Read Anne Morrow Lindbergh: Her Life Online
Authors: Susan Hertog
10
NYT
, 9/23/29, “Lindbergh Log Sent by Radio Operator.”
11
HGHL
, AML letter to ECM, 9/20/29, p. 79.
12
Ibid., pp. 80–81.
13
HGHL
, AML letter to ERM, 9/23/29, p. 88.
14
HGHL
, AML letter to ERM, 9/23/29, p. 90.
15
HGHL
, AML letter to CCM, 9/26/29, p. 93.
16
Saturday Evening Post, 2/1/30, “Exploring the Maya with Lindbergh,” by William I. Van Dusen.
17
Dr. Austen Fox Riggs, trained in surgery, later joined his father-in-law, Dr. Charles McBurney, in studying the work of Dr. George Gehring who believed that “organic illness is interwoven with emotional upheaval.” In 1913, Riggs began a formal practice of psychotherapy in Stockbridge, known as “not a sanitarium for the treatment of the psychoses (there were many of those), but a center for the treatment of the neuroses.” The Austen Riggs Foundation was formally established in 1919. From Lawrence S. Kubie, M.D.,
The Riggs Story
, New York: P. B. Hoeber, 1960.
18
Elizabeth Cutter Morrow Diaries, Dwight Morrow Papers, Amherst College Archives.
19
Elisabeth Reeve Morrow letters to Constance Chilton, 1925–1934.
20
Elizabeth Cutter Morrow Diaries, Dwight Morrow Papers, Amherst College Archives.
21
Anne used Reeve Hemperly, a contraction of old Cutter family names, as her
nom de plume
.
22
NYT
, 11/21/29, “Morrow and Adams Join Naval Parley” and
NYT
, 11/29/29, “Larson Will Name Morrow to Senate.”
23
NYT
, 12/3/29, “House Delegation Favoring Morrow.”
24
NYT
, 12/17/29, “Start Morrow 1936 Boom.”
25
Elizabeth Cutter Morrow Diaries, Dwight Morrow Papers, Amherst College Archives.
26
HGHL
, AML letter to ECM, 11/6/29, p. 110.
27
HGHL
, AML letter to CCM, 1/13–14/30, p. 121.
28
HGHL
, AML letter to ECM, 1/30–31, p. 126.
29
Ibid., pp. 127–128.
30
Literary Digest
, 4/12/30, “Motoring and Aviation: Husband and Wife Teams in the Flying Game,” p. 39.
31
HGHL
, AML letter to CCM, 4/10/30, p. 132.
32
HGHL
, AML letter to ECM, 3/4/30, p. 129.
33
Ibid., p. 130.
9.34
NYT
, 4/21/30, “Lindbergh Sets a Record from Coast of 14¾ Hours with Wife as Navigator.”
1
AML,
The Unicorn and Other Poems
, p. 11.
2
NYT
, 5/31/30, “Lindbergh Takes Morrow on Airplane Flight from Atlantic City to Newark in 45 Minutes.”
3
New Republic
, 11/5/30, “Dwight Morrow in New Jersey.”
4
HGHL
, AML letter to ELLL, 6/10/30, p. 137.
5
The sad fact is that the answers already existed but were inaccessible to the American medical community. Not until 1928 did Alexander Fleming notice the antibacterial qualities of mold. This observation led to the discovery of penicillin, which was used to treat many disorders, including rheumatic fever. The association between this fever and heart disease was already known, and in 1945, penicillin became a life-saving treatment. Unfortunately, the cure was not on hand for Elisabeth. See Blake Cabot,
The Motion of the Heart: The Story of Cardiovascular Research
, New York: Harper and Brothers, 1954, pp. 106–119.
6
Elisabeth Reeve Morrow letter to Charles Burnett, 9/17/30, Bowdoin College Archives.
7
HGHL
, AML letter to ELLL, 6/10/30, p. 137.
8
New York
Daily News
, 6/23/30, “‘We’ Now are Three,” by Robert Conway.
9
NYT
, 6/24/30, “Baby ‘Adopted’ by France.”
10
Ibid., 6/25/30, “Messages and Gifts Flood the Lindberghs.”
11
HGHL
, AML letter to ELLL, 6/23 and 24/30, p. 138.
12
NYT
, 6/26/30, “Birth Papers Filed for Lindbergh Baby.”
13
Outlook
, 12/3/30, “What’s Wrong With Lindbergh?”
14
HGHL
, AML letter to ERM, 7/30/30, p. 140.
15
John B. Watson, with the assistance of Rosalie Rayner Watson,
Psychological Care of the Infant and Child
, New York: W. W. Norton, 1928.
16
HGHL, AML letter to ERM, 7/30/30, p. 141.
17
Interview with Betty Gow.
18
Anne and Charles were unaware that officials in Mercer and Hunterdon counties competed over the location of the estate. After the Lindberghs bought their property, each county vied for the right to call the Lindberghs their own. Hunterdon County won, even though most of the land was in Mercer.
19
HGHL
, AML letter to ELLL, 9/29/30, p. 144.
20
HGHL
, AML letter to CCM, 11/10/30, p. 147.
21
HGHL
, AML letter to ELLL, 8/20/30, p. 142.
22
Ibid., “Tuesday Morning, March,” p. 155.
23
As a result, Charles and his half-sister Eva Christy donated the home and the land to the state of Minnesota, which designated it a park. The state’s intent was to reconstruct the house as a museum and to use its ninety-three acres of woodlands for public recreation.
24
HGHL
, AML letter to ELLL, 3/5/31, p. 153.
25
HGHL
, AML letter to ECM, 4/19/31, p. 161.
26
Elisabeth Reeve Morrow letters to Constance Chilton, 1925–1934.
27
NYT
, 5/14/31, “Denies Engagement of Elizabeth Morrow.”
28
Partner in Morgan and Grenfell, London affiliate of J. P. Morgan and Company.
29
Elisabeth Reeve Morrow letter to Mary Chilton.
30
HGHL
, AML letter to ELLL, 5/10/31, p. 162.
31
NYT
, 5/30/31.
32
NYT
, 6/20/31, “Into the Setting Sun with the Lindberghs.”
33
AML,
North to the Orient
, New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1935.
34
Eager to elevate the status of the Lindberghs, the press failed to note that the aviators Wiley Post and Harold Gatty flew a record-breaking flight over the Bering Strait in a direction opposite to that of June 1931.
35
AML,
North to the Orient
.
36
Interview with Janet Johnson; interview with Betty Gow.
37
HGHL
, AML letter to ECM, 7/17/31, p. 163.
38
Interview with Betty Gow.
10.39
Elisabeth Reeve Morrow letters to Constance Chilton, 1925–1934.
1
Details pertaining to Morrow’s death are drawn from the Dwight Morrow Papers, Amherst Archives.
2.
Harold Nicolson, op. cit., p. 399.
3
.
NYT
, 10/6/31, “His Last Address a Plea for Charity.”
4
AML,
North to the Orient
.
5
NYT
, 10/6/31, “Dwight W. Morrow Dies.”
6
NYT, 10/7/31, “Funeral of Morrow to be Held Today.”
7
NYT
, 10/8/31, “Morrow Is Buried; Notables at Beir;” Plato,
Selected Dialogues
, Franklin Library, Franklin Center, PA., 1983, pp. 43–103.
8
Dwight Morrow letter to Reuben Clark, U.S. Ambassador to Mexico, 1/30/31, Dwight Morrow Papers, Amherst College Archives.
9
Letters of condolence to Elizabeth Cutter Morrow, Dwight Morrow Papers, Amherst College Archives.
10
Information about Betty Gow’s summer in Maine and her relations with Red Johnson are from the following sources: Interview with Betty Gow; Betty Gow, Statements, 3/3/32 and 3/10/32, NJSPM; Finn Henrick Johnson, Statement, 3/8/32, NJSPM; and Johannes Junge, Statements, 3/9/32 and 4/14/32, NJSPM.
11
HGHL
, AML letter to ELLL, 11/12/31, p. 204.
12
HGHL
, AML letter to CCM, 11/16/31, p. 205.
13
Ibid., pp. 205–206; and interview with Joan Johnson.
14
William Raymond Manchester,
The Glory and the Dream: A Narrative History of America
, 1932–1972, Boston: Little, Brown, 1974.