The response from the experts was always the same: So, your mom told you this aviator's helmet belonged to Amelia Earhart? That's great, they'd say, but we're going to need a little more proof.
That was the gist of the messages conveyed to Anthony Twiggs, who inherited the leather cap more than 20 years ago when his mother died.
It was still, after all these years, remarkably supple, with the tiniest of tears just below the half-moon-shaped communications pocket on the left flap. The cap looked very much like the aviator's helmet she wore for her first trans-Atlantic flight, in 1928. It had been missing since an air race in 1929. This was the same race from which Earhart's leather goggles went missing, later found with lenses missing and donated in 1957 to the Smithsonian Institution.
The story of Earhart's iconic helmet began as part of a 1928 marketing stunt in an office in Times Square, where the idea of "Lady Lindy" was created. How Twiggs, now 67, came to be in possession of this famous cap starts with a tale his mother used to tell about the day in 1929 that she saw Amelia Earhart at Cleveland Municipal Airport. It was the finish line of the Women's National Air Derby — forever branded as the Powder Puff Derby, thanks to a wisecrack from Will Rogers, the folksy movie star and humorist.
The race started in Santa Monica, Calif.: 20 women, 20 airplanes, taking off one after the other at one-minute intervals. Earhart, already world famous and the odds-on favorite to win, arrived in Cleveland after eight grueling days. Only 11 women made it all the way to the end, where 18,000 spectators were waiting, including Twiggs' mother, Ellie Brookhart.
Even though Earhart would take only third place, she was mobbed by fans at the airfield, and Ellie and a group of school friends were among those who raced to greet her single-engine Lockheed Vega after its loud and bumpy landing. To hear his mother describe it, it was chaos on the airstrip. (Twiggs has found old newsreel footage on YouTube to confirm her report.)
In her story, a boy who had a crush on her pulled her aside afterward. He told her he had Earhart's leather helmet and wanted her to have it. She asked him if he had ripped it off her head. He told her he had found it on the ground.
On the rare occasion that his mother recounted the story, she might, if begged, take out the helmet for one of her four children. She had stored it carefully in an unsealed see-through plastic bag, "like a Ziploc without the zip," which was carefully laid out on tissue paper in a small box.