Charles Lindbergh 1930 color added 2016
by David Lee Guss
Title
Charles Lindbergh 1930 color added 2016
Artist
David Lee Guss
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
"Lindbergh's Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer, A. Scott Berg, contends Lindbergh was not so much a supporter of the Nazi regime as someone so stubborn in his convictions and relatively inexperienced in political maneuvering that he easily allowed rivals to portray him as one. Lindbergh's receipt of the German medal was approved without objection by the American embassy; the war had not yet begun in Europe. The award did not cause controversy until the war began and Lindbergh returned to the United States in 1939 to spread his message of nonintervention. Berg contends Lindbergh's views were commonplace in the United States in the pre-World War II era. Lindbergh's support for the America First Committee was representative of the sentiments of a number of American people.
Yet Berg also notes that 'As late as April 1939 after Germany overtook Czechoslovakia ' Lindbergh was willing to make excuses for Hitler. 'Much as I disapprove of many things Hitler had done,' he wrote in his diary on April 2, 1939, 'I believe she [Germany] has pursued the only consistent policy in Europe in recent years. I cannot support her broken promises, but she has only moved a little faster than other nations ... in breaking promises. The question of right and wrong is one thing by law and another thing by history.' Berg also explains that leading up to the war, in Lindbergh's mind, the great battle would be between the Soviet Union and Germany, not fascism and democracy.
In 1957, actor James Stewart portrayed Lindbergh in the movie The Spirit of St. Louis. Stewart lobbied hard for the role as he had been a lifelong admirer of Lindbergh and described his trans-Atlantic flight as 'one of the defining moments of my youth.' He encountered derision for trying to play a 26-year-old man in his late 40s and The Spirit of St. Louis was a commercial failure."
The Austrian born Billy Wider directed the picture. Wilder's mother, grandmother and stepfather were Holocaust victims.
Uploaded
November 2nd, 2016
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