1. I knew Eddie Rickenbacker was an American flying ace in World War I, and won the Medal of Honor, but I didn't know that much about the rest of his life until now.
2. Rickenbacker grew up in poverty. His parents were struggling immigrants from Switzerland. His home had no electricity, plumbing, or heat. He ran with local street kids, but after his father died at age 12, he had to work odd jobs to support the family.
3. Through hard work, starting from the very bottom, Rickenbacker learned to become an auto mechanic, and then one of the country's top race car drivers, winning millions in today's dollars.
4. In the early years of World War I, he took a job with an automotive company in England. While traveling there by ship, he was nearly arrested as a suspected German spy on the count of his name, and continued to be monitored by British intelligence.
5. When the US entered the war, Rickenbacker looked for a way to join the war effort. Because of his driver fame, he got himself recruited as a personal chauffeur for General Pershing, the top US commander in France.
6. Eventually he got himself assigned to drive Billy Mitchell, Pershing's top aviation aide. After much incessant badgering, he got Mitchell to let him sign up for flight training as a pilot, despite being well over the age limit.
7. As a fighter pilot, Rickenbacker shot down 26 enemy planes over the Western Front, to become the top US ace, winning the Medal of Honor. Eventually he became commander of the 94th Aero Squadron.
8. Upon returning home, war hero Eddie Rickenbacker was assigned to help sell Liberty Bonds to pay off the war debt. Initially an awkward public speaker, he became more and more comfortable in the public spotlight.
9. In the early 1920s, Rickenbacker used his fame and his automotive knowledge to launch his own car company, with the motto "A car worthy of its name".
10. Initially successful, the company bet wrong on controversial new 4-wheel braking technology, and went out of business. Rather than declaring personal bankruptcy, Rickenbacker vowed to repay all of his debts - which he eventually succeeded in doing.
11. In 1925, Rickenbacker was a key witness defending his friend Billy Mitchell, who was courtmartialed for his outspoken (and arguably insubordinate) criticism that the US army was neglecting to invest in air power.
12. In 1927, Rickenbacker put together a group of investors to buy and refurbish the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, home to the Indianapolis 500.
13. Rickenbacker soon got pulled back into aviation, rising to become the CEO of the rapidly growing Eastern Airlines. In 1938, faced with a hostile takeover, he bought the airline himself with financing from General Motors' Alfred Sloan.
14. In 1941, however, Rickenbacker was nearly killed when an Eastern Airlines DC-3 he was riding crashed outside Atlanta, Georgia. The injured survivors sat all night in the wreckage waiting to be found and rescued.
15. Rickenbacker's broken ribs were poking out of his chest, and his left eyeball was poked completely out. He was nearly given up for dead. At 50 years old, he spent months recovering in a full body cast, in great pain.
16. He fully recovered, but needed a cane to walk. They were able to save his left eye, and Rickenbacker claims he actually saw better with it after the accident.
17. Shortly after his recovery, Rickenbacker was recruited by the US Army to conduct highly demanding tours of air units in America, Europe, and the Pacific, boosting morale and reporting back with suggestions to improve air operations.
18. However, flying to a remote island in the Pacific, the B-17 carrying Rickenbacker had navigation trouble and was forced to ditch in the ocean. He and the crew were lost at sea, floating in three tiny rubber rafts.
19. They drifted for 24 days, surrounded by circling sharks, badly sunburned and in many cases already severely injured, subsisting on rain water and the meat from a seagull they somehow caught, reading Bible passages to each other.
20. Finally, after nearly giving up all hope, they were sighted by American planes and rescued. Rickenbacker had once again miraculously survived.
21. Amazingly, Rickenbacker continued his mission, meeting with General MacArthur in the South Pacific. He later traveled on a wartime military observation mission to China and the Soviet Union.
22. After World War II, Rickenbacker continued to serve as CEO of Eastern Airlines, helping to shepherd in the jet age, before being forced out - in his 70s - in the early 1960s.
23. Rickenbacker died of a stroke on a trip to Switzerland in 1973, at the age of 82. He is buried in his hometown of Columbus, Ohio.
24. What an amazing person. I'm surprised no one has made a movie about him (at least since 1945). But they did honor him with a stamp in 1995, and named an airport after him near Columbus, Ohio.

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More from @prchovanec

28 Feb
1. I just read to my 8-year old twin daughters about an exceptional person I never heard of before: Bessie Coleman, the first African-American woman pilot, and the first Native American pilot. Image
2. Bessie was born in 1892 to a family of sharecroppers in Texas. Her family was part Cherokee. She walked four miles every day to a segregated one-room schoolhouse, where she established herself as a gifted student, especially in math. Image
3. At the age of 23, Bessie moved to Chicago where she worked as a manicurist. Hearing stories of returning aviator from WWI, she wanted to learn how to fly, but no pilot school would accept her. Image
Read 10 tweets
28 Feb
The US reported +1,554 new coronavirus deaths today, bringing the total to 524,669. The 7-day moving average declined to 1,985 deaths per day. Image
The US had +64,320 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total to over 29.2 million. The 7-day average declined to under 71,000 new cases per day. Image
18 US states had over 1,000 new cases today, of which 3 had over 5,000. New York led the pack with over 8,000 new cases, followed by Texas and Florida with over 5,000. Image
Read 6 tweets
28 Feb
Talk to any average person in China about whether they are envious of the US. You will notice a marked change in the past 10-15 years. Nor is that change limited to China. This is a major challenge facing US foreign policy, and bluster won’t overcome it.
This is not “taking China’s side”. This is a sober appraisal by someone who wants America and American values to succeed.
Note I say 10-15 years. This is not the failure of a single leader - though Trump’s response to it was entirely wrong-headed and made it worse, not better.
Read 4 tweets
27 Feb
I would imagine that it's just a coincidence. Still, it's getting harder and harder to distinguish insane fact from feverish fiction these days.
Idea: a Twitter party game where I make a statement about something absolutely ludicrous that supposedly happened at #CPAC2021, and you have to guess if it's true or false.
Example: A sitting GOP congressman spoke at #CPAC2021 less than 12 hours after addressing a gathering of white nationalists. True or false? (True)
Read 7 tweets
27 Feb
The US reported +2,246 new coronavirus deaths today, bringing the total to 523,082. The 7-day moving average fell back to 2,033 deaths per day.
The US had +80,625 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total to over 29.1 million. The 7-day moving average declined slightly to just over 71,000 new cases per day.
The number of active cases in the US has gradually fallen back below 9.1 million.
Read 8 tweets
26 Feb
The US reported +2,414 new coronavirus deaths today, bringing the total to 520,785. The 7-day moving average declined slightly again to 2,082 deaths per day.
The US had +77,377 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total to over 29.0 million. The 7-day moving average rose to over 71,000 new cases per day.
20 US states had over 1,000 new cases today, of which 4 had over 5,000. New York led the pack with over 9,000 new cases, followed by Texas with over 7,000.
Read 7 tweets

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