hundred yards from the plane. We were on higher ground. As far as I remember, the (men) that pulled the plane on the field and us guys from H & S 8th were the only ones there.”
Pg 36 Marine Capt Earl Ford of Fallbrook, CA, artillery master sgt with 2nd Marines. Interview 6-7-88 by Paul Cook. “The aircraft was about 100 yards (from me) maybe less. We all saw it. No way we could miss it. A civilian twin engine. No way it was military. American aircraft in civil registration… some officers were saying it was Amelia’s… it had only two windows on the side, back here.”
Arthur Nash, Air Corps Corps, P47 group on Aslito. Claims he saw the plane on July 4, 1944 (book says 1945, must be a misprint based on following) pg 40:
“After landing on Isley.. at 2:30 pm, Japanese soldiers were running around the airstrip, one killed himself in the cockpit of a P47D with a grenade…” I slept fairly well (in the hangar) and (in the morning) wandered over to a large hole in the hangar wall facing the other hangar. The hangar floor and the area between the hangars was littered with debris, displace with siding from the hangars, maybe 65 yards apart, but close enough to get a good look at a familiar aircraft outside the other hangar. My eyesight was acute and what I saw was Amelia Earhart’s airplane!... the next morning I went over to see it but it was gone.”
Jerrell Chatham, 1st platoon, I company, 3rd regiment, 2nd marine deivions: “I was driving trucks .. on Saipan… when we went ashore I saw the hangar where Amelia Earhart’s plane was stored, I also saw the plane in the air. They told us not to go close to the airplane hangar and we did not…”
Pg 44: Howard Ferris, US Marines: “Sent to Saipan for guard dutey… an old hangar structure at end of a runway. This hangar was not large,.. small trees in front of big doors.. (then he recounts the same Marine argument that Devine and Nabers recount – where some Navy brass attempted to get in, but a Marine (Nabers) refused them entry.)” Howard was not present at the fire, but one of his buddies was. The buddy said a truck arrived with many gas cans and the guards saturated the entire hangar.. and it burned totally.
Pg 50 Robert Sowash, 23rd regiment 4th Marines Division: “I saw a plane in a building that was not a military plane.. I remember other Marines saying it was the same as Earhart’s. Later the place was cordoned off..”
Pete Leblanc, 121st Naval CB’s, 4th Marine division: “some of our guys were sneaking over towards the airfield to try and see (AE’s plane). We heard there were guards there. Then it was burned up later.”
AMELIA EARHART: LOST LEGEND - DONALD MOYER WILSON
Over 200 eyewitnesses as gathered by all the different authors with the various reports of her landing on Mili, being brought to Jaluit and incarcerated in Garapan prison.