The friends
James Norman Hall
The Pairie Press (1939)
In Collection
#1912
0*
Poet
aviator, pow
Hardcover 
e
Product Details
LoC Classification PS3515.A363F7 1939
Dewey 811.5
Edition 1st ed. limited
Nationality American
Pub Place Muscatine IA
No. of Pages 34
Height x Width 9.1  inch
First Edition Yes
Personal Details
Read It Yes
User Defined
Conflict WW1
Notes
"This edition is limited to three hundred and eighty copies printed on W&A all-rag paper."

A Treasury of War Poetry contain his war poem,THE CRICKETERS OF FLANDERS

James Norman Hall (April 22, 1887 – July 5, 1951)


He was born in Colfax, Iowa, where he attended the local school. Hall graduated from Grinnell College in 1910 and became a social worker in Boston, Massachusetts, while trying to establish himself as a writer and studying for a Master's degree from Harvard University.

Hall was on vacation in the United Kingdom in the summer of 1914, when World War I began. Posing as a Canadian, he enlisted in the British Army, serving in the Royal Fusiliers as a machine gunner during the Battle of Loos. He was discharged after his true nationality was discovered, and he returned to the United States and wrote his first book, Kitchener's Mob (1916), recounting his wartime experiences.

Returning to France, Hall joined the Lafayette Escadrille, a French-American flying corps, before the United States officially entered the war. Hall was awarded the Croix de Guerre with five palms and the Médaille Militaire. When the United States entered the war, Hall was made a Captain in the Army Air Service. There he met another American pilot, Charles Nordhoff. After being shot down, Hall spent the last months of the conflict as a German prisoner of war. He was awarded the French Légion d’Honneur and the American Distinguished Service Cross.