Hosted on MSN1mon
An interview with a cold-blooded killer with a tie to Lindbergh baby’s death inspired Long Island author’s debut novel, ‘The Ruins’The murderer was referring to Richard Hauptmann, the German-born man executed for the kidnapping and murder of Lindbergh’s infant son, Charles Jr. in New Jersey in 1932.
American aviation and military officer Charles Lindbergh made history on May 20, 1927, when he departed for his first solo flight as a pilot across the Atlantic. Less than five years later, on ...
Lindbergh's seventh novel is entrancing, a believable fantasy like The People in Pineapple Place and her other witty tales. Dawn and her brother Marcus are visiting their sour great-uncle Elroy ...
When Charles Lindbergh returned to the United States after making his historic solo flight from New York to Paris, he was both a hero and the biggest celebrity in the world. In the weeks and ...
In 1932, after the toddler son of pioneering aviator Charles Lindbergh was snatched from his crib at his parents’ Hopewell, New Jersey, home, the media coverage of the crime quickly became nothing ...
On May 20, 1927, Charles A. Lindbergh left Long Island's Roosevelt Field in a single-engine plane built by Ryan Airlines. The plane, named the Spirit of St. Louis, would not touch ground again ...
Tabloids called the headline-making kidnapping and murder of Charles Lindbergh, Jr. in March 1932 “the crime of the century.” The victim was the first-born son of the nation’s most revered ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results