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BOOK

Title:  
Les vérités sur l'utilisation de l'aviation militaire avant et pendant la guerre: Un faute désastreuse, suprême leçon pour l'avenir!
Creator:
Ader, Clément, 1841-1925
Publication:
Les Frères Douladoure, Toulouse, 1919.
Notes:  
"Recueil des projets, conseils et lettres": p. [95]-206. At head of title: Pour la sécurité et l'honneur de la France.
Call #:  
623.746 AD3V
Extent:
214 p. ; 23 cm.



BOOK

Title:  
Guide concernant l'organisation et le fonctionnement des formations aéronautiques de la zone des Armées du Nord et du Nord-Est
Creator:
France Armée. Grand Quartier Général des Armées du Nord et du Nord-Est. État-Major.
Publication:
Henri Charles-Lavauzelle, Paris, 1918.
Call #:  
623.746 F84G
Extent:
180 p. : facsims. ; 18 cm.



BOOK

Title:  
Of battles long ago: memoirs of an American ambulance driver in World War I
Creators:
Cutler, G. Ripley. | Knickerbocker, Charles H.
Publication:
Exposition Press, Hicksville, N.Y, c1979.
Notes:  
Illustrated endpapers.
Call #:  
B C975o
Extent:
280 p. : front. (port.), illus., ports. ; 21 1/2 cm.



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1903-1918
Abstract:  

Henry Howard Houston II (1895-1918) was the son of a prominent Philadelphia family, the Houstons. He enjoyed a privileged upbringing, graduating from Chestnut Hill Academy in 1912 and from the University of Pennsylvania in 1916. Upon his graduation date, he enlisted in Battery C of the First Field Artillery, Pennsylvania National Guard, and was sent to the Texas and New Mexico borders in response to Pancho Villa's raids from Mexico. In January 1917, he volunteered with the American Field Ambulance Service in France during World War I, stationed near Verdun, where he was constantly under fire when performing his duty to pick up wounded soldiers from the trenches. Henry took a commission in the French Army and enrolled in its transportation school. The French government awarded him the Croix de Guerre for gallantry under fire. When the U.S. entered the war, Henry resigned his commission in the French army and rejoined the Pennsylvania National Guard, his unit being the 53rd Field Artillery Brigade, 28th Division. He returned to the U.S. and received training as an aerial observer at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. Early in 1918 he returned to France as a staff member of the 53rd Field Artillery Brigade, commandedn by General William Price. In August 1918, Lt. Houston was killed south of Arcis-le-Ponsart while returning from an air field. He was 23. The bulk of this eight linear feet collection reflects Henry's personal life as a son, soldier, friend and lover, during the last three years of his life 1916 to 1918.
Call #:  
Mss.Ms.Coll.76.17
Extent:
8 Linear feet