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This classic text was originally intended, when it first appeared
in 1928, as propaganda for air-minded youth, these letters and
diaries in fact tell the story of the Royal Flying Corps and Royal
Air Force from August 1914 to the Armistice four years later.The
book is beautifully written-equal to the classic narratives of the
first war in the air-the descriptions of aerial dog fights, dawn
patrols and mess parties interspersed with Merrivale's' overview
giving the reader one of the finest accounts of what it meant to be
a Flying Officer in the early days of air warfare.Major Rothesay
Nicholas Montagu Stuart Wortley MC (1892-1926) was a First World
War flying ace credited with six aerial victories. When war was
declared, he served initially on an infantry brigade staff under
his father, who was a brigadier general. From there, he was
seconded to the Royal Flying Corps in early 1917. He was assigned
to 22 Squadron as a flight commander and Bristol F.2 Fighter pilot.
Between 6 September 1917 and 28 January 1918, he set an Albatros
D.V aflame, destroyed two others, drove down two other enemy
airplanes, and captured an Albatros D.III. He was then rotated back
to England to 44 Home Defence Squadron. In September 1918, he was
appointed to command 88 Squadron, back on the Western Front.
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