Amelia Earhart and her navigator disappeared in 1937 as they were attempting an around-the-world flight. In this age of government disinformation and misinformation, this decades-old mystery intrigues me. Thomas Devine never got his book “Take Me Home” published before he died, but Mike Campbell has made it available online, chapter by chapter. It clashes with the official “lost at sea” explanation as well as the recent book, titled “The Last Flight,” which does not mention Thomas Devine’s investigations at all. New subscribers to these Substacks can get more information from: “Amelia Earhart: The Truth at Last” by Mike Campbell. 2021, Sunbury Press. Just this year, the state of Kansas erected a statue of Earhart in the Washington, D.C. Statuary Hall.
For those of you who want to follow these accounts, track down recent news online about the declassification of the Earhart files. Why did it take so long? The Internet also contains news about the alleged location of Earhart's Lockheed Electra, underwater. It also contains the account of her and her pilot dying of starvation on the remote Nikomorokp Island. The alleged eyewitness on Saipan died recently at the age of 92. It