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facts about quentin roosevelt.html

38 Facts About Quentin Roosevelt

facts about quentin roosevelt.html1.

Quentin Roosevelt was the youngest son of President Theodore Roosevelt and Edith Roosevelt.

2.

Quentin Roosevelt was killed in aerial combat over France on Bastille Day, 1918.

3.

Quentin Roosevelt is the only child of a US president to have died in combat.

4.

Quentin Roosevelt's behavior prompted his mother, Edith, to label him a "fine bad little boy".

5.

Quentin Roosevelt quickly became known for his humorous and sometimes philosophical remarks.

6.

Once, when his brother Archie was terribly ill, it was Quentin Roosevelt who brought the pony Algonquin to his room by elevator, sure that this would make his brother smile.

7.

Quentin Roosevelt started his education at Force Elementary School and then attended the Episcopal High School in Alexandria, Virginia.

8.

Quentin Roosevelt consistently scored high marks and displayed the intellectual prowess of his father.

9.

Quentin Roosevelt was engaged to Flora Payne Whitney, the elder daughter of Harry Payne Whitney and Gertrude Vanderbilt.

10.

All the Roosevelt sons had military training prior to World War I With the outbreak of war in Europe in August 1914, there was a heightened concern about the nation's readiness for military engagement.

11.

Quentin Roosevelt trained on Long Island at an airfield later renamed Roosevelt Field in his honor.

12.

Finally sent to France, Lieutenant Quentin Roosevelt first helped in setting up the large Air Service training base at Issoudun.

13.

Quentin Roosevelt was a supply officer and then, in time, ran one of the training airfields.

14.

Quentin Roosevelt had one confirmed kill of a German aircraft during the German spring offensive, which he shot down on July 10,1918.

15.

Gay, hearty and absolutely square in everything he said or did, Quentin Roosevelt was one of the most popular fellows in the group.

16.

Quentin Roosevelt was reckless to such a degree that his commanding officers had to caution him repeatedly about the senselessness of his lack of caution.

17.

Quentin Roosevelt's bravery was so notorious that we all knew he would either achieve some great spectacular success or be killed in the attempt.

18.

Quentin Roosevelt's plane was shot down in aerial combat over Chamery, a hamlet of Coulonges-en-Tardenois.

19.

Quentin Roosevelt was killed by two machine gun bullets which struck him in the head.

20.

Leutnant Karl Thom of Jasta 21, one of the greatest German flying aces of the war, was in the vicinity and had confirmed kills nearby; he was often credited with Quentin Roosevelt's downing, but never claimed the kill.

21.

Buford, like Quentin Roosevelt, was reported as missing in action, but he managed to land safely at a French aerodrome.

22.

Quentin Roosevelt had witnessed Quentin's last fight from the air, and described it to his family several months later:.

23.

Quentin Roosevelt's loss was one of the severest blows we have ever had in the Squadron, but he certainly died fighting, for any one of us could have gotten away as soon as the scrap started with the clouds as they were that morning.

24.

Two days after Quentin Roosevelt fell, the following German communique was intercepted by our wireless:.

25.

Quentin Roosevelt was identified by his papers as Lieutenant Roosevelt, of the USA Flying Corps.

26.

The aviator of the American Squadron, Quentin Roosevelt, in trying to break through the airzone over the Marne, met the death of a hero.

27.

Quentin Roosevelt's effects are being taken care of in order to be sent to his relatives.

28.

Quentin Roosevelt was buried by German aviators with military honors.

29.

The German pilot who shot down Quentin Roosevelt told me of counting twenty bullet holes in his machine when he landed after the fight.

30.

Quentin Roosevelt survived the war but was killed in an accident while engaged in delivering German airplanes to the American Forces under the terms of the Armistice.

31.

Quentin Roosevelt such honor not only because he was a gallant aviator, who died fighting bravely against odds, but because he was the son of Colonel Quentin Roosevelt whom they esteemed as one of the greatest Americans.

32.

Nearby lay the shattered remains of the airplane, with the seventy-six "wound stripes" which Quentin Roosevelt had painted on it, still to be seen.

33.

Quentin Roosevelt's resting place became a shrine and an inspiration to his comrades in arms.

34.

Quentin Roosevelt's death was a great personal loss to his father, who understood quite well that he had encouraged his son's entry into the War.

35.

In 1955, eleven years after the World War II American Cemetery was established in France at Colleville-sur-Mer, Quentin Roosevelt's body was exhumed and moved there.

36.

Quentin Roosevelt's remains were moved in order to be buried next to his eldest brother Ted, who had died of a heart attack in France in 1944, shortly after leading his troops in landings on Utah Beach on D-Day as Assistant 4th Infantry Division Commander.

37.

In June 2007, several Roosevelt family members as well as members of the Theodore Roosevelt Association visited the small monument in France at the French village over which Quentin was shot down in 1918.

38.

Quentin Roosevelt was billeted in the village of Mauperthuis and based in Saints at the time of his death.