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Arthur Raymond Brooks Collection

National Air and Space Museum

Object Details

General note
Other materials: medals and memorabilia transferred to NASM Aeronautics Division.
Creator
Brooks, Arthur Raymond, 1895-1991
Names
Bell Telephone Laboratories
Florida Airways Corp
United States. Army. Air Service. 22nd Pursuit Group
United States. Department of Commerce. Aeronautics Branch
Brooks, Arthur Raymond, 1895-1991
Topic
Fighter pilots
Works of art
SPAD XIII (S.13) "Smith IV"
Aeronautics
Periodicals
Aeronautics, Military
Provenance
A. Raymond Brooks, Gift, 1989, NASM.1989.0104
Creator
Brooks, Arthur Raymond, 1895-1991
See more items in
Arthur Raymond Brooks Collection
Summary
This collection consists of the personal papers and memorabilia of Arthur Raymond Brooks. It includes photographs, correspondence, documents, and certificates relating to Brooks' aviation career, as well as personal correspondence, photographs, and diaries (1907-87).
Biographical/Historical note
Arthur Raymond Brooks (1895-1991) was a fighter pilot for the U.S. Army Air Service during World War I and later, a civil aviation pioneer. Born in Framingham, Massachusetts on November 1, 1895, Brooks graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1917 with a Bachelor of Science degree in electrochemical engineering. In July of that year, he enlisted in the Aviation Section of the U.S. Army Signal Corps. His flight training was provided by the Royal Flying Corps' School of Military Aeronautics in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. He was then sent for further flight training to Fort Worth, Texas where he flew with the 139th Squadron, 2nd Pursuit Group. In March 1918, Brooks left for France and completed pursuit training at the 3rd Aviation Instruction Center, American Expeditionary Force (AEF), at Issoudun. The 139th was placed at the Vaucouleurs Aerodrome, Toul sector, where the squadron was equipped with SPAD VII aircraft. Brooks was eventually made its flight commander. By early August, he was assigned as flight commander of the 22nd Aero Squadron, 2nd Pursuit Group. His new squadron was supplied with SPAD XIII pursuit craft. Altogether, he flew 120 missions in four different aircraft. He named each of the aircraft Smith in honor of his fiancée (Ruth Connery) who was attending Smith College in Massachusetts. The final plane he flew in combat, the Smith IV, is on display at the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum. On July 29, 1918, Brooks achieved his first confirmed aerial victory by downing a German Fokker aircraft. Later, he destroyed two more Fokkers while flying over enemy lines on September 14. On that day, Brooks single-handedly engaged eight enemy aircraft in combat thus, earning him the Distinguished Service Cross. By the war's end, he had six confirmed kills to his credit. Following the armistice of November 11, 1918, Brooks remained in France as the 22nd Squadron's commanding officer. His squadron was kept in reserve for possible German occupation duty. Upon his return to the United States in July 1919, Brooks was promoted to Captain. He decided to stay in the Air Service and was subsequently assigned as commanding officer for the 95th Pursuit Squadron, stationed at Kelly Field, Texas. From May 1920 to August 1921, he was put in charge of the 1st Pursuit Group at Ellington Field, Texas. Following that assignment, Brooks attended Air Service Field Officer's School, Langley Field, Virginia. After graduation, he stayed on duty at Langley Field until his resignation from the U.S. Army Air Service in December 1922. This action was spurred both by Brooks' frustration with being on the Army's stagnant promotion list and an interest in entering the private sector. During 1920-21, while in the service, he was involved in a failed Framingham-based commercial aviation business called the Brooks, Banks and Smith Corporation. Also in 1920, Brooks married Ruth. Their only child, Peter, was born in 1929. Brooks' first job after his honorable discharge from the Air Service was as secretary for the National Automobile Association during 1923-24. During 1924-25, he worked in advertising sales for the financial magazine, United States Investor. Once again, his desire to be engaged in commercial aviation compelled him to become involved in establishing and organizing the Florida Airways Corporation from late 1925 into 1926. In time, Florida Airways became Eastern Airways. Brooks left this financially struggling enterprise and joined the Department of Commerce's Aeronautics Branch in August 1926. For the next seventeen months, he worked as an airway extension superintendent and associate airways engineer. His main task with the Aeronautics Branch was to survey air routes and supervise the installation of beacons to assist air mail pilots navigate the Appalachian Mountains from Virginia to Pennsylvania. He left government service in early 1928 and was hired by Bell Telephone Laboratories. He spent the next few decades working as a scientist, engineer and chief pilot for the company at Hadley Field, New Jersey. There, Brooks and his staff conducted pioneering research on ground-to-air radiotelephone communications and electronic aviation navigation equipment. During much of this period, he piloted a Fairchild FC2-W Wasp and a Ford Tri-Motor that operated as flying laboratories for the team's communications research. He was Bell's publications manager for New Jersey operations at the time of his retirement in 1960. Brooks stayed active in aviation for the remainder of his life. Even in his nineties, he enjoyed flying all sorts of aircraft, including ultralights, gliders and hot-air balloons. He belonged to many aviation-related and professional associations and organizations such as the American Legion, Military Order of the World Wars, Combat Pilots Association, Order of Daedalians, OX-5 Aviation Pioneers Association, Telephone Pioneers of America, Cross and Cockade, Associate Fellow of the American Institute for Aeronautics and Astronautics, Quiet Birdmen, WWI Overseas Flyers and the American Fighter Aces Association. Brooks also remained involved with the alumni affairs of his alma mater – MIT. He attended numerous air shows and reunions, including the sixty-fifth, and final reunion, held for the Lafayette Flying Corps in Paris, France in 1983. In 1980, he was inducted into the Aviation Hall of Fame of New Jersey. Brooks lived long enough to see his Smith IV restored by the National Air and Space Museum during the 1980s. Brooks, the last surviving American World War I ace, died in Summit, New Jersey, on July 17, 1991.
Extent
13.72 Cubic feet (31 boxes)
Date
1910-1988
Archival Repository
National Air and Space Museum Archives
Identifier
NASM.1989.0104
Type
Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Correspondence
Financial records
Diaries
Drawings
Publications
Photographs
Videotapes
Citation
Arthur Raymond Brooks Collection, NASM.1989.0104, National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian Institution.
Arrangement
Series 1: Professional material 1.1 Official military documents 1.2 Correspondence 1.3 Reports 1.4 Handbooks, instructions, and manuals 1.5 Photographs 1.6 Brochures 1.7 Programs 1.8 Magazines 1.9 Newsletters 1.10 Newspaper clippings and articles Series 2: Personal materials 2.1 Personal documents 2.2 Correspondence 2.3 Diaries and day-timers 2.4 Photographs 2.5 Biographical notes 2.6 Transcripts 2.7 Logbooks 2.8 Travel guides, maps, atlases, and train/airline timetables 2.9 Books 2.10 Miscellaneous materials 2.11 Oversized materials 2.12 Posters, prints and maps 2.13 Newspapers and newspaper supplements
Processing Information
Arranged and described by Mark Kahn, 2002. Encoded by Elizabeth Bauerle, December 2011.
Rights
Material is subject to Smithsonian Terms of Use. Should you wish to use NASM material in any medium, please submit an Application for Permission to Reproduce NASM Material, available at Permissions Requests.
Genre/Form
Correspondence
Financial records
Diaries
Drawings
Publications
Photographs
Videotapes
Scope and Contents
This collection consists of the personal papers of Arthur Raymond Brooks. These papers relate to his military career with the U.S. Army Air Service (1917-22), his years in both civilian government service and the private sector (1923-60), as well as a lifetime's involvement in numerous military, academic, aeronautical, and professional associations and organizations. Additionally, there are examples of correspondence and autographed photographs from such aerospace notables as Eddie Rickenbacker, Jimmy Doolittle, Billy Mitchell, Clayton Bissell, Reed Chambers, and Michael Collins. The collection is arranged into two broad series. First, is the material relating to his professional life. This includes Brooks' official military documents (U.S. Army commission, discharge papers, etc.), correspondence, reports, photographs (mostly from his time spent as an Air Service officer in France and the U.S.), handbooks, manuals, brochures, programs, speeches, magazines, newsletters, newspaper clippings, and articles. The second series contains items pertaining mainly to his personal life. Included here are personal documents such as income tax receipts, last will and testament, correspondence, photographs (both largely from and of family and friends), diaries, biographical notes, transcripts from audio tape cassettes, logbooks, travel guides, and books. Miscellaneous materials retained by Brooks such as a commemorative medallion, prints, posters, publications, a stamp album, photograph albums, newspapers, and address books are also found in this series. Brooks' papers are arranged both chronologically and alphabetically. Official military and personal documents, correspondence, reports, photographs, brochures, programs, newspaper clippings and articles, diaries and day timers, biographical notes, transcriptions, logbooks, travel guides, maps, atlases, timetables, and newspapers are organized by the former method. Handbooks, instructions, manuals, magazines, and newsletters are grouped alphabetically by title. The books are arranged alphabetically by author.
Restrictions
No restrictions on access
Related link
Record ID
ebl-1503512016001-1503512016013-0
Metadata Usage
CC0
GUID
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/pg21ce64706-6071-4c10-ac68-41c02098b251

In the Collection

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  • Text for Use in Air Service Correspondence Course -- Meteorology, chapter 1, U-748, A.S.

  • Staff Study on an Air Academy

  • Correspondence, Brooks and Ruth

  • Scrapbook, John A. Sperry

  • Diaries

  • Correspondence

  • Air Transport Communication

  • Method of Conducting a Chasse patrol Across Lines

  • Correspondence and copy of American Aviation Historical Society, Journal, vol. 22, no. 2

  • Photographs

  • Diary

  • Biographical notes

  • Biographical notes and checklists

  • Correspondence, Ruth and her mother

  • The Catholic Club of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Correspondence

  • Diary

  • Diary

  • Popular Aviation

  • Pilot's logbook for Brooks

  • Travel guide, Versailles, Frederick Mayer, Paris, France

  • Stamp album

  • Correspondence, Brooks and family

  • Miscellaneous certificates, diplomas, and birthday cards and drawings for Brooks

  • Correspondence and brochures

  • Diary

  • Correspondence

  • Transcripts

  • Photographs, Brooks' house, Summit, New Jersey

  • Inter-Allied Games, France

  • Diary

  • Certificate, Brooks as honorary life member of the Wings Club, Inc.

  • Correspondence

  • Correspondence

  • Biographical notes

  • Newspaper clippings

  • Biographical notes

  • Photographs

  • Correspondence

  • Photograph album, Brooks, family, and friends

  • Rosters and records

  • Personal documents

  • Photographs

  • Pilot's logbook for Brooks

  • Correspondence

  • Correspondence, Brooks, Ruth, his brother, and mother

  • Magazines

  • Poster, France triumphant in war over Germany

  • Diary

  • Atlas

  • Prints, Gathering of Eagles, by Jay Ashurst

  • Correspondence, Brooks and Ruth

  • Photographs

  • Diary

  • Transcription, radio broadcast

  • Correspondence, notes, newspaper clippings, and photographs

  • Photographs, Ruth

  • Biographical notes

  • Biographical notes

  • Framingham Evening News

  • Correspondence and article

  • Industrial Mathematics

  • Photographs

  • Newspaper clippings and transcript

  • Photographs, miscellaneous

  • Photographs

  • Correspondence, Brooks, family, friends and admirers

  • Newspaper clippings, New York Herald, war situation

  • Framingham News

  • Correspondence and brochures

  • Photographs, Brooks, family and friends

  • Correspondence

  • Cooper, Bryan, and Batchelor, John. Fighter. New York: Ballantine Books

  • Correspondence and promotional booklets

  • Photographs

  • Programs

  • Photographs (color), scale model of SPAD XIII (S.13) "Smith IV"

  • Aviation Atlas -- 1935-1936, Gulf Refining Company, fourth edition

  • Diary

  • Correspondence

  • Newspaper clippings

  • Aerostatics

  • Correspondence

  • Technology Review

  • Correspondence and newspaper clippings

  • Sportsman Pilot

  • Pursuit Reconnaissance Reports

  • Propwash

  • Correspondence, Brooks and Ruth

  • The Langley Field Times

  • Photographs, Brooks and Ruth

  • Technology Bureau

  • Brooks visit to the National Air and Space Museum's Paul E. Garber facility

  • Diaries

  • Universal Bomb Sight (UBS)

  • Diary

  • Logbooks

  • Certificate sample, Brooks and the Smith IV, National Air and Space Museum

  • Correspondence, Brooks, Ruth, his brother, and mother

  • Plane Talk

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Arthur Raymond Brooks collection
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