Eagle Biography
Robert L. "Bob" Scott, Jr.
Determined to one day "own the sky," Robert L. Scott, Jr., dreamed of flying from the day
he saw his first aircraft. At the age of 12, he attempted to fly a homemade glider from
the roof of a three-story house, but cleared only the first tree when the wing snapped and
he ended up in a bed of roses. This experience turned out to be the only crash of his
flying career. After graduation from West Point in 1932, Scott attended flight training at
Randolph Field, Texas. After earning his wings in 1933, he was assigned to fly the 0-1
Falcon. In 1934, when the Army Air Corps took over the troubled airmail delivery,
Scott volunteered for this dangerous duty because it promised nearly unlimited flying. For
the next 5 months, Scott assigned to the 99th Observation Squadron, regularly traveled the
route between Newark and Cleveland.
In October 1934, he married Kitty Rix and 6 months
later they were transferred to Panama where he flew the Boeing P-12. Following this tour
and one to Randolph Field, he served in WW II. As the war began, he bluffed his way into a
classified operation, Task Force Aquila, a follow-up to the Doolittle Raid, using B-17
Flying Fortresses to attack Japan. Scott did not want his crew to know he had
never flown the B-17, so he took a solo ride around Wright Field to check himself out.
When the classified operation was canceled, Scott volunteered to fly transports over the
"Hump" from Burma into China to resupply General Claire Chennault's Flying Tigers
. Drawing on his previous fighter experience, he convinced Chennault to loan him a
P-40 Warhawk to help escort the transports.
In July 1942, Scott assumed command
of the 23d Fighter Group, which had been newly formed from the deactivated Flying
Tigers. As commander of this prestigious unit, he achieved 13 aerial victories
against Japanese aircraft, with 5 more probables. As Group Commander, he scheduled himself
for virtually every mission. Finally, Chennault forbade his participation on some missions
so he could perform his many other duties. Returning to the States in January 1943 as an
Ace, Scott was directed by General "Hap" Arnold to travel nationwide on a public relations
tour. It was during this period that he wrote the book God Is My Co-Pilot,
which quickly became a wartime best seller and movie.
Following the war Scott served as
Commander of Williams Field and the first jet-fighter school located there. In 1951, he
became Commander of the 36th Fighter-Bomber Wing at Furstenfeldbruck AB, Germany. Brigadier
General Scott has amassed some 14,000 hours in military aircraft and has authored 15 books.
In 1980 at the age of 72, he fulfilled a 30-year ambition by returning to China and walking
on the Great Wall he had flown by during WW II.
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| More About The Eagle: |
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| Honored as an Eagle In: |
| 1986 `
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1990
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1995
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Beginning 13 February 1934, the Army Air Corps was tasked by the President to
carry the airmail. During the next 5 months, Lieutenant Robert L. Scott, Jr.,
flying many aircraft, including the B-10 and the 0-39, regularly carried mail
over the 358-mile route from Newark to Cleveland known as the "Hell Stretch."
Although plagued with extreme weather and inadequate equipment, Scott and his
fellow pilots demonstrated the flexibility of the Air Corps and its value to
the nation.
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