Anne Morrow Lindbergh: Her Life (84 page)

BOOK: Anne Morrow Lindbergh: Her Life
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40
Ibid., “‘No Mercy,’ Wilentz Plea; Intruder Shouts at Court; Case Goes to Jury Today.”

41
NYT
, 2/14/35, “Justice Trenchard’s Charge to Jury Stressing Burglary Element in Case.”

42
LROD
, AML diary, 2/13/35, p. 249.

43
Harold Nicolson, letter to Vita Sackville-West, 2/14/35.

44
LROD
, AML diary, 2/13/35, p. 249.

45
NYT
, 2/14/35, “Hauptmann in Cell Falls in Collapse.”

46
LROD
, AML diary, 2/18/35, p. 251.

18.
A ROOM OF HER OWN

1
LROD, AML diary, 5/16/35, p. 275.

2
Ibid., 3/19/35, p. 264.

3
Ibid., 4/30/35, pp. 268–270.

4
Ibid., pp. 270–271.

5
Ibid., p. 271.

6
Ibid., 5/8/35, p. 271.

7
NYT
, 6/21/35, “Carrel, Lindbergh Develop Device to Keep Organs Alive Outside Body.”

8
LROD
, AML diary, 6/21/35, p. 278.

9
Ibid., 7/3/35, p. 279.

10
Saturday Review
, 8/17/1935, “The Seeing Eye.”

11
Newsweek, 8/17/1935, “Air-Jaunt: Mrs. Lindbergh Can Write as Well as She Can Pilot.”

12
Publishers Weekly
, 8/24/1935, “Anne Lindbergh’s Book a Hit.”

13
LROD
, AML diary, 8/28/35, p. 300.

14
Ibid., 9/5/35, p. 305.

15
Ibid., 9/15/35, p. 308.

16
Ibid., 10/31/35, p. 324.

17
Alexis Carrel,
Man, the Unknown
, New York: Harper and Brothers, 1935.

18
By 1931, twenty-seven states had passed laws permitting sterilization. By 1932, more than 12,000 sterilizations had been performed in the United States, half of them in California. By 1935, the year Carrel’s book was published, Denmark, Germany, Switzerland, Norway, and Sweden condoned enforced sterilization. To those who espoused it, sterilization of the socially unfit was simply a matter of reason and good economics. Source: J. H. Landman, Ph.D., J.D., J.S.D.,
Human Sterilization: The History of the Sexual Sterilization Movement
, New York: Macmillan, 1932.

19
Time
, 9/16/1935, “Carrel’s Man.”

20
LROD
, AML diary, 9/17/35, pp. 312–313.

21
NYT
, 10/3/35, “Books of the Times.”

22
LROD
, AML diary, 12/3/35, p. 328.

23
Newsweek
, 12/28/35, “Lindberghs Seek Threat-Free Exile as Hauptmann Seeks Life.”

19. CROSSING OVER

1
NYT
, 1/5/36, “Lindberghs at Landaff.”

2
Ibid., 12/23/35, “Lindbergh Family Sails for England to Seek Safe, Secluded Residence; Threats on Son’s Life Force Decision.”

3
Ibid., 12/30/35, “Due in Liverpool Tomorrow.”

4
LROD
, AML diary, 12/23/35, p. 333.

5
Time
, 1/6/36, “Hero and Herod,” part I.

6
Ibid., 1/13/36, “Hero and Herod,” part II.

7
.
NYT
, 12/26/35, “Gangs Abroad Too, Lindbergh Is Told.”

8
British Sessional Paper 1936–1937, Command Paper #5520, vol. 26, p. 463.

9
NYT
, 1/3/36. “Letters to the Editor: Crime in England.”

10
LROD
, AML diary, 12/29/35, p. 335.

11
Time
, 1/6/36, “Hero and Herod.”

12
LROD
, AML diary, 12/31/35, p. 336; and
NYT
, 1/4/36, “Lindberghs Start Trip to Wales.”

13
F&N
, AML letter to ELLL, 1/10/36, pp. 3–4.

14
F&N
, AML letter to CCM, 1/12/36, pp. 6–7.

15
Ibid., p. 7.

16
F&N, AML diary, 1/21/36, p. 10.

17
Deirdre Beddoe,
Women Between the Wars: 1918–1939
, London: Pandora, 1989.

18
F&N
, AML diary, 1/28/36, p. 16.

19
Ibid., pp. 11–12.

20
Reeve Lindbergh, op. cit., pp. 143–144.

21
The idea that art puts a glaze over reality recurs throughout Anne’s work, permeating her books and poetry.

22
F&N
, AML diary, 2/3/36 through 2/15/36, pp. 17–22.

23
Ibid., 2/19/36, p. 23.

24
Ibid., 2/20/36, pp. 23–26.

25
Ibid.

26
Ibid., p. 25.

27
Jane Brown,
Sissinghurst: Portrait of a Garden
, 1990; Anne Scott-James,
Sissinghurst: The Making of a Garden
, 1974; and Tony Venison, “The Garden Before Sissinghurst,”
Country Life
, 169:924–6, 1981.

28
AML,
The Unicorn and Other Poems
, p. 10.

29
Fon W. Boardman, Jr., op. cit.

30
NYT
, 3/2/36.

31
F&N
, AML diary, 3/6/36, p. 29.

32
Ibid., p. 30.

33
Robert Goralski,
World War II Almanac: 1931–1945
, New York: Bonanza Books, 1981, p. 43.

34
F&N
, AML diary, 3/6/36, p. 31.

35
F&N
, AML letter to DWM, Jr., 3/25/36, pp. 40–41.

36
NYT
, 4/4/36, “Hauptmann Put to Death for Killing Lindbergh Baby; Remains Silent to the End.”

37
Ibid.

38
F&N
, AML diary, 4/21/36, pp. 42–44.

39
Ibid., 5/16/36, pp. 53–55.

40
Ibid., 4/23–26/36, pp.
44
–4
6
.

41
F&N
, AML letter to CCM, 3/23/36, pp. 36–40.

42
F&N
, AML diary, 4/30/36, pp. 46–47.

43
Ibid., 5/12/36, pp. 48–53.

44
Ibid., 6/24/36, pp. 71–72.

45
Ibid., 7/4/36, pp. 72–73.

46
Walter Ross interview with Kate and Truman Smith, 4/9/65; Interview with Katharine Smith, 5/14/85; Interview with Katharine (Kaetchum) Smith Coley, 5/25/85; Robert Hessen, ed.,
Berlin Alert: The Memoirs and Reports of Truman Smith
, Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press, 1984.

47
Interview with Katharine Smith, 5/14/85.

48
Robert Hessen, ed., op. cit.

49
Ibid.

50
Preceding four paragraphs:
F&N
, AML diary, 7/22/36, pp. 80–84.

51
William L. Shirer,
The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Germany
, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1959.

52
F&N
, AML diary, 7/22/36, pp. 80–84.

53
Time
, 8/3/36, “Airmen to Earthmen;” A perusal and examination of three representative newspapers of the Nazi Reich
—Voelkischer Beobachter, Berliner Tageblatt
, and
Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung—
during this period reveals that Lindbergh was welcomed as an American hero, whose presence gave validation to the technological developments in aviation.

54
Walter Ross interview with Truman Smith, 4/9/65.

55
Interview with Katharine Smith, 6/18/85.

56
Ibid., 5/14/85.

57
Ibid., 6/18/85.

58
Interview with Katharine (Kaetchum) Smith Coley, 5/25/85.

59
Interviews with Katharine Smith, 5/14/85 and 6/18/85.

60
NYT
, 7/24/36, “Lindbergh’s Warning.”

61
Literary Digest, 1/9/37, “English Garden: Lindbergh’s Idyll.”

62
Ibid.

63
NYT
, 7/25/36, “Lindbergh Speech Praised by Steed,” Wickham Steed.

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