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glennhcurtiss.com
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www.latinamericanstudies.org
www.af.mil
www.afapo.hq.af.mil
www.ngb.army.mil
![]() Edgar S. Gorrell Colonel Edgar S. Gorrell (1891-1945) was a pilot and an advocate for aviation safety. He graduated from West Point in 1912 and then spent two years as an infantryman in Alaska before transferring to the Signal Corps, where he joined the 1st Aero Squadron, serving under Gen. John J. Pershing in Mexico. On one of his flying missions in Mexico, Gorrell ran out of gas and was stranded in the desert for several days before being rescued. Upon returning to his unit, he began to criticize the poor equipment US pilots were forced to use, both in terms of actual aircraft components and the signals and communication equipment used on land. In 1917 he was promoted to Captain, and in World War I he became the Chief Engineering Officer for the Air Service, and eventually the Chief of Staff for the Air Service, with the rank of Colonel. After the war, Gorrell remained in Europe representing the US at conferences and peace talks. In March 1920, he resigned his commission in the Army and joined the automobile business. He served as the vice president of Marmon Motor Car Company until 1925. Then he became vice president, director, and general manager, and later president, of the Stutz Motor Car company of America. In January 1936, Gorrell again switched fields when he was elected the first president of the Air Transport Association of America, shortly after its conception. It was with this organization that he was known for his role in promoting safety in civil aeronautics. He was a strong advocate for the Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938 which provided government control and regulation of civil aeronautics, and he provided testimony before congressional committees several times. Gorrell continued to support civil aeronautics, especially through his role as president of the Air Transport Association of America, until his death, in 1945. |
>>>> at Fort Sill categorically refused to fly in the JN-2s except during "war and in case
of absolute necessity."
Utecht said the pilots blamed "politics, personal ambition and utter lack of knowledge of
aviation as being responsible for the dangerous plight of the 1st Aero Squadron."
Lieutenant Herbert A. Dargue was quoted as saying, "It is nothing short of criminal to
send the aviators up under such conditions as we are meeting here."
Twelve R-2s were delivered to the squadron in May, but the planes, which had been very
hastily constructed, were missing vital spare parts and had faulty wiring and leaky fuel
tanks. The aircraft even lacked compasses, instruments and tool kits when they arrived <<<<
Some things never change! Could be a 2004 headline.
>>>> at Fort Sill categorically refused to fly in the JN-2s except during "war and in case of absolute necessity."
Utecht said the pilots blamed "politics, personal ambition and utter lack of knowledge of aviation as being responsible for the dangerous plight of the 1st Aero Squadron."
Lieutenant Herbert A. Dargue was quoted as saying, "It is nothing short of criminal to send the aviators up under such conditions as we are meeting here."
Twelve R-2s were delivered to the squadron in May, but the planes, which had been very hastily constructed, were missing vital spare parts and had faulty wiring and leaky fuel tanks. The aircraft even lacked compasses, instruments and tool kits when they arrived <<<<
Some things never change! Could be a 2004 headline.
I know this is an old thread, but it's the only one I could find searching under Pancho Villa.
I'm watching the movie Pancho Villa with Antonio Banderas, and they have him shooting a distraught widow because she's spitting on him and calling him an assassin.
Does anybody know if that really happened, or if it's a Hollyweird fiction?