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About The Book
Description
Author
Lt. Billy Schauffler pilot First Aero Squadron is writing this story.&nbsp; His letters add a fascinating human perspective to historic events.&nbsp; Young men of the era Billy among them eagerly joined the Great Adventure in the air over the Western Front.&nbsp; It was not all flying and fighting.&nbsp; He writes of French hospitality fine wine and knee-deep mud and prays on the eve of battle for the safety of his men and the day when the sky will be silent and nightingales sing.<br><br>Major Billy Mitchell and civilian Billy Schauffler were both learning to fly in 1916 at the Curtiss Aeronautical Station Newport News Virginia.&nbsp; Student pilot Billy Schauffler badgered student pilot Billy Mitchell about getting into military flying.&nbsp; Captain Thomas Milling a fellow student pilot told Schauffler to write a letter of application which he would carry to Army Headquarters in Washington D. C.<br><br>Billy's letter writing saga began.<br><br>The Army fashioned an application form based on Billy's letter and Milling suggested that all five civilian student pilots fill them in.&nbsp; They did.&nbsp; And within a month they were in the Army.<br><br>Lt. Schauffler tells of joining America's only operational Air Force equipped with eight underpowered Curtiss Jenny JN-3 biplanes on the Mexican border.<br><br>In France he writes with humor about flying obsolete hand-me-down French aircraft.&nbsp; He tells of Squadron camaraderie La vie en Escadrille.&nbsp; A squadron visitor wrote The aviator at the front regards life in a lighter vein.&nbsp; When it is party time their high jinks have the elements of a Wild West Show.&nbsp; At mealtime it is a banquet without pretty girls.<br><br>Behind the lines he delivered the first airmail to Army Divisions scattered across France.&nbsp; On the battle line he describes hedge-hopping guns blazing across no-man's-land and enduring the muzzle blast of friendly artillery to deliver messages.<br><br>Billy was a pioneer pilot in the development of aerial reconnaissance.&nbsp; His letters often written within minutes after returning from battle stir the imagination.&nbsp; As he describes attacks we find meaning in the motto Beware of the Hun in the Sun.&nbsp; You are there.