Osa Leighty Johnson is a part of the nineteenth century only
because she was born in 1894. Raised in a conventional family in Chanute,
Kansas, a twist of fate brought her in contact with one of the celebrities of
the day, Martin Johnson. Martin had already distinguished himself as an
adventurer, having sailed partway around the world with famed author Jack
London. Then sixteen-year-old Osa and twenty-six year old Martin had a short
and sometimes rocky courtship, but they married in 1910 and set about promoting
the pictures he’d taken on his adventures.
Though Osa initially thought Martin had decided to settle
down, she soon learned that her husband simply could not stay in one place for
long. Martin was a photographer at heart. Nothing made him happier than taking
pictures of strange peoples and strange animals in strange places. From
cannibals in Borneo to pygmies in Africa, Osa journeyed beside her famous
husband into places no white person, and certainly no white woman, had ever
dared venture.
And she didn’t just journey. Oh, she was the first to admit
she liked pretty dresses and a proper kitchen. But Osa worked right beside
Martin in the field. She learned to work the big motion picture cameras. She learned
to shoot both pistol and rifle, bringing down even a rhino that charged her
husband while he was filming, saving Martin’s life. She hiked up mountains,
forded flooding rivers in massive transports, crawled through gorilla trails in
the dense jungle. She learned to fly and took her airplane, Osa’s Ark, cross
the entire continent of Africa.
Always, Martin and Osa were a pair, her making sure his life
was as healthy and easy as possible given their unconventional vocations, him
being devoted to her safety and comfort.
Tragically, Martin was killed in a commercial plane crash in
1937, a crash that severely injured Osa. She could easily have retired to
Chanute and lived out her life on speaking fees alone. But she didn’t. Instead,
she wrote books about her experiences; took a huge safari with her into Africa
to shoot portions of the motion picture Stanley
and Livingstone, starring Spencer Tracey; and designed real-life-looking stuffed
animals for the National Wildlife Federation.
Osa Johnson died at age 58 and was buried alongside her
beloved Martin. Her family started the Martin and Osa Johnson Safari Museum in
her honor.
Now that’s a heroine for the ages.
2 comments:
Wow, what a lady. I wonder why she isn't world-famous.
I think she's better known in some circles, Lynn. One of the references I consulted about her said her and her husband's films had inspired millions of people. And Disney World's Animal Kingdom Lodge apparently has a display of their photographs. But she was definitely a new person to me, so I'm so glad my friend loaned me the book!
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