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Seattle Aviator Captured by Huns Addresses League [Clipping]
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."
Quick Wit Saves Seattle Flyer from Execution [Clipping]
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.
Lieutenant Archibald and his SPAD [Clipping]
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.
U.S. Aviator Prisoner [Clipping]
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]
Newspaper clipping from an unidentified publication, circa 1918. Reports on Norman S. Archibald's capture and confinement in a prisoner-of-war camp.
Three World War flyers have informal reunion here [Clipping, 1935]
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]
Magazine clipping, "Paradise Lost" by E. V. Sutherland, from The Pointer, April 19, 1935. Reviews Archibald's book "Heaven High, Hell Deep."
A Romantic Record of War in the Air [Clipping]
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.