Charles and Anne Morrow Lindbergh

Anne Spencer Morrow and Charles Augustus Lindbergh were married on May 27th, 1929 at her parents' home in Englewood with only a few close friends and relatives in attendance. A local seamstress made Anne's wedding gown and Brussels cap and she carried a bouquet of flowers her sister,
 Elisabeth had picked from the garden. After sneaking away so reporters wouldn't learn of the marriage, they boarded a cabin cruiser in Long Island sound and headed north towards Maine.

During the first five months of their marriage the Lindberghs traveled constantly, never staying in one place for more than a few days, living out of suitcases. Anne wanted to find a home, but worried about the publicity that would surround the move. She told her mother she had no patience with people who stared at them, who followed their every move. It made her feel like a monkey in a cage. "There are so few people in the world who treat us naturally."

When she learned she was going to have a baby the desire for a home became paramount. New Years 1930 found her feeling well enough to travel with Charles to Los Angeles to pick up a brand new Lockheed Sirius and in it attempt the west to east transcontinental record.

In California they met Amelia Earhart, the first woman to fly the Atlantic. She impressed Anne very much. Earhart thought Lindbergh was peculiar, and witnessed one of his annoying practical jokes. One evening while visiting a friend, he stood behind his wife and let drops of water fall on her blue, silk dress. Amelia thought Anne was going to cry, but instead she emptied her glass of buttermilk on Charles' blue suit. At first he was amazed, then he threw up his head and shouted with laughter.

Related information
  • L. Gardner, The case that never dies: The Lindbergh kidnapping