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Gould 0738
 
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Default It's easier to be in trouble with an airplane than a boat...

We all joke about the guys down at the marina who toast both wives and
sweethearts, (and may they never meet!), and who have a steady stream of
different "interior design consultants" going aboard at odd hours.

Look at the mess you can get into with an airplane! Good thing Anne Morrow
wasn't an aviator as well, he'd a been busted for sure.

(Lindbergh was an outspoken German sympathizer prior to WWII. Looks like he
found a German who was sympathetic in return later on).

Goes to show we all put our pants on one leg at a time.



DNA Proves Lindbergh Had Secret German Family
By Erik Kirschbaum, Reuters



AP file
Lindbergh's German children say they have no interest in his estate.

BERLIN (Nov. 28) - Genetic tests have proven claims by three Germans that the
American aviator Charles Lindbergh was their father and led a secret double
life for almost two decades, a family adviser said Friday.

Anton Schwenk, media consultant to the Germans, said DNA tests conducted by the
University of Munich in October proved with 99.9 percent certainty that Dyrk
and David Hesshaimer and their sister Astrid Bouteuil were Lindbergh's
children.

"It's a delightful moment for them because they now have a feeling of
belonging," Schwenk told Reuters. "They knew all along he was their father
because they spent time with him growing up. But it's good to have an iron-clad
confirmation."

Lindbergh, who also had six children with his U.S. wife Anne Morrow Lindbergh,
became famous for his daring 1927 solo flight across the Atlantic from New York
to Paris in 33 hours.

Lindbergh started a romance with Munich hat-maker Brigitte Hesshaimer in 1957
when he was 55 and she was 32. They had three children: Dyrk, now 45, Astrid,
43, and David, 36.

A restless world traveler, Lindbergh spent five to 14 days with his family in
Munich up to three times a year until he died in 1974. Lindbergh and Hesshaimer
kept the relationship a secret and the children knew the tall visitor only as
"Mr Careu Kent."

The Germans said they did not discover the true identity of the mystery visitor
until later. They described him as a loving man who devoted much time and
energy to them, setting up trust funds and helping to buy a family house.

FROSTY SILENCE AT FIRST

The Germans first revealed the secret in August, two years after their mother
died and despite promising her to keep quiet. They said they only wanted to set
the record straight and had no interest in Lindbergh's estate or tarnishing his
legacy.

Their claim was initially met by frosty silence from the Lindbergh family. But
Morgan Lindbergh, the aviator's grandson, came forward to say he believed the
Germans were his relatives because they looked "hauntingly familiar" in photos.

He said he was willing to take a DNA test and had a warm meeting with the three
Germans in Europe. But other family members were hesitant, wary of past hoaxes.

Schwenk said there had been "amiable meetings as well as regular contacts with
letters and calls" between his clients and the Lindberghs.

"There are also meetings planned for next year in the United States," he added.

"They never had any doubt they were Lindbergh's children," he said. "I'd say
it's not a happy end to the story but a happy beginning."

Bouteuil said she only discovered the true identity of her father in the early
1980s after she found dozens of letters from Lindbergh and an article about him
and confronted her mother.

Despite his huge popularity in 1927, Lindbergh's reputation later suffered
because of his pre-war sympathy for Nazi Germany and getting an award from
Luftwaffe leader Hermann Goering. He was later rehabilitated and remained a
celebrity until he died.

According to his biographer, A. Scott Berg, Lindbergh's marriage was in trouble
in the late 1950s when the affair began.

Schwenk said a book and a television documentary were being planned about
Lindbergh's double life and his Munich love story.


11/28/03 10:53 ET


  #2   Report Post  
Greg
 
Posts: n/a
Default It's easier to be in trouble with an airplane than a boat...

So all that "solo flight" stuff was just an excuse to leave his wife home?
  #3   Report Post  
Harry Krause
 
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Default It's easier to be in trouble with an airplane than a boat...

Greg wrote:

So all that "solo flight" stuff was just an excuse to leave his wife home?


Wonder if his honey was Eva Braun?

Imagine sharing a mistress with the progenitor of our current US
attorney general's beliefs.



--
Email sent to is never read.
  #4   Report Post  
Steve
 
Posts: n/a
Default It's easier to be in trouble with an airplane than a boat...

To bad, he didn't realize what a good thing he had and was cheating on..
Anne Morrow, was one of the finest ladies of the era IMHO.

Steve
s/v Good Intentions


  #5   Report Post  
erich
 
Posts: n/a
Default It's easier to be in trouble with an airplane than a boat...

Looks like Lucky Lindy got lucky - at least 3 times.
(Gould 0738) wrote in message ...
We all joke about the guys down at the marina who toast both wives and
sweethearts, (and may they never meet!), and who have a steady stream of
different "interior design consultants" going aboard at odd hours.

Look at the mess you can get into with an airplane! Good thing Anne Morrow
wasn't an aviator as well, he'd a been busted for sure.

(Lindbergh was an outspoken German sympathizer prior to WWII. Looks like he
found a German who was sympathetic in return later on).

Goes to show we all put our pants on one leg at a time.



DNA Proves Lindbergh Had Secret German Family
By Erik Kirschbaum, Reuters



AP file
Lindbergh's German children say they have no interest in his estate.

BERLIN (Nov. 28) - Genetic tests have proven claims by three Germans that the
American aviator Charles Lindbergh was their father and led a secret double
life for almost two decades, a family adviser said Friday.

Anton Schwenk, media consultant to the Germans, said DNA tests conducted by the
University of Munich in October proved with 99.9 percent certainty that Dyrk
and David Hesshaimer and their sister Astrid Bouteuil were Lindbergh's
children.

"It's a delightful moment for them because they now have a feeling of
belonging," Schwenk told Reuters. "They knew all along he was their father
because they spent time with him growing up. But it's good to have an iron-clad
confirmation."

Lindbergh, who also had six children with his U.S. wife Anne Morrow Lindbergh,
became famous for his daring 1927 solo flight across the Atlantic from New York
to Paris in 33 hours.

Lindbergh started a romance with Munich hat-maker Brigitte Hesshaimer in 1957
when he was 55 and she was 32. They had three children: Dyrk, now 45, Astrid,
43, and David, 36.

A restless world traveler, Lindbergh spent five to 14 days with his family in
Munich up to three times a year until he died in 1974. Lindbergh and Hesshaimer
kept the relationship a secret and the children knew the tall visitor only as
"Mr Careu Kent."

The Germans said they did not discover the true identity of the mystery visitor
until later. They described him as a loving man who devoted much time and
energy to them, setting up trust funds and helping to buy a family house.

FROSTY SILENCE AT FIRST

The Germans first revealed the secret in August, two years after their mother
died and despite promising her to keep quiet. They said they only wanted to set
the record straight and had no interest in Lindbergh's estate or tarnishing his
legacy.

Their claim was initially met by frosty silence from the Lindbergh family. But
Morgan Lindbergh, the aviator's grandson, came forward to say he believed the
Germans were his relatives because they looked "hauntingly familiar" in photos.

He said he was willing to take a DNA test and had a warm meeting with the three
Germans in Europe. But other family members were hesitant, wary of past hoaxes.

Schwenk said there had been "amiable meetings as well as regular contacts with
letters and calls" between his clients and the Lindberghs.

"There are also meetings planned for next year in the United States," he added.

"They never had any doubt they were Lindbergh's children," he said. "I'd say
it's not a happy end to the story but a happy beginning."

Bouteuil said she only discovered the true identity of her father in the early
1980s after she found dozens of letters from Lindbergh and an article about him
and confronted her mother.

Despite his huge popularity in 1927, Lindbergh's reputation later suffered
because of his pre-war sympathy for Nazi Germany and getting an award from
Luftwaffe leader Hermann Goering. He was later rehabilitated and remained a
celebrity until he died.

According to his biographer, A. Scott Berg, Lindbergh's marriage was in trouble
in the late 1950s when the affair began.

Schwenk said a book and a television documentary were being planned about
Lindbergh's double life and his Munich love story.


11/28/03 10:53 ET



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