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Francis H. Rust, WWI PILOT & AIR MAIL PILOT KILLED IN A 1932 CAM 27 BAIL-OUT.

$ 12.11

Availability: 55 in stock
  • Condition: Please see description and image.
  • Type: Signature

    Description

    An air mail envelope signed by Rust with a FIRST FLIGHT * ST. JOSEPH, MO. OCT 1, 1929 * ST. LOUIS - OMAHA and canceled SAINT JOSEPH MO. 2 OCT 1 1929.  Backstamped OMAHA NRBR. GEN DEL NO. 2 OCT 1 1929. Perfect!
    RUST, Francis H. WWI PILOT & AIR MAIL PILOT KILLED IN A 1932 BAIL-OUT. (1897-1932).
    He was a member of the fiftieth Reserve Military Aviator class at Kelly Field, the class of Jun. 29, 1918; USAS (1917-19); at the time of his 1926 application for a Contract Air Mail Pilot's Certificate he had been a pilot for Houston Aerial Transport, Colorado Airways and Michigan Air Transport and logged approximately 3600 hours; CAM 12 (1926-27); Contract Air Mail Pilot Certificate no. 105 (1926); Robertson Aircraft Corp. pilot or reserve pilot on CAM 2 (1929- ); Transport Pilot rating no. 3435 (1928); flew air mail for Robertson Aircraft Corp. on CAM route 28 (1929); air mail pilot for Thompson Aeronautical Corp., he died of injuries sustained when he bailed out of his mail plane in a snowstorm while flying CAM route 27, Detroit-Chicago (1932). (2nd LT, ASSC.).
    DO YOU KNOW THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN U. S. AIR MAIL SERVICE PILOTS AND CONTRACT AIR MAIL PILOTS?
    The U. S. Air Mail Service was formed as a branch of the Post Office Department under the Second Assistant Postmaster General in 1918 and flew air mail until it was disbanded in 1927. There weren't very many of them and the lives of many of them were cut short! The movement of air mail was placed in the hands of contractors in the later twenties. They were two distinct groups of aviators and flew under distinctly different circumstances. What makes the pilots of the U.S. Air Mail Service so interesting to us even today, more than ninety years after the service was disbanded? The answer lies in the kind of men they were, in their acceptance of significant risk in every undertaking, and their single-minded focus on a career in aviation. These men were to the children of the twenties what astronauts were to us in the sixties, railroad engineers were to the children of the nineteenth century and explorers were to still earlier generations. Their lives simply reeked of adventure! When pilots signed up for the Air Mail Service they were required to agree to fly fixed routes in literally any kind of weather. And to do it in antiquated open-cockpit planes with only the most basic of instrumentation, which most knew from their Great War flying to be dangerous under the best of circumstances. In the DH, for instance, the placement of fuel tank, pilot and engine assured that the pilot would be incinerated in any significant crash or nose-over. The hot engine drove the fuel tank into the cockpit and fire exploded the escaping vaporized fuel. Yet applications far, far outnumbered the available jobs and the pilots, day after day, accepted their flight schedules and did everything in their power to deliver the mail to the next air mail field on a fixed schedule. By the time air mail flying was placed in the hands of contractors and Contract Air Mail pilots were licensed by the Post Office Department, things had changed dramatically for pilots. Aircraft were purpose-built for air mail, radio had been introduced, weather was much better understood, pilots were carefully selected and trained and the risks of flying were better understood by the executives managing the air mail routes.
    A-6709
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