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![[photo] [photo]](Buildings/ric1.jpg)
Rickenbacker House
Photo from the National
Historic Landmarks collection |
From 1895 to 1922, this was the Columbus, Ohio, home of famed World War
I aviator Edward "Eddie" Vernon Rickenbacker. Eddie, a leading race car
driver prior to World War I, joined the American Expeditionary Force as
a sergeant and staff driver in 1917. He sailed to France the next month
with John J. Pershing and his staff. Although overage and not a high school
graduate, Rickenbacker, with the assistance of William
"Billy" Mitchell, received an assignment to flight school. After 17
days at the French aviation school at Tours, Eddie received his wings and
a commission as first lieutenant; however, he was assigned to the Advanced
Flight School at Issoudun as an engineering officer, not a pilot. Eventually
he was transferred to the 94th Aero Pursuit Squadron, where on April 14,
1918, he took part in the "first combat mission ever ordered by an American
commander of an American squadron of American pilots." Rickenbacker became
commander of the squadron on September 24. The next day he single-handedly
took on seven German planes over the German lines and shot down two of them--an
act for which he was belatedly awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor
in 1930. In six months he shot down 26 German aircraft--22 airplanes and
four balloons.
Captain Rickenbacker
Photo from Clipart.com
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Eddie Rickenbacker returned home after the end of the war as the idol of
the American public, the "American Ace of Aces." He refused offers to make
movies or endorse products, but he did publish his war memoir entitled Fighting
the Flying Circus. He married Adelaide F. Durrant in 1922 and founded
the Rickenbacker Motor Company, which went bankrupt in 1927. Eddie then
joined General Motors where he worked in both their automobile and aircraft
divisions. In 1938 he purchased Eastern Airlines from General Motors, making
it the "first airline to operate without a subsidy from the Federal government."
During World War II Rickenbacker toured American bases at home and abroad
as a special civilian consultant for Secretary of War Henry Stimson. On
one of these tours to the South Pacific, Eddie's airplane became lost, ran
out of fuel and had to land in the ocean. His book Seven Came Through
describes the 24 days he and the crew spent adrift on life rafts before
being found. After the war, Rickenbacker returned to Eastern Airlines as
Chairman of the Board, a position he held until his retirement in 1963 at
age 73. In October 1972 Eddie Rickenbacker suffered a stroke, and he died
in Zurich on July 24, 1973.
The Captain Edward V. Rickenbacker House, a National
Historic Landmark, is located at 1334 Livingston Ave., in Columbus,
Ohio, and was recently placed on the Ohio
Preservation Alliance's Most Endangered Places List. The house is
currently closed to the public, but is being renovated as part of the
Rickenbacker-Woods
Technology Center. |