The Bulletin, Bend / Central Oregon News

FEBRUARY 09, 2010 05:43 PM

bendbulletin.com/News

Articles Restaurants Yellow Pages Web Newsprint Archive 1907 — 1994

This article has been corrected. Read correction.

Bend's 'Amelia' link

Last modified: October 30. 2009 4:52AM PST
George P. Putnam appears in this archive photo with wife Amelia Earhart, circa 1931.
more photos more photos

George P. Putnam appears in this archive photo with wife Amelia Earhart, circa 1931.
Submitted photo

advertisement:

Further reading

To read more about Putnam's time in Bend, check out “Frontier Publisher: A Romantic Review of George Palmer Putnam's Career at The Bend Bulletin, 1910-1914, with an Extended Epilogue,” by Jim Crowell, an account released by the Deschutes County Historical Society.

Did you know?

There's a local connection to “Amelia,” the movie about famed aviatrix Amelia Earhart that's opening today in Bend.

Earhart's husband, George Palmer Putnam (played by Richard Gere), was editor and publisher of The Bend Bulletin and mayor of Bend before leaving and eventually marrying Earhart (played by Hilary Swank).

In Putnam's day, Bend was a dirt-street village of 500 people. Putnam, a good-looking bachelor and heir to an East Coast publishing firm, was an adventurous young man with big dreams.

He came here to enjoy the West and became a promoter of Bend, seeing the town get electricity, railroads and timber mills.

While back East on a trip in 1911, he met and married Dorothy Binney, an heir to the Crayola crayon fortune, and brought her here.

They led the social scene and enjoyed the outdoors, particularly canoeing on the Deschutes.

Putnam's career took him to Salem to become the Oregon governor's private secretary, then to Medford and Salem to edit and run newspapers.

Eventually, he moved back East to work in the family business. There he published Charles Lindbergh's autobiography, which gave him contacts in the world of aviation.

When a wealthy benefactor asked Putnam to find an aviator to be the first woman to cross the Atlantic, his search took him to the not-yet-famous Earhart.

He divorced Binney in 1929 and two years later married Earhart.

After her successful transatlantic flight in 1932, Putnam promoted Earhart's career and published her books about flying.

Two years after Earhart's disappearance over the Pacific, he released her biography, “Soaring Wings.”

This article has been corrected. Read correction.

ARTICLE ACCESS: This article is among those available to all readers. Many more articles are available only to E-Edition members. Sign up today!


blog comments powered by Disqus
The Bulletin
Parade Magazine Bend Homes Luxury Bend Homes