Charles A. Lindbergh--Man,
Mason, American
by Roger
M. Firestone, 33 KCCH
rfire@jtan.com
http://mastermason.com/rfire
Table
of Contents: Origins Mason Hero Victim Controversy
American Synthesis Author's Note
The
Mississippi River begins its 1700-mile course to the sea at
About
a hundred miles from its headwaters, the
In
1902, when Lindbergh was born, things were far different. Few who read this article
today can really remember what turn-of-the-century
Lindbergh's
father was practicing law in Little Falls when Lindbergh was born, but his
mother, unwilling to rely on the limited facilities of country doctors and
midwives, chose to have her child in
Although
Little Falls was isolated from the more metropolitan parts of
In
At
the time, he was working as a mail pilot for Robertson Aircraft Corporation and
already planning his trans-Atlantic flight in pursuit of the Orteig prize.
Reading Lindbergh's own accounts of his experiences in 1926-27, one is struck
by how thoroughly busy he was, making his efforts on acquiring the Masonic
degrees more remarkable. During that period, he engaged in negotiations with
aircraft manufacturers for the construction of the plane that was to be named The
Spirit of St. Louis, flew the mail regularly between St. Louis and Chicago,
and survived several parachute landings when bad weather forced him to ditch
the mail plane. Only once did he fail to recover the mail bags and send them on
by train.
Lindbergh's
biographers, including Lindbergh himself, make essentially no mention of his
connection with Masonry. Perhaps it was that he, like many other Masons,
carried the duty of secrecy beyond that which is actually required. We do know
that he wore the Square and Compasses on his historic flight and the plane bore
a Masonic emblem; he also later joined the National Sojourners in
The
lasting fame of Charles A. Lindbergh stems from his success at being the first
person to cross from
In
1927, there were fewer distractions for the public's attention. Commercial
radio had barely begun broadcasting. Most people received their news in
newspapers. The competition to be the first to cross the Atlantic solo captured
the public attention, especially as the newspapers sought to play up the
competitive angle. Aviation was not yet routine--many people had never seen an
aircraft close up, and very few had flown in one. Barnstormers, of whom
Lindbergh was one, could attract huge crowds with demonstrations of aerobatic
routines. The risk of serious injury or death was always present for aviators
in the 20's and 30's. But the rewards were there for those who took the
risks--not only Lindbergh, but men like Billy Mitchell and Howard Hughes built
careers and fortunes on their daring.
Against
this backdrop, Lindbergh's accomplishment stood out, nevertheless. Not only for
the $25,000 prize (worth perhaps ten times that in 1989 dollars), but because
of how he achieved it, taking risks that older and more experienced fliers
would have rejected as beyond foolhardy: There was considerable competition for
the award among a number of aviators, and the contest had already cost some of
them their lives. Lindbergh's trans-Atlantic flight came exactly one day after
he set a transcontinental flying record. Piloting a plane that was little more
than a fuel tank with wings, carrying only a few sandwiches and virtually no
navigational equipment, he made the crossing in 33-1/2 hours, landing at Le
Bourget Field in Paris to become one of the greatest celebrities of the
twentieth century. The fame and connections that his flight brought him far
overshadowed the monetary prize.
Over
the next year or so, Lindbergh was feted in many countries. Some said he was
the single best known person in the world. In the many speeches he gave during
this period he continually urged the further development of aviation, doing
much to shape the world we know today, with its innumerable air links among the
continents and extending to some of the remotest parts of the globe. His
goodwill flights took him many places in the
Sometimes
it seems that the breathless media have announced a new "crime of the century"
to have occurred every five or six weeks. Perhaps televised violence and news
reporting have desensitized us to it altogether, while crimes of brutality have
been replaced in the newspapers with government scandals. In some ways,
however, the 80's pale before the lawless period of the 20's and 30's, when
criminal gangs led by the likes of Capone, Dillinger, and Barker roamed the
country and cities were owned and run by the Mob. The 20's had seen such
celebrated cases as Sacco and Vanzetti and Leopold-Loeb run their course in the
papers. Nevertheless, against this backdrop, the Lindbergh kidnapping case
stood out.
Of
course, it was Lindbergh's fame that made the crime impossible to treat
routinely. The cruel circumstances are well known: The Lindberghs' first child,
Charles A. Lindbergh, III, was kidnapped from his
The
conviction of Hauptmann came in December of 1935, more than three years after
the commission of the outrage. Lindbergh bore the ransom payment, the
investigation, and the eventual trial with stoicism. What he could not bear was
the sensationalism of the press. The papers had already garnered his scorn for
their reportage of the quest for the Orteig trans-Atlantic prize. But their
behavior in sensationalizing the kidnapping of his child was to earn his
contempt and loathing for the rest of his life. Distortions of the facts and
invasion of his privacy were common elements of the press's quest for greater
circulation, and a natural consequence of the press freedom guaranteed by our
Constitution; nevertheless, Lindbergh was never able to live with these
circumstances.
When
the trial was over at last, Lindbergh was free of obligations tying him to
Lindbergh
had not yet reached the end of his fourth decade when he became involved in the
controversy that was to shadow his reputation and affect the direction of the
rest of his life. Lindbergh's move to Europe allowed him to escape the
curiosity-seeking crowds of the
These
acquaintanceships gave Lindbergh insight into the industrial strengths of the
various European powers. In particular, the Germans under the Nazi regime were
most eager to obtain world recognition for the new state they had built less
than twenty years after their surrender at the end of the First World War. The
1936
Lindbergh
was suitably impressed. So much so, in fact, that when World War II loomed in
1939, he was to return to the United States and travel widely to urge American non-involvement
in no uncertain terms, even going so far as to resign his commission in the
U.S. military when President Roosevelt made thinly-veiled accusations of
treasonous intent against him. What he had failed to realize was that the Nazis
had hoodwinked him and used him as an element of propaganda, false
intelligence, and psychological warfare. His views were to cost him dearly. He
suffered the loss of much of his prestige before the American public, once the
The
anti-Lindbergh positions are easy to justify with the perspicacity of hindsight.
It is now obvious what would have befallen the world had
The
first half of this century was also a time of considerably lower social
consciousness. Racial stereotypes were common in the public mind, and
anti-Semitism was a casual fact of life. Henry Ford supported the publication
and distribution of notorious anti-Semitic tracts. Tuning in the late movie
when "Charlie Chan at the Olympics" is being broadcast will show how widely
accepted these ideas were, and how
Lindbergh
no more than reflected these ideas of the American public, perhaps amplifying
them through his origins. Having grown up in the midsection of the country, far
removed from the cosmopolitan East Coast, and more conscious than most, through
his aviation experiences, of the enormous distances that separated North
America from the European continent, he felt that there was little to gain from
participation in the European conflict. The homogeneous population of the
Similarly,
Because
we are prone to overlook the tragedies and difficulties that affected him,
Lindbergh led the kind of life that most of us think of as the American dream.
Raised in small-town
As
a hero of aviation, Lindbergh stood for all that the public thought of as
essentially American: Independence, self-reliance, courage, and perseverance.
At a time when the West had been won and most thought the frontier gone,
Lindbergh showed there was another kind of frontier to explore through science
and technology.
Lindbergh
also exemplified that Yankee stubbornness so typical of us. Once he had formed
an opinion, he was virtually unshakable. Vexed by the newspapers' superficial
coverage of his aviation achievements, infuriated by their abuses in the
kidnapping stories, he never again trusted them, even refusing to be
photographed where he could avoid it, regardless of the many changes in the media
in the post-war years. Despite having been deceived by the Nazis, who convinced
him that the Luftwaffe and its industrial base were more than twice as strong
as they actually were, he was unable ever to admit that his pre-war views had
been in error. But it was also this stubbornness that allowed him to withstand
the ordeal of the kidnapping and subsequent trial and that also became, in his
chosen field of aviation, the tenacity that allowed him to persist in a course
at which others had failed and thereby achieve the fame that lasted the rest of
his life.
The
tragic flaw in Lindbergh's life was that he achieved fame and success too
soon--before he acquired the discipline and judgment that a slower climb to influence
and achievement would have given him. An edifice lacking the pillar of wisdom
is not well built. In his struggles with President Roosevelt, he lacked the
savvy to deal with politicians, notably Harold Ickes, Roosevelt's Secretary of
the Interior, who knew just how to discomfit Lindbergh and expose his weak
points. Worse, Lindbergh often chose the wrong associates, despite the best of
intentions. Accused of anti-Semitism (probably incorrectly, if he took
seriously his responsibilities as a Mason), Lindbergh nevertheless was soon to
associate himself even more closely with Henry Ford, whose hatred for Jews was
widely known. The traditions of Masonry remind us that there may be serious
consequences for us if we associate with others of poor character, even if we
are not at fault ourselves. It was not a lesson Lindbergh took to heart.
But
generally, if we are to find fault with Lindbergh, it is also to find fault
with ourselves. Lindbergh's controversial views were in fact those of a large
number of Americans of the time. The difference was that he was prominent,
making him a target, and he was therefore penalized for expressing them when
they no longer made sense. Americans have always had an ambiguous relationship
with our heroes: We exaggerate their accomplishments, invade their privacy, and
search for their flaws. When we find a suggestion of clay clinging to their
feet, we are all too eager to see them brought down. Even Washington and
Lincoln had their critics, and it is easy to remember how Eisenhower went from
being the hero of Europe to an allegedly "do-nothing" president. This
is not necessarily entirely bad; we have the example of what becomes of a
society in which a Stalin, Mao, or Hitler can do no wrong. But Master Masons
should need little reminding of how a small group of greedy men, lacking the
power themselves to create greatness, can destroy the prominent and talented.
Like
the river near whose banks he was reared, Lindbergh passed through many changes
in his life. As the Mississippi separated East from West, yet joined many areas
of the country in trade and travel, sometimes he united us all, sometimes he
divided us, as he traveled over the obstructions and through the narrow
passages, twists, and turns of the course of his life. When the Mississippi
reaches its mouth in Louisiana, it deposits the heavy load of silt acquired in
its passage through the American heartland and flows quietly out to join the
sea. The silt does not go to waste, however; it builds new land at the end of
the Mississippi delta, while the waters rise again from the ocean to return to
the source as the rain. In August of 1974, Charles A. Lindbergh, whose daring
had demonstrated that it was possible to explore the new lands of aviation, put
down his final burdens to rejoin the Source of all being. We will have a long
wait before another single individual so captures the attention and imagination
of the world. His life stands forever as an example of American leadership and
achievement in the Twentieth Century.
Like
Lindbergh, I too grew up in Minnesota. My maternal grandfather became a Mason
in St. Louis only a few years before Lindbergh did. And I have often visited
Hunterdon County, NJ, where he lived during the first years of his married
life. These connections have perhaps allowed me to create this brief survey of
the important points in his life with a greater understanding of how they
affected him. But I realize that after so much has been written about one of
the most prominent men of our time, there is little new to say. I can only hope
that I have said it differently.
A
portion of this article first appeared in the Scottish Rite Journal, which is published by the
Supreme Council, 33, of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite for the Southern
Jurisdiction of the United States.