Anne Morrow Lindbergh: Her Life (77 page)

BOOK: Anne Morrow Lindbergh: Her Life
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1
BMAU
, AML diary, February 1928, pp. 106–107.

2
Lydiard H. Horton, “On College Disappearances: The Analysis of a Case,”
New England Journal of Medicine
, December 5, 1929, vol. 201, no. 23, pp. 1155–1163.

3
BMAU
, AML diary, February 1928, p. 106.

4
Elisabeth Reeve Morrow letters to Constance Chilton, 1925–1934.

5
BMAU
, AML diary, January 1928, p. 103.

6
NYT, 1/2/28, 27:5, “Extols Lindbergh as Good-Will Envoy.”

7
Ibid., 2/14/28, 2:2, “Lindbergh Flew 9060 Miles.”

8
CAL, Autobiography of Values
, p. 90.

9
NYT
, 1/25/28, 9:3, “Plan Lindbergh Holiday.”

10
Ibid., 2/9/28, “Senate Authorizes Lindbergh Medal.”

11
BMAU
, AML diary, February 1928, p. 107.

12
Dwight Morrow Papers, Amherst College Archives.

13
Dwight Morrow Papers, Amherst College Archives.

14
BMAU
, AML diary, Feb. 1928, pp. 108–109.

15
Ibid., pp. 109–110.

16
Ibid., 3/1/28, p. 114.

17
Ibid., 3/18/28, pp. 119–120.

18
Ibid., 3/1/28, p. 115.

19
Ibid., “April—still,” p. 142.

20
Elizabeth Reeve Morrow letters to Constance Chilton, 1925–1934.

21
NYT
, 3/2/28, “Col. Lindbergh Sees Mother Honored.”

22
Ibid., 3/28/28, “Letters to the Times: Letting the Colonel Rest.”

23
Ibid., 3/18/28, “Army Finds Col. Lindbergh in Perfect Health; Flier Says This Answers ‘Breakdown’ Reports.”

24
Ibid., 3/25/28, “Lindbergh Weary of the Limelight but Won’t Retire.”

25
Ibid., 2/14/29, “Tell of Lindbergh Shyness.”

26
CAL, Autobiography of Values, p
. 122.

27
BMAU
, AML diary, “Boston,” pp. 155–156, 159.

28
Ibid., June 1928, pp. 163–164.

29
Interview with Reeve Lindbergh Tripp.

30
Dwight Morrow Papers, Amherst College Archives.

31
BMAU
, AML diary, 3/18/28, p. 118.

32
Ibid., 3/26/28 through 4/5/28, pp. 124–134.

33
Ibid., 4/8/28, p. 137.

34
Elisabeth Morrow letters to Connie Chilton, 1925–1934; interview with Anne McGavrin.

35
Constance Morrow Morgan, op. cit., pp. 111–113.

36
Interview with Anne McGavrin.

37
BMAU
, AML diary, “Cuernavaca,” pp. 130–134.

38
Ibid., June 1928, p. 161.

39
Ibid., “3–11:30 in Laredo,” p. 136.

40
Ibid., “After a reading at Smith College,” p. 140.

41
Ibid., 5/3/28, pp. 145–147.

42
Information on Dwight Morrow’s career in Mexico is based on Ronald Steel, op. cit., pp. 236–244, and Ron Chernow, op. cit., pp. 287–301.

43
Dwight Morrow Papers, Amherst College Archives.

44
Ronald Steel, op. cit., p. 242.

45
NYT
, 3/31/28, “Will Rogers Suggests Morrow as Candidate.”

46
BMAU
, June 1928, pp. 160–161.

47
Morrow Family Papers, Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College Library.

48
Ibid.

49
BMAU
, AML diary, “Boston,” pp. 157–158.

50
NYT
, 2/18/28, 6:4, and 4/2/28, 26:3.

51
BMAU
, AML diary, 7/13/28, p. 168.

52
CAL, Autobiography of Values
, p. 123.

53
BMAU
, AML diary, “Englewood, Wednesday Morning,” p. 175.

54
Ibid.

55
BMAU
, AML diary, “Evening,” p. 179–180.

56
Ibid., p. 180.

57
BMAU
, AML letter to CCM, 10/12/28, p. 181.

58
Ibid., p. 183.

59
Ibid., p. 182.

60
Ibid., p. 185.

61
Ibid., p. 186.

62
BMAU
, AML diary, “Evening,” p. 180.

63
Interview with Margot Wilkie.

64
BMAU
, AML letter to CCM, 10/12/28, p. 181.

65
Ibid., p. 203.

66
Ibid., p. 188.

67
Ibid., pp. 189–195.

68
Ibid., 11/28, pp. 213–215.

69
Ibid., p. 214.

70
Ibid.

71
Interview with AML.

72
BMAU
, AML letters to CCM, 10/27/28, p. 207, and 11/28, p. 214.

73
BMAU
, AML letters to ERM, 10/26/28, p. 206, and 11/28, p. 219.

74
BMAU
, AML letter to ERM, 11/28, p. 219.

75
BMAU
, AML letter to CCM, 11/28, p. 214.

5. PRESENTIMENT

1
AML,
The Unicorn and Other Poems
, p. 77.

2
Elizabeth Cutter Morrow Diaries, Dwight Morrow Papers, Amherst College Archives.

3
Ibid.

4
Ibid.

5
Their house in Cuernavaca was named Casa Manana.

6
NYT, 1/1/29, “D. W. Morrows Hosts.”

7
Elisabeth Reeve Morrow letters to Connie Chilton, 1925–1934.

8
Elizabeth Cutter Morrow Diaries, Dwight Morrow Papers, Amherst College Archives.

9
AML letter to James Newton, Feb. 1942, in James Newton,
Uncommon Friends
, New York: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1987, pp. 256–257.

10
All around Anne convention prevailed. The “new woman” of the 1920s was not like her mother’s generation, restless with rebellion and social defiance. In the wake of suffrage was a sudden realization that the reins of power had not changed. Women did not vote in large numbers nor did they form the political blocs anticipated by those who had fought for suffrage. While women enrolled in universities and joined the workplace in unprecedented numbers after the war, the demographics of marriage had changed. By the end of the 1920s, the marriage rate among educated women had doubled, and the task of balancing marriage and career became an identifiable social problem. (See Nancy Woloch,
Women and the American Experience
, New York: McGraw-Hill, 1996, pp. 241–279.) In 1925, when Anne was a freshman at Smith, the college opened the Institute for the Coordination of Women’s Interests, resolving to ameliorate the “intolerable choice between career and home,” but the institute folded. The experts concluded that women had no choice, given the prevailing social prejudice. (See Dolores Hayden,
The Grand Domestic Revolution: A History of Feminist Designs for American Homes, Neighborhoods, and Cities
, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, pp. 266–277, and C. Todd Stephenson, “Integrating the Carol Kennicotts,” in
Journal of Women’s History
, 1992, vol. 4, no. 1 [Spring], pp. 89–113.) Even though Anne’s contemporaries at Smith were preparing for a life of professional and financial independence, most would sacrifice their careers for the security of home and family within three years after graduation. (Alumnae Association of Smith College,
Alumnae Biographical Register
, 1935, Smith College Archives, pp. 338–357.)

11
BMAU
, AML letter to CCM, 10/26/28, p. 199.

12
Elisabeth Reeve Morrow letters to Connie Chilton, 1925–1934.

13
Ibid.

14
NYT
, 1/31/29, “Hoover’s Cabinet Viewed as Formed.”

15
Endicott Peabody letter to Dwight Morrow, Dwight Morrow Papers, Amherst College Archives.

16
NYT, 1/30/29, “Dwight W. Morrow at Stockbridge.”

17
Ibid.

18
AML letter to Jim Newton, February 1942, in James Newton, op. cit., pp. 256–257.

19
BMAU
, AML letter to Corliss Lamont, undated, pp. 227–228.

20
NYT
, 2/13/29, “Col. Lindbergh Betrothed to Miss Anne S. Morrow; Lands in Cuba after Delay.”

21
Ibid.

22
NYT
, 2/14/29, “Tell of Lindbergh Shyness.”

23
Ibid., “Comments on Engagement.”

24
NYT
2/13/29, “Col. Lindbergh Betrothed to Miss Anne S. Morrow; Lands in Cuba After Delay.”

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