This
story was updated at 11:27 a.m. EDT.
As a new
major motion picture about famed female pilot Amelia Earhart prepares to launch
onto movie theater screens this weekend, a scarf she wore is being readied for
its own liftoff, flying on the space shuttle with the astronaut grandson of her
personal photographer.
Randy
Bresnik, whose grandfather Albert was recruited by Earhart in 1932 to be her
only authorized photographer, is set to take the scarf on
shuttle Atlantis when it departs with supplies and spare parts for the
International Space Station (ISS) in November.
"We
are flying Amelia Earhart's favorite scarf that she unfortunately did not take
with her on her final mission," revealed the STS-129 astronaut during an
interview with collectSPACE.com.
"Fortunately, she also decided not to take her photographer with her
otherwise I might not be here today."
As the film
"Amelia" starring Hilary Swank in the title role recounts, Earhart,
who made the first
transatlantic solo flight by a woman in 1933, and her navigator Fred Noonan
disappeared while flying over the Pacific Ocean during an attempt in 1937 to
become the first female to fly around the world.
Scarves
in space
Earhart's
scarf accompanying Bresnik on STS-129 is on loan from the Museum of Women
Pilots in Oklahoma City, which displays the history of the Ninety-Nines, the
international organization of female aviators founded in 1929 by 99 women
pilots led by Earhart as president.
"It
has the Ninety-Nines' symbol, the intertwined nines in the center of it,"
described Carolyn Smith, chairman of the Ninety-Nines' Board of Trustees for
the museum, of the red and white scarf.
"We
know that she wore the scarf," continued Smith. "We don't have any
pictures of her wearing that exact scarf but it was given to us either by her
mother or her sister when they gave us a number of other items of Amelia's. So
we know that it was her scarf and she wore it, but we do not know exactly
when."
The
Ninety-Nines have at least one other of Earhart's worn scarves and it too has
been carried into space. The first American woman to pilot and command the
space shuttle, Eileen Collins, flew that scarf on her first mission in 1995.
Yet another
scarf -- a brown, gold, and orange silk square belonging to Purdue University
-- flew on the 1990 mission to deploy the Hubble Space Telescope. And a watch
that Earhart wore is slated to launch to the space station with astronaut
Shannon Walker in the spring of 2010.
Completing
the journey
So for the
Ninety-Nines, it is less this time that the scarf is flying to orbit than it is
who is taking it there.
"It is
interesting and maybe a little bit completing a story," explained Smith.
"Why
we're really interested in Randy taking the scarf up into space is because of
his unique relationship to Amelia through his grandfather," said Smith.
"It's very unique that his grandfather took all of these pictures and that
we have these pictures, and that the grandson of that photographer is actually
an astronaut who is going to be taking it up into space. That's where the real
unique connection is, Randy taking it up into space."
That
connection will be doubly represented on Atlantis, as Bresnik is also flying
one of his grandfather's photographs for the Earhart Birthplace Museum in
Atchison, Kansas, which is also operated by the Ninety-Nines.
According
to Smith, once Bresnik returns the scarf, it will be part of a new display at
the Museum of Women Pilots dedicated to his grandfather's photographs.
For his
part, Bresnik is also planning to capture a special photo of his own.
"The
other thing he told us is that he has the coordinates for Howland Island,"
shared Smith, referencing the island that Earhart was trying to find and land
at when she disappeared. "He is going to try to take a picture of [the
island] as they overfly it in the space shuttle."
"He
said, 'If nothing else, some part of Amelia will have finished her
around-the-world trip.' I thought that kind of neat," said Smith.
"Wherever
she is, wherever she ended up on that final flight, we'll be within 200 miles
of it," said Bresnik. "Her scarf will be that much closer to her
during this flight. That will be pretty neat."
Click here to view Amelia
Earhart's scarves and wristwatch that have flown or will fly in space.
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