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Item Type- Text (8)
- clippings (8)
- Archibald, Norman S., 1894-1975 (8)
- United States. Army. Air Service (5)
- World War, 1914-1918 (5)
- Prisoners of war (4)
- Heaven high, hell deep, 1917-1918 (2)
- Air pilots, Military (1)
- Airplanes, Military (1)
- Hartney, Harold Evans, 1888-1945 (1)
- Kerwood, Charles W. (1)
- Redman, Ben Ray (1)
- Sutherland, E.V. (1)
- United States. Army. Air Service. Aero Squadron, 95th (1)
8 results
Newspaper clipping, "Seattle Aviator Captured by Huns Addresses League," from the Seattle Star, March 19, 1919. Reports on Norman S. Archibald giving a talk to the Municipal League about his time at the front and as a prisoner of war. Partial article on verso titled "Germans Show No Repentance, Are Anxious to Strike France Again."
Newspaper clipping, "Quick Wit Saves Seattle Flyer from Execution," from unidentified publication, March 2, [circa 1919]. Prints an account from Norman S. Archibald about his capture, in which he gave credit to a German balloon crew for shooting him down. This saved him from being executed for carrying incendiary ammunition.
Newspaper clipping, "Lieutenant Archibald and his SPAD," from an unidentified publication, circa 1918-1919. Includes a captioned photograph of Norman S. Archibald with his SPAD aircraft.
Newspaper clipping, "U.S. Aviator Prisoner," from the Post-Intelligencer, October 9, 1918. Reports on Norman S. Archibald's capture by German forces.
[Clipping about Norman S. Archibald's capture and confinement in a prisoner-of-war camp, circa 1918]
(Item)
Newspaper clipping from an unidentified publication, circa 1918. Reports on Norman S. Archibald's capture and confinement in a prisoner-of-war camp.
Newspaper clipping, "Three World War flyers have informal reunion here," from the Seattle Daily Times, September 12, 1935. Reports on a reunion of World War I pilots Harold E. Hartney, Charles Wayne Kerwood, and Norman Archibald.
Paradise Lost [Clipping]
(Item)
Magazine clipping, "Paradise Lost" by E. V. Sutherland, from The Pointer, April 19, 1935. Reviews Archibald's book "Heaven High, Hell Deep."
Clipping, "A Romantic Record of War in the Air" by Ben Ray Redman, from The Saturday Review of Literature, January 26, 1935. Reviews "Heaven High, Hell Deep" by Norman Archibald.