Controlled names derived from the AMNH Library catalog.
For use with uncontrolled names found in AMNH documentation.
AMNH: Section 10, Floor 1.
Summary
The Lindbergh Plane at the American Museum of Natural History featured Tingmissartoq, the Wright-powered Lockheed Sirius seaplane flown by Charles and Anne Lindbergh as well as equipment, items, and maps used on their journeys. While intended as a temporary exhibition, the seaplane remained on view in the Hall of Ocean Life for over twenty years. The plane was donated to the Museum by Charles and Anne Lindbergh and was 27-feet long with a 750 horsepower, 9-cylinder, Wright cyclone engine. It was suspended from the ceiling in a manner to give the illusion of flight. The installation of the plane in the Hall of Ocean Life was supervised by Charles Lindbergh and Museum Director George H. Sherwood; suspension of the plane from the ceiling was conducted by Jake Schrope (5), and the installation of the 400 items in display cases was supervised by Harold E. Anthony and Roy Chapman Andrews (1, p. 1-2). The exhibition of the Lindbergh Plane overlapped with the installation of William Beebe's Bathysphere (2, 1934, p. 9). In 1937 about half of the accessory material was removed from the exhibition and placed in storage, and the plane's position was adjusted so that it no longer blocked the Hall of Ocean Life's Coral Reef Group (2, 1937 p. 40). The Museum had planned to install the plane in a planned Geographic Hall (3), however, it remained in the Hall of Ocean Life until 1955 when it was transferred to the Air Force Museum in Dayton, OH, followed by a move to the Smithsonian Institution's Air and Space Museum in 1959, where it remains as of 2018 (4).
The display cases featured (1, p. 1-4):
*"Emergency Equipment for Land Travel"
*Equipment for forced landings on land or water
*Flying equipment and clothing for Arctic expedition
*Maps and navigational equipment
*An outboard motor
*Water-proof, shock-proof emergency radio set
*A rubber boat and sled
*Fishing gear
*First aid equipment and protective gear
This is a condensed summary of the exhibition. For additional information, see Sources and/or Related Resources.
Lindbergh Plane was exhibited in hall 1934 January 15 - 1955, then called the Hall of Ocean Life (1, 1934)
Supervised installation of nearly 400 objects in exhibit with Harold E. Anthony (5)
Supervised installation of nearly 400 objects in exhibit with Roy Chapman Andrews (5)
Donated plane and equipment (1, 1934)
Donated plane and equipment (1, 1934)
Plane transferred to Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum in 1959 and current home as of 2018 (4)
In charge of suspension of plane from ceiling (5)
Directed assembly of ship for exhibit (3)
Images of exhibition on view in Hall of Ocean Life
Repository: AMNH Special Collections. [Black and white photo prints of exhibition in preparation and on view]
Repository: AMNH Special Collections. [News articles, print-out from Smithsonian website]