Newspaper clipping, "Mitchell fought valiantly for a unified air service," from The Detroit News, February 20, 1936. Obituary for Brigadier General William L. "Billy" Mitchell, describing his military career, his advocacy for a unified air force, and…
Newspaper clipping, "Yanks on the Rhine" by Wallgren, from The Stars and Stripes, December 6, 1918. Comic strip of American soldiers comparing life in France and Germany following the end of World War I.
Newspaper pages, "Pacific Stars and Stripes," Volume 28, No. 129, May 9, 1972. Four pages (pages 1-2 and 23-24) containing articles about military operations, politics, and sports. A paragraph in the article "3 MiGs Shot Down Near Hanoi," which…
Newspaper photograph from an underdetermined newspaper, showing passengers and crew onboard a Boeing Model 307 Stratoliner, circa 1939. An inscription labels the pilot as "Ray."
Newspaper clippings about Julius A. Barr glued to a piece of board, circa 1938-1939. Articles include two obituaries and a clipping about the first flight of the Boeing Model 307 Stratoliner.
Newspaper clipping, "Stratoliner in 1st Test Flight," from unidentified newspaper, circa December 1938 or January 1939. The article describes the first test flight of the Boeing Model 307 Stratoliner, piloted by Edmund "Eddie" Allen with Julius Barr,…
Newspaper clipping, "J. A. Barr, Stratoliner Victim, Flew Madam Chiang's Plane," from unidentified newspaper, circa March 1939. Obituary for Julius A. Barr, who died in a test flight crash of a Boeing Model 307 Stratoliner on March 18, 1939. The…
Newspaper clipping from unidentified newspaper, circa March 1939. Photograph and brief obituary for Boeing test pilot and engineer Earl A. Ferguson, who died in a test flight crash of a Boeing Model 307 Stratoliner on March 18, 1939
Two magazine clippings, "Light Car Talk" and "The Hot Spot on the Piston," from The Autocar, July 14, 1917.
Part of a series of loose materials included inside the J. M. Wilson notebook.
Newspaper clipping, "Lieut. Hyde Visits Butler," from an unidentified newspaper, circa 1910s-1920s. Announces that Lieutenant Jules Verne Hyde will visit Butler, [Missouri?].