39

Aviator CHARLES A. LINDBERGH Autograph Letter Signed About His Family History

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Autographs Start Price:1,000.00 USD Estimated At:1,800.00 - 2,000.00 USD
Aviator CHARLES A. LINDBERGH Autograph Letter Signed About His Family History
Autographs
Charles A. Lindbergh Typed Letter Signed About His Family History Starting From the American Revolutionary War and Revealing His British Loyalist “Tory” Relative “John Land”
CHARLES A. LINDBERGH (1902-1974). Famed American Aviator after his historic 33 1/2 hour Solo Non-Stop Transatlantic Flight from New York to Paris in 1927 in his “The Spirit of St. Louis” airplane, Author, Inventor, Explorer, and Social Activist.
July 22, 1967-Dated, Exceptional Content Typed Letter Signed, “Charles A. Lindbergh,” penned in deep black ink, 1 page, measuring 8” x 10” on fine quality watermarked “Fidelity Onion Skin” paper, together with its original Air Mail Postal Envelope from Les Monts-de-Corsier, Vaud, Switzerland, Choice Crisp Near Mint. This Letter is written to Professor North Callahan, of Bronxville, New York, being a very personal Letter about Lindbergh’s family history. Typewritten in black, easily readable, thanking Professor Callahan for sending him his new book titled, “Flight from the Republic.” Lindbergh writes that he had already purchased Seven copies for other family members, including his cousin Admiral Land, and one copy for his own personal library. The book refered to is fully titled, “Flight from the Republic: The Tories of the American Revolution” by North Callahan, Published by Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1967.

In this Letter, Charles Lindbergh tells of his family’s story regarding a “Revolutionary War incident.” This incident involved a distant Lindbergh relative named “John Land” who was a “Tory” British Loyalist who was carrying dispatches for the King’s forces, and was at one point fired upon by American Patriots, as he fled through a swamp, being hit by a bullet. John Land had also been told that his wife and children had been massacred by Indians, while John’s wife had been informed her husband John had been killed by Revolutionary Patriot forces. Later on, they discovered each other to be still alive and they reunited in Canada. Charles Lindbergh goes on to write how “Several years ago, my wife and I visited the old Land family house on the banks of the Delaware (River).”

The deep rich black fully executed signature, “Charles A. Lindbergh” measures just over 2.5” long, along with having his name in type below. This wonderful Letter come together with its original Swiss Postmarked Air Mail Postal Envelope, having Charles Lindbergh’s return address in Darien, Connecticut typed on the reverse top flap. It remains in near Mint condition. (2 items).
Charles Lindbergh became a hero overnight after his historic 33 1/2 hour Solo Non-stop Transatlantic Flight from New York's Roosevelt Field to Le Bourget Air Field in Paris (May 20- 21, 1927) in his Ryan Monoplane - “The Spirit of St. Louis” - which won him the Orteig Prize (given by Raymond Orteig) of $25,000, as well as the Congressional Medal of Honor.

In 1932, his son Charles was kidnapped and murdered, which led to a federal law against kidnapping, popularly known as The Lindbergh Act. From 1935-39, Lindbergh lived in Europe and assisted Dr. Alexis Carrel (1873-1944), Nobel Prize-winning French surgeon and biologist, in the construction of the perfusion pump, used in keeping organs alive outside the body. With Lindbergh, Carrel authored the book The Culture of Organs (1938). His autobiography, The Spirit of St. Louis (1953), won a Pulitzer Prize.