- Aubrey Hornsby
Aubrey Thomas Hornsby I (
8 January ,1895 –May 23 ,1981 ) was a U.S. Army officer and pioneer aviator who reached the rank ofBrigadier General . He began his Army career duringWorld War I as anartillery observer , seeing service inFrance andGermany , then continued to serve as an aviator and administrator throughWorld War II , after which he was elected to theAlabama House of Representatives .Biography
He was born in 1895 in
Eclectic, Alabama to Judson Anne Nichols (1869-1953) and Jackson Lee Hornsby (1868-1954). His father was a merchant. [1900 US Census ;Eclectic, Alabama ] Hornsby graduated from Elmore County High School in 1915, then attended theUniversity of Alabama andSouthern University for two years until he volunteered in the Army as a Private in May 1917.Less than six months after his enlistment, he had earned his commission and was appointed
Second Lieutenant in November 1917, in the Field Artillery Reserve. In May 1918, he transferred to theAmerican Expeditionary Force as an Aerial Observer serving in France,England , and Germany for one year. He returned to the United States in 1918, married Nannie Mae Thomas ofAlabama onAugust 15 ,1918 and they had three children: Aubrey Thomas Hornsby II (1922-1983) who was born in Virginia; William Lee Hornsby (1926-?); and Jack Hornsby (1927-1978). William and Jack were both born in Alabama. Aubrey was then stationed atMitchell Field , onLong Island until July 1920. Along with his transfer toKelly Field in Texas, he was promoted toFirst Lieutenant .In 1921 Hornsby graduated from both the
Air Service Pilots' School and theAir Service Bombardment School . He participated in the 1922 experimental bombing of surrendered Germanbattleship s as a contemporary ofBilly Mitchell , and he won the second place award in the 1926 Liberty Engine Builders' Trophy race. This was an air-race held among fifteen top military pilots at the Sesquicentennial International Exposition inPhiladelphia to celebrate the nation's 150th birthday. [Austin, Erastus Long: "The Sesqui-Centennial International Exhibition", p. 302. Ayer Publishing, 1976. ISBN 0405076703] . In 1930 the family was living inRiverside, California . [1930 US Census ;Riverside, California ] As a captain he commanded Clark Field in thePhilippines .Gunter Field in Alabama was built in 1940 under his leadership and he was the first base commander. This was an important training center built prior to, but in expectation of, US involvement in WWII. Originally it was known as Army Air Corps Basic Flying School, later as Gunter Field, and now as part of Maxwell Air Force Base. Hornsby assumed that position on
August 27 ,1940 , and was replaced 28 months later by ColonelRaymond L. Winn onDecember 28 ,1942 , one year after Pearl Harbor. [Mueller, Robert: "Air Force Bases, Volume I", p. 215. DIANE Publishing Co., 1989. ISBN 1428993169] . It was at Gunter Field that the assembly line system of maintaining planes, whose time-saving efficiency had attracted wide attention, was pioneered, based on Hornsby's experience in aircraft maintenance.As a Brigadier General, Hornsby commanded the
308th Bombardment Wing of the United States Air Force for part of 1946, while it was stationed inKorea as part of the occupation force [Maurer, Maurer: "Air Force Combat Units of World War II", p. 418. DIANE Publishing Co., 1983. ISBN 1428915850] and involved in weather research.Aubrey died in 1981 in
Montgomery, Alabama .Postings
* 1917-18: American Expeditionary Force (Europe)
* 1918-20:Mitchel Field ,Long Island inNew York
* 1920-22: Kelly Field, Texas
* 1922-24:Langley Field ,Virginia
* 1924-27: Maxwell Field, Alabama
* 1927-30: March Field,California
* 1930-32: Clark Field,Philippine Islands
* 1932-33: Maxwell Field, Alabama
* 1933-37: Bolling Field,District of Columbia
* 1937-40: Maxwell Field, Alabama
* 1940-42: Gunter Field,Montgomery, Alabama
* 1946-46: 308th Bomber Group - Korea (various)ee also
References
* Gunter History, AU/HO Office, Pg. 47, (Circa) 1943
* [http://members.tripod.com/airfields_freeman/AL/Airfields_AL_Montgomery.htm#Gunter Abandoned & Little-Known Airfields: © 2002, © 2006 by Paul Freeman.]
* R. Manning Ancell; The Biographical Dictionary of World War II Generals and Flag Officers;Westport, Connecticut ; Greenwood Press, 1996
* [http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:3261711&id=I05513 Hornsby family]
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