Seven Came Through: Rickenbacker's Full Story

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Doubleday, Doran, 1943 - Aircraft accidents - 118 pages
During World War II Rickenbacker, America's ace of aces in the First World War, supported the Allied war effort as a civilian. In October of 1942, Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson sent him on an inspection tour of air bases in the Pacific Theater of Operations (and entrusted him with a secret message to MacArthur), where his B-17 was forced to ditch after running out of fuel due to faulty navigation equipment. For 24 days, Rickenbacker and seven other men endured starvation, sporadic rainfall, and exposure, adrift in life rafts while waiting for rescue from the aircraft that searched for them in vain. One man died after drinking seawater. After splitting up with a crewman in another raft the remaining survivors, including Rickenbacker, were finally picked up on an island in the Tuvalu chain. He had lost 40 pounds in the ordeal, but went on to complete his assigned mission. This book tells the harrowing tale of their survival at sea.

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Contents

The Death of Sergeant Alex
21
The Rescue
46
Completing the Mission
75
Copyright

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