Monthly Archives: March, 2021

“AE’s Packard” claim dissolves under scrutiny

If ever a story published on this blog needed an update, it’s my March 15 post, Marshall seeking final proof on “Earhart’s Packard.”  I really stepped in this one, and so will now attempt to extricate myself from this muck, not only to debunk yet another false Earhart claim, but also to warn others who might be adversely affected in the future.

I wasn’t initially skeptical about Ross Marshall’s assertion that his 1935 Packard Super 8 Coupe once belonged to Amelia Earhart.  Some readers even could have understood my post as an flat-out, unadulterated promo supporting his boast about his car’s unique status as an Earhart heirloom, or even that Marshall and I are friends, which is absolutely not the case. I’ve agreed to further air Marshall’s story, I wrote in my March 15 post, “in the hope that he can somehow find the final proof the Packard was indeed Amelia’s, and thus increase its value and prestige,” which was Marshall’s stated goal from the jump.  

Actually the car wasn’t my main concern.  Marshall had contacted Marie Castro and expressed interest in helping her with the Earhart Memorial Monument project on Saipan, and my first instinct was to support her and the AEMMI.  “As you can see,” I wrote in conclusion — and here was my extremely stupid misstatement, which certainly could have been taken as an endorsement: “I have a personal interest in Mr. Marshall’s final success in nailing down his Packard as Earhart’s, about which no one should have any doubt to begin with. Should that happen, we have his pledge that he would build the AEMMI monument ‘personally.’ ”  (Italics added.)

Other than his potential contribution to the Saipan Earhart Monument, I didn’t care whether Marshall sold his car at any price.  But more importantly, I’ve never intentionally perpetrated any false claims about Amelia Earhart or anyone else.  Regrettably, I briefly suspended this ethical imperative in my haste to assist Marie Castro and her worthy cause.  This work has never been about money for me; my integrity and reputation are not for sale, and I’ve never knowingly written or uttered a lie in my Earhart work since my introduction to the story in 1988.

I soon experienced the truth of the old adage, “No good deed goes unpunished,” and not for the first time.  Longtime reader, pilot and friend William Trail quickly disabused me of any illusions I had about Marshall’s so-called “AE Packard.” 

“I’ve been chewing away on this and I’m highly skeptical of this whole Packard thing,” Trail wrote in a March 16 email and comment to this blog.  “Something’s just not right.”  Trail continued:

Ross Marshall alleges that the president of the Packard Motor Company (PMC) gifted AE a 1935 Packard Super 8 Coupe in February 1935.  Although not named by Marshall, the president of PMC at the time was James Alvan Macauley.  Macauley was president from 1916 to 1939.  At the time of the alleged gifting, AE and GP were residing in Rye, N.Y. Therefore, upon transfer to AE the vehicle would be registered to her in New York.  I would think that a check of the motor vehicle records for 1935 archived by the Commonwealth of New York Department of Motor Vehicles would be worth doing.

James Alvan Macauley Sr., president of Packard Motor Company from 1916 until 1939, graces the cover of the July 22, 1929 issue of Time magazine.

On 28 July 1935, AE and GP purchased a home and moved to 10042 Valley Spring Lane in North Hollywood, Calif.  If they possessed a 1935 Packard Super 8 Coupe it stands to reason that the vehicle would then be re-registered in California.  A check with the California DMV for archived vehicle registrations is worth looking into as well.

In the back of his book, Legerdemain [Saga Books, 2007], David K. Bowman provides a detailed, almost day-by-day account of AE’s life.  There is nothing for February 1935 about AE being gifted a Packard automobile, or having a photo op with the president of Packard — both fairly significant events if they actually happened.  I don’t see something that newsworthy falling through the cracks and beinglost to history.”  It would be the same if the Ford Motor Company had gifted a 1968 Mustang GT to Steve McQueen, and it wasn’t publicized.  No way!

Then, there is America’s Packard Museum in Dayton, Ohio.  Mr. Robert Signom III is Curator. . . . I would think that if Packard gifted AE a Super 8 Coupe the curator of America’s Packard Museum would surly know about it.  I would also think that Mr. Marshall would have contacted him by now.  The museum was easy enough to find.  It didn’t require Sam Spade or Philip Marlowe.  I did it this morning. 

I wrote to Mr. Signom at Dayton’s American Packard Museum, which is now temporarily closed, and got no reply.  Another museum, the National Packard Museum, referred me to an expert in New York, but the email address they provided rejected my message and he hasn’t replied to the snail mail I sent.   

I joined a Packard information forum on March 17.  My query has received 665 views to date, ostensibly from Packard experts and enthusiasts, and not a shred of evidence has been forthcoming to support either Earhart’s connection to the 1935 Packard or that the two fires described by Marshall ever occurred.  I did learn that Marshall himself is associated with at least one well-known contributor to this Packard Information site, who informed him about my query to the forum.  This may be why I’ve heard nothing of substance from this bunch, as Marshall’s Packard has apparently been accepted on the site as once belonging to Earhart, basically on Marshall’s say-so.  Sometimes no reply is itself an answer.  

Considering the dystopian nightmares the California and New York state governments have become, I don’t want to get involved with their DMVs and don’t believe it’s necessary.  I’m certain I’d find nothing if I ever gained access to reliable records, and the fact that Marshall has not mentioned them as two agencies that would support his story tells us plenty about his credibility, or lack of same.

Original photo, titled “1935 Packard Phaeton with aviator Amelia Earhart, in Brooklyn Day opening ceremonies.”  The caption read, in part, “A 1935 Packard three-quarter right side view, parked on street, crowd in background, at the Brooklyn Day opening ceremony. Inscribed on photo back; 1935 Packard super eight, model 1204, twelfth series, 8-cylinder, 150-horsepower, 139-inch wheelbase, 4-person phaeton. . . . Amelia Earhart participating in the Brooklyn Day opening ceremonies.  (Photo courtesy of the Detroit Public Library, National Automotive History Collection.)

Marshall’s statement that we can confirm . . . AE and The President of Packard were pictured together is Manhattan New York in Feb 1935, announcing the new Packard range of Automobiles for 1935is his only claim that can verified, as the above photo testifies, although the president of Packard is not named in the caption.  Marshall has nothing more than this, an accidental confluence between the Packard company and Amelia Earhart, yet he’s bent on transforming his 1935 Packard into a cash cow and a fat payday through sheer effrontery and chutzpah, more commonly known as BS.

“Marshall’s story is a load of bull,” William Trail wrote in a March 19 email.  “AE’s life has been so meticulously researched, minutely scrutinized, and painstakingly documented, that if James Alvan Macauley, President of Packard Motor Cars had authorized a specially built automobile to be gifted to her there is no question in my mind that we’d know about it.  Packard aficionados would know about it.  It would be well documented.”

Among the experts I’ve contacted in search of their informed opinions is one Arthur Einstein, author of Ask the Man Who Owns One”: An Illustrated History of Packard Advertising (McFarland; 1st edition September 2, 2010).  Most of the Packard historians I’ve contacted have not seen fit to answer my queries, but Trail bought the Kindle edition of Ask the Man on March 21, and spent the afternoon “pouring  through the relevant chapters covering the 1920s up to the 1950s,” he said.  “I also carefully reviewed the Chapter Notes, Bibliography, and Index.  Bottom line:  No mention of Amelia Earhart whatsoever.”

Two catastrophic, record-destroying fires?

My BS alarm was not functioning the day I read Marshall’s first email to me, as it should have loudly screamed upon reading his two incredible whoppers below.  Subsequent research showed that no evidence whatever exists for these two statements Marshall presented to explain the lack of documentation linking Earhart and the Packard:

The sad part about the critical documented history of our Packard was No. 1, The Department of Roads in Dallas had a fire in the early ’50’s which destroyed all the files and records of ownership of The City beyond the early forties.  The late ’40s title we hold shows the last time our car was registered was 1948, the original license plates are still on our car to this day! 

Then, No. 2, we have the history of The Packard Motor Company with a similar problem.  It appears when Packard was amalgamating with Studebaker in the late 60’s the two opposing Sales Directors had such a dislike for each other, the Packard man destroyed by fire, all the build records and buyers of Packard going back more than 50 years of corporate history!

I’m not the only one who’s been fooled by Ross Marshall’s tall tales about his 1935 Packard.  The above is a screen shot of an October 2018 New Zealand News Hub video story,Amelia Earhart’s custom-built final car on show in Auckland.  In the interview, Marshall tells unsuspecting listeners, “Theoretically she got out of that car and into the aircraft, and this really was her last living asset in the world today,” and finished his pitch with, “It brings tears to your eyes.”

As stated above, I find no evidence supporting these alleged fires.  Was Marshall repeating stories told to him by the Dallas judge, who he does not identify, or did he invent these two ridiculous yarns on his own?  I don’t know, and it makes little difference.  These stories are phony as a three-dollar bill, I should have called him out on them, and the more I looked at this, the more embarrassing it became.  Not only that, the Dallas judge segment of Marshall’s story is irrelevant, as William Trail pointed out in a March 19 email:

Marshall’s story about documentation obtained from the Texas judge is inconsistent.  The excuse that there was a fire at that destroyed records in Dallas has no bearing.  It is a misdirection, a dodge.  Official Texas motor vehicle documentation would not establish AE’s ownership of the vehicle.  Archived New York and California DMV records would be the logical place to look.  Marshall hasn’t done that because he knows his claim is false.  Likewise, Marshall’s claim that the Packard records that would prove his claim were deliberately burned is also a misdirection.

Longtime Packard expert Dwight Heinmuller, of Sparks, Md., a Packard historian and co-author of Packard: A History of the Motorcar and Company (Automobile Quarterly, 1978), joined Trail in rejecting Marshall’s claims that fires have destroyed all evidence that his car once belonged to Earhart.  

“The owners claim that Studebaker-Packard was formed in the 1960s and that two employees hated each other and destroyed files, etc.,” Heinmuller wrote in a March 20 email: 

All of that is nonsense.  S-P was formed in October 1954.  There were no clashes between employees at that level that would have resulted in files being destroyed!  Records were NOT destroyed.  Further, only the dealer would have records as to whom cars were sold except for factory delivered cars.  Those records may exist but their whereabouts is unknown.

It appears to me that there is no way to confirm that AE owned this Packard unless some document(s) is produced for verification.  So, anyone that says this was AE’s Packard cannot prove it, so why perpetuate the rumor?  I remember seeing this and thought at the time that these people’s claims are questionable.” 

I’ve contacted more than a handful of authors and other experts in seeking some dispositive statements that might put this issue to rest.  Thus far, only Heinmuller has been civil enough to respond.  Some of these automotive history types are rude elitists who refuse to soil themselves by mixing with a “conspiracy theorist,” while others may consider the answer to the question about Earhart’s alleged ownership so obvious that it requires no confirmation — maybe both apply!  For whatever reasons, that aspect of the basic research hasn’t been easy, but in the end the truth requires no snooty verification.  Neither William Trail nor I have found a single reference that places a 1935 Packard in Amelia Earhart’s name, or any Packard of any year, for that matter.  This itself is definitive. 

Brass date plate from Ross Marshall’s 1935 Packard Super 8 Coupe.  Though photo quality is lacking, it shows the vehicle number is 858 230, and that it was delivered by Packard to Dallas, Texas on Feb. 2, 1935.  How could this have been designated for Amelia Earhart?

On March 19, Trail found more helpful data on the Packard Information site whose forum I discussed above.  Buried among numerous photos of infinite Packard-repair minutiae is the brass date plate from Ross Marshall’s 1935 Packard Super 8 Coupe.  The photo quality isn’t good, but the vehicle number is 858 230, and it was delivered by Packard to Dallas, Texas on Feb. 2, 1935.

“If this automobile was built especially for AE, why would Packard ship it to Dallas?” Trail asked.  “Why wouldn’t the data plate indicate that this vehicle was built especially for AE as Marshall claims it was?”

Unmentioned until now, but far from the least of countless discrepancies is Marshall’s claim that “Our Packard has her AE’ initials still permanently displayed today,” yet he’s offered no photo to support that contention.  Moreover, even if the “AE” were somewhere on the car, anyone could have put it there, least of all Earhart herself, who was not the type to do such a thing.  An entirely accurate description of this entire tawdry matter isn’t appropriate for a family blog like this, but Marshall’s contentions add up to a huge, steaming pile of you know what.

Finally, as a condition of my writing and publishing Marshall’s story, and not contingent on selling his car or results of any kind, he pledged to make a donation to the AEMMI when the March 15 story went up on this blog.  In a March 18 email to Marie Castro, Marshall told her that it is impossible to do business overseas these days when you are attempting to do a cash transfer.”  He then promised to send her a check “via registered mail in a few days.”  Marie, ever hopeful, is still waiting. *

Clearly, Marshall thinks that Marie and I are morons, and he was right about me, at least briefly.  Whether he is a con man or simply a naive victim himself — can we even consider the latter a possibility? — is irrelevant in the end.  He’s abused Marie Castro’s goodwill and mine as well — not to mention our readers’ time and attention.  As I told Marie as this sordid incident was playing itself out, “This Ross Marshall is some piece of work.

* On May 12 Marie informed me that she had received a generous check from Marshall, a pleasant surprise for this writer.   “I believe in “Being patient, good things take time,” Marie wrote in an email.

Marshall seeking final proof on “Earhart’s Packard”

Australian Ross Marshall is the proud owner of a very special antique car, a 1935 Packard Super 8 Coupe that he’s convinced was made and gifted to Amelia Earhart.  His problem is that, technically, he can’t actually prove it, although I wonder who besides Marshall actually cares about the provenance of the car.

Nevertheless, I’ve agreed to further air Marshall’s story, in the hope that he can somehow find the final proof the Packard was indeed Amelia’s, and thus increase its value and prestige. 

“I think I mentioned in my email that I happen to own a very special and beautiful Packard Automobile which we believe was specially built and ultimately gifted to AE in Feb. 1935 by the President of Packard Motor Company,” Marshall wrote in a March 11 email to Saipan’s Marie Castro. I acquired my car from a retired Supreme Court Judge in Dallas Texas, who swore black ‘n blue our Packard belonged to AE from Feb. ’35 till she disappeared, at which time her husband G.P. [Putnam] kept the car for one year hoping she would return!”  Marshall continues, below:

This photo appeared in New Zealand’s Otago Daily Times on March 28, 2018, with the caption, “Gold Coast couple Ross and Robyn Marshall with their 1935 Packard.  Photo: Hokitika Guardian.

The sad part about the critical documented history of our Packard was No. 1, The Department of Roads in Dallas had a fire in the early ’50’s which destroyed all the files and records of ownership of The City beyond the early forties.  The late ’40s title we hold shows the last time our car was registered was 1948, the original license plates are still on our car to this day! 

Then, No. 2, we have the history of The Packard Motor Company with a similar problem.  It appears when Packard was amalgamating with Studebaker in the late 60’s the two opposing Sales Directors had such a dislike for each other, the Packard man destroyed by fire, all the build records and buyers of Packard going back more than 50 years of corporate history!

So what do we have which confirms the history and ownership of Amelia with our Packard? 

All we know is AE always owned and drove exotic automobiles with unique body styles, and pretty colors. apparently her favorite color is blue!  We also know she was an outstanding attraction to Corporate America, a sponsor’s dream, who wanted her association with their product.  Packard Motor Co. at that time was the largest car manufacturer in the USA, their association with AE was paramount!  What we can confirm is that AE and The President of Packard were pictured together is Manhattan New York in Feb 1935, announcing the new Packard range of Automobiles for 1935, the very same week as Packard delivered the blue Packard Coupe through their Dallas Packard dealer?  Is this a coincidence?

This photo appeared in New Zealand’s Otago Daily Times on Oct. 29, 2017 in a story headlined, 1935 Packard Built for Amelia Earhart on Display”  The caption read, “Custom made for Amelia Earhart.  Displayed [sic] at Warbirds Air Show in Nov 2017 in New Zealand.  Still bears her initials “AE.’ ”

Our Packard has her “AE” initial ‘s still permanently displayed today [no photo available].

So, how does  all this fit with you and Saipan, you may well ask? Somewhere out there is a picture or a story relating to Amelia and or her husband which associated them with our blue Packard Coupe!  If we can confidently establish the history, it will enhance the value of our car significantly indeed.  We know as fact various people want to see her Packard back in The USA and on display somewhere where it should be seen.  There is to this date, no sign of her plane so her only tangible asset indeed is her Packard.

If we could find evidence confirming her ownership, the value of our Packard would increase considerably and we would be delighted in contributing to your very worthy AEMMI funding, without question!  Somewhere, in files, in pictures, there is a reference to the association we are looking for, maybe somewhere in the books you have most generously donated might be a start?

I have had many significant enquirers to pass the ownership and ship the Packard back to the USA so she can be enjoyed by all.  I am now well into my eighties and would love to see her car back in the USA where it belongs.

I would love to see your monument completed, I compliment you on your forthright vision and sincerely hope we can see completion in our lifetime together!  If we can achieve the result our Amelia Packard deserves, we will see your monument completed!

I look forward to further communication with you Ms. Marie, hopefully we can meet in person sometime in the future, no doubt very aware of the travel restrictions we sadly endue with the awful Corona Virus the world is currently enduring.

Rear view of the 1935 American Packard Coupe, from the story in Australia’s Otago Daily Times of Oct. 29, 2017,

In a March 12 email to me, Marshall expanded on the history of his car:

Back in 2018 we were invited to ship our Packard Coupe to New Zealand for a World Packard Car Club Rally along with some 20 very special Packards from the USA.  We ultimately enjoyed a full year with the Packard, touring both the North and South Islands, all the time enjoying incredible notoriety because of the AE association.

. . . We have enjoyed restoring the AE Packard to its former glory, over the past 14 years, we have won numerous trophies, she is an absolute delight to drive, a real honor to own, but she should be where her real home is, back in the USA in an appropriate location for all to enjoy.

Maybe with your help this might happen.  If it does, Marie would not need to find any other donors to achieve her dream. I would commit to building the AEMMI monument personally, sooner rather than later too!

Ross Marshall,
Stargate Park,
Tallebudgera,
Australia

As you can see, I have a personal interest in Mr. Marshall’s final success in nailing down his Packard as Earhart’s, about which no one should have any doubt to begin with.  Should that happen, we have his pledge that he would build the AEMMI monument “personally.”  This would be an answer to all our prayers, to say the least.

Of course we’d like everyone to contribute to the Amelia Earhart Memorial Monument on Saipan (see March 16, 2018 story), and all donations are most appreciated.  Please make your tax-deductible check payable to: Amelia Earhart Memorial Monument, Inc., and send to AEMMI, c/o Marie S. Castro, P.O. Box 500213, Saipan MP 96950.  The monument’s success is 100 percent dependent on private donations, and everyone who gives will receive a letter of appreciation from the Earhart Memorial Committee.

“A Mysterious [Earhart] Encounter in 1945 Japan”

This story appeared in the November 1994 edition of the Amelia Earhart Society Newsletters, and is another unique example of the strange and weird lore that has attached itself to the Earhart saga over the decades.  I will leave the rest to you, dear reader, to sort out and classify for yourself, and will forego any further introductions.  (Boldface emphasis mine unless stated; capitals and underline emphasis in original.) 

 “A Mysterious Encounter in 1945 Japan”
Excerpts taken from a tape narrated by Ralph S. Martine, on Sept. 14, 1993

At the end of WWII, our Naval unit moved from Okinawa (we had been there for the battle and all that good stuff’) to Sasebo, a naval base built in an excellent harbor in the southern part of Japan.  There we were kept aboard ship about two weeks because our commander wasn’t sure how the Japanese people would treat us.  The SEABEES and a small detachment of marines went ashore to start cleaning up the city. 

U.S. Intelligence overview of Sasebo Harbor area, April 1945.

Sasebo was originally about the size of Huntington Park in LA with 3 and 4 story buildings, but twelve of our super fortresses had leveled the entire city.  When we were allowed liberty, I wanted to see the countryside, shops, stores, even though there wasn’t anything to buy.  I wanted to see what Japan was like.  On the outskirts of Sasebo, three other sailors and I were walking up the hill into a side street of a residential district when we met 9 or 10 British sailors coming down.  They were having a great time busting in the doors and walls of the Japanese tissue-paper houses they were passing.  We jumped them, and they ran off, which was a wonder as there were only 4 of us.

When the fight was over, we were standing there and the Japanese started coming out of all these houses — seemed like a thousand, but there must have been only about 50 of them.  Men and women, were all pulling at us to see who could get us to go to their house because we had saved their property from being damaged.  We were right in front of a [Japanese] Navy Captain’s house, and because I was the tallest and biggest of our four, he won me [sic].  I went into his house, which hung out over the edge of the hill on poles like they do in California.  The city of Sasebo started right at the edge of a creek below his house. 

We sat on the porch, and he introduced me to his 8 years old daughter, and his wife.  They were both literally scared of me because they believed the propaganda that the Japanese had put out that we were monsters, and my size didn’t help that monster image.  But the Captain knew what kind of people we were because he had graduated from U.S.C. in L.A. in 1934, at or near the head of his class.  He was a naval ordinance officer, and a very nice person to talk to as he knew English better than I do.  After he graduated he went back to Japan, took his commission as a Japanese naval officer, and got married in the mid-1930s.

Sitting on his porch we could see the whole city — what was left of it — just rubble, nothing standing.  I visited him several times, bringing him toilet articles I bought in our ship’s store, and giving his wife Palmolive soap, which was the best the Navy, had.  He shared his whisky with me — sugar beet whisky, which was pretty good.  The third time I went over with more things for him, he told me he was from the base directly across the harbor from his house, which was located on the southeast side of Sasebo.  We could look westward across the water and see the naval base clearly.

In normal conversation, nothing leading up to it, he said that in one of those buildings on the base there were parts of Amelia Earhart’s plane!  (Boldface in original) He tried to tell me which building but I really didn’t understand.  This came out of the clear blue.  We had been talking about the war and the 12 super fortresses which leveled the city.  He showed me which way they flew in across the city, banked around, and went back to Guam.  They knew exactly where we were flying to and from.  In this same conversation, he also indicated that Amelia Earhart and her “mechanic” were still alive at that time and were living in a house outside of Sasebo, just up the road from the naval base.  (Boldface in original.)

We had been given orders aboard our ship that if you came in contact with any prisoners or dead bodies, you were to go immediately to Army intelligence.  I was in the Navy, but MacArthur was running the whole show, and he insisted that all intelligence go through the Army.  I told this Japanese naval officer that we were moving to the sea plane base at Yokohama, and that I wouldn’t see him again.  He bade me goodbye, and I didn’t question any more that he had said because of all the instructions we had been given by MacArthur.

This photo appeared in the July 16, 2009 issue of Stars and Stripes, in a story titled “Retired sailor’s visit to Sasebo a history lesson,” by Travis J. Tritten.  The caption reads: “Aug. 29, 1945 USS LST 1077 makes landfall at Sakibe in Sasebo in August 1945.  The peak of Mt. Akasaki rises from the haze along the horizon.”  (Photo courtesy Howard Benedict.)

We arrived in Yokohama just before Thanksgiving.  As soon as I got to Tokyo I looked for Army Intelligence which was right on the main drag, in the center of town, in a four-story building.  You could see from one side of Tokyo clear across to the other side (about 10 miles). Only a few buildings were left: most were just pieces of ruins.  The building that housed Army Intelligence was one of the few that was still intact.  I went inside and talked with the sergeant behind the desk. 

From the stripes on his arm, I could tell he had been in the service for about 12 years.  I told him my information about Amelia Earhart, and he looked at me very puzzled, with a dumb look on his face.  He asked me who this Amelia Earhart was?  I told him she was a woman aviation pilot trying to break the record flying around the world and she was lost in the Pacific, and that there was a lot of speculation that the Japanese had shot her down.  He sent me to another officer because he didn’t know what I was talking about.  I went to 5 or 6 different officers in Army Intelligence, and NOT ONE OF THESE MEN EVER HEARD OF AMELIA EARHART!

These men were all Caucasians, Army, looked like Americans, and everything else looked proper to me.  But not one of them knew who AE was!  I couldn’t believe it.  You could not have lived in the continental part of the United States without knowing who AE was, and to be older than me at the time you couldn’t have done it.  The Army Sergeant couldn’t have had 12 years in the service at that time without knowing who she was.  I was on some jungle islands in tile Pacific, and the natives knew who she was.  They didn’t have newspaper, radios, or any communications, but they still knew who AE was!  And these men in Army Intelligence did not know, or they played dumb (which is normal for any intelligence agency), and I don’t believe they looked into the matter whatsoever.  They just dropped it because it was 600 miles away to the south of Tokyo.

I read about the AE Society in Colorado, in “Omni” magazine.  As much as I’d love to meet with you all, it looks like I won’t be able to make it to the convention in California.  However, I decided to tell my story to you this way, and I would be glad to talk with any of you on the phone, or if you are in my area of Oregon.  God Bless and take care.

(Ralph Martine resides at 18625 East Burnside, Lot 6, Portland, Oregon, 97233; phone: 503-492-xxxx.)

Ralph S. Martine passed away in January 2012 in Portland, Ore., at age 84.  I’ve seen nothing else relative this story, which ranks among the strangest Earhart yarns I’ve ever read.

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