Excerpts from Scott Berg's Lindbergh
Lindbergh's family history:
"For all his fascination with detail,
Lindbergh never examined his family history closely enough
to see that it included financial malfeasance,
flight from justice, bigamy, illegitimacy,
melancholia, manic-depression, alcoholism, grievous
generational conflicts, and wanton abandonment of families.
But these undercurrents were always there. And so
this third-generation Lindbergh was born with a
deeply private nature and bred according to the
principles of self-reliance -- nonconformity and the
innate understanding that greatness came at the
inevitable price of being misunderstood."
In 1925, Lindbergh graduates first in his class
from Army flying school:
"That night the new lieutenants enjoyed a
farewell dinner in San Antonio, assembling for the
last time. 'The gang' decided to remain in contact
by circulating a round-robin letter, to which
Lindbergh would contribute over the years. Except for
rare chance encounters over his lifetime of
travels, however, he would only see one or two Army
classmates ever again. Lindbergh was already leading
a compartmentalized existence, always packing
light, carrying few people from one episode of his life
to the next."
Following his New York-to-Paris flight,
Lindbergh embarks on a three-month tour in the
Spirit of St. Louis to promote aviation. After landing his plane in
a Utah desert to spend the night, he has an epiphany:
"He realized he had been sentenced to a life as
a public figure on a scale to which no man before him had ever been subjected. Feeling
overexposed, overextended, and overexalted, he wished to
'combine two seemingly contradictory objectives, to
be part of the civilization of my time but not to
be bound by its conventional superfluity.'"
Lindbergh and Dr. Alexis Carrel, his Nobel
Prize-winning colleague at the Rockefeller Institute,
discuss eugenics:
"Lindbergh spent every available minute with
his mentor; and for months his mind was Carrel's
to mold. Sitting in the doctor's high-walled garden
or by the fireplace late into the night, the two
men discussed improving qualities within the human species and the population at large, through
diet and reproduction. 'Eugenics,' Carrel wrote in
Man, the Unknown, 'is indispensable for the
perpetuation of the strong. A great race must propagate its
best elements.' He and Lindbergh carried on such
discussions over the course of the summer, delving into
the subject of 'race betterment.' Unfortunately, similar discussions were raging throughout
the Third Reich, a coincidence that would not be
lost on future detractors of either Carrel or Lindbergh."
Lindbergh admires Nazi Germany:
"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
of 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."
The effect of his efforts on behalf of America First
on Lindbergh's reputation:
"Other debates in American history would
later be recalled with at least an appreciation for
the high-mindedness of their ideas; and other
members of America First would bear no stigma for
having been allied with that particular cause. But
America First swiftly entered the annals of public
discourse tainted; and Charles Lindbergh would
thenceforth be contaminated, considered by many
wrong-headed at best traitorous at worst."
Lindbergh by A. Scott Berg
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