A significant number of prominent figures emerged during the Jazz Age, including American aviation pioneer and advocate for women's rights, Amelia Mary Earhart. Born on July 24, 1897 in Atchison, Kansas, Amelia Earhart from an early age began to display leadership skills and a tendency to cause harm. Nicknamed "Meeley" by her parents, she often misbehaved with her sister, Grace Muriel, who served as her "duty follower." Their upbringing was quite unconventional because Amy Earhart, Amelia's mother, did not believe in turning her children into "pretty little girls". This disdain for the traditionalist gender roles that society had assigned to women in this era had an unconscious effect on Earhart. Evidence of this can be seen in her adult years as an aviator, as her attire routinely consisted of "tomboyish" clothing and her activities and hobbies were also considered to be of that nature. At the young age of ten, Amelia Earhart attended the state fair, where she had the chance to see her first airplane at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines. Without thinking twice, he left the plane and started playing again. She is credited with this verbal reaction after seeing the biplane: "It was a thing of rusty wire and wood and didn't look interesting at all", mentioned in The Sound of Flight by Mary Lovell. It wasn't until Amelia participated in an aerobatic flying display nearly ten years later in Long Beach that she became seriously interested in flying. On December 28, 1920, pilot Frank Hawks gave her a ride that would change her life forever. During Amelia's childhood, the family's financial well-being was very unstable, which can be attributed to her father's alcoholism. After losing his half-job in 1929, the years between the end of World War I and the onset of the Great Depression. During this era, traditionalist values began to see a gradual decline as the adoption of technological advancements increased. Amelia Earhart was one of many eminent figures who caused the decline of traditionalist values by demonstrating through flight that equality between the sexes existed. He embraced technology with his planes and his car, both innovations that the common person could not afford. Amelia Earhart, initially born rich, had to work her way up to become a famous aviator. She single-handedly achieved the American Dream of finding happiness and prosperity through hard work and perseverance. During the Jazz Age, a significant number of prominent figures emerged, including Amelia Mary Earhart, an American aviation pioneer and advocate for women's rights.
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