Charles Lindbergh

Charles Augustus Lindbergh (1902-1974) was an American celebrity best known as the first man to complete a nonstop transatlantic solo flight. In May of 1927, he flew from New York City to Paris, France.

His celebrated flight, which coincided with the advent of mass media in the United States, made him, along with Babe Ruth, one of America's first modern celebrities. Fame would carry a heavy price for Lindbergh, however, when, in 1930, his infant son, Charles Jr, was kidnapped, to the outrage and sorrow of the entire nation. Despite extensive nationwide searches, the boy was eventually found to have been murdered.

Later in 1930, Lindbergh further extended his heroism by inventing a pump which revolutionized heart surgery. But his star soon began to tarnish. In the 1930s he travelled to Germany to familiarize himself with the Luftwaffe, initially at the behest of the US War Department; but while in Germany he became chummy with many Nazis, even accepting a German civilian award from Adolf Hitler.

When World War II began, Lindbergh advocated American neutrality, accusing British and Jewish groups of lobbying Franklin D. Roosevelt (whom this son of a Republican Congressman opposed) with interests other than those of the US at heart. He became prominent in the anti-intervention group America First, using his celebrity to assemble huge crowds at anti-war rallies.

Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Lindbergh ceased his anti-war activities and attempted to return to the USAAC. The War Department refused to recommission him on the direct orders of the President. Lindbergh served as a consultant to the Army throughout the war, and, from 1944 on, flew combat missions against the Japanese as a civilian. His suggestions greatly improved the performance of the storied P-38 fighter.

After the war, Lindbergh served as a special consultant to the United States Air Force and Pan-American Airways. In 1954 President Dwight Eisenhower restored Lindbergh to the Air Force as a Brigadier General. From the 1960s on, he advocated for environmental conservation causes. He died in Hawaii in 1974.

Charles Lindbergh in "Someone is Stealing the Great Throne Rooms of the Galaxy"
When Rufus Q Shupilluliumash landed outside Paris, he compared himself to Charles Lindbergh, only furrier.