Read Anne Morrow Lindbergh: Her Life Online
Authors: Susan Hertog
The house and gardens of the Morrow estate, called Next Day Hill (to-Morrow), Englewood, New Jersey, circa 1929. Today it houses the Elisabeth Morrow School
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(UPI / Corbis-Bettmann)Elizabeth and Dwight Morrow stand at the front door of their sprawling new home in Englewood, set into the hills of the Palisades, custom built by European craftsmen on fifty-two acres of meadows and woodlands, circa 1929. (Amherst College Archives and Special Collections, Amherst College Library)
Anne and Charles with Gloria Swanson at an official reception during their 1929 flight to California for TAT, introducing coast-to-coast service in forty-eight hours by train and plane. Anne, tired of the public ceremony, wants to go home to her sisters and her parents. (Culver Pictures)
In July of 1930, Anne nurses her newborn son, Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr., in the garden of her parents’ Englewood estate. Frustrated without a home of their own, the Lindberghs nonetheless choose to remain in the comfort and security of Next Day Hill. (New York Times Co./Archive Photo)
After a three-month tour west to California, Anne and Charles pose in front of their Lockheed Sirius at the Los Angeles airport before their record-breaking transcontinental flight home to New York, March 21, 1930. Anne, the first woman to receive a glider pilot’s license, is now seven months pregnant. (AP/Wide World Photos)
Anne Morrow and Charles Lindbergh at Mitchell Field, Long Island, on their honeymoon, July 1929. (Lindbergh Picture Collection, Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library)
Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr., surrounded by his great-grandmother Annie Cutter, his grandmother Elizabeth Morrow, and his mother, Anne, January 1931. (UPI/Corbis-Bettmann)
The road leading up to the Morrow estate on Deacon’s Point on North Haven, an island off the coast of Maine. The house was built at the same time as Next Day Hill, while Dwight Morrow was Ambassador to Mexico, circa 1929-1930
.(Lindbergh Picture Collection, Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library)
On a survey tour north to Asia, Anne and Charles arrive in Ottawa, Canada, August 1931, before crossing the icy tundra toward Alaska. (Roger-Viollet/Liaison Agency)
Anne posing with Eskimos in Point Barrow, Alaska, August 1931. (Underwood & Underwood/Corbis-Bettmann)