Description:

Lindbergh Charles 1902 - 1974 Inaccuracies about Lindbergh's 1927 flight to Mexico in the Spirit of St. Louis, where he first met his future wife, Anne Morrow, prompt Lindbergh to pen an explanatory letter to the author. Autograph Letter Signed, "Charles A. Lindbergh", 1 page, 5.25" X 7.25" visible, Englewood, N.J., April 23, 1935, on personal stationery, to British author, Harold Nicolson, concerning some errors Nicolson made in a book describing Lindbergh's trip to Mexico in the Spirit of St. Louis, matted and framed with an image of Lindbergh standing next to the plane, to a finished size of 18" by 14". Light soiling and the usual folds, overall in apparent near fine condition. In full: "Dear Mr. Nicholson: / I hope you will excuse my taking the liberty of making a few notations in the pages of your book dealing with my flight to Mexico in the Spirit of St. Louis. They are in regard only to facts of which I have personal and definite knowledge./ With best regards / Charles A. Lindbergh [signed]".

Charles Lindbergh is most famous for his successful trans-Atlantic flight to secure the Orteig Prize for flying from New York to Paris nonstop. After receiving the Medal of Honor for his journey in 1927, Lindbergh became a national hero, and due to his celebrity status, traveled throughout the U.S. and even to neighboring Mexico. The first time Lindbergh flew over Mexican territory in the "Spirit of St. Louis" was September 23rd, 1927, when he flew over Mexicali, Baja California en route from San Diego, CA to Tucson, AZ as a part of Lindbergh's successful tour to promote aeronautics sponsored by The Guggenheim Fund. In 1927, Lindbergh made a nonstop flight between Washington D.C. and Mexico City, his first formal visit. He was invited by Dwight Morrow, the new American Ambassador to Mexico, to do a good will tour. Dwight Morrow and Charles Lindbergh liked each other from the start and became friends throughout the tour. On December 21st, 1927, Anne Morrow, Dwight's daughter, arrived in Mexico to spend Christmas with her family. Anne was introduced to Charles at the US Embassy in Mexico City. In a little more than a year, Anne and Charles Lindbergh would be engaged and soon after, married. Harold Nicolson, British politician and author, published a biography of Charles Lindbergh's father-in-law Dwight Morrow in 1935, four years after Morrow died. The book was simply entitled "Dwight Morrow," and it is that book Lindbergh annotated and referred to in this letter.

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