PILOT STORIES: Barnes,
James Maurice
| Air Mail
Service Began: |
August 24, 1924 |
| Air Mail Service Ended: |
July 15, 1927 |
| Total Hours Flown: |
1452.02 |
| Total Miles Flown: |
139,458 |
| Assignment: |
Salt Lake City, Utah |
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November 1, 1924 – Reno, Nevada |
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February 1, 1925 – Salt Lake City,
Utah |
James M. Barnes was born in Stillwater, Oklahoma
on April 26, 1899. He was living in Salt Lake City, Utah,
when he was hired to be an airmail pilot flying out of that
city on August 24, 1924. Having flown privately in the area,
Barnes knew it well, and knew some of the tricks of the trade.
He noted once that "I learned it is not beset to fly
straight through Secret Pass, in the Ruby Mountains when there
is a high west wind. Winds shoot straight up."
In
November 1926, Barnes earned a reprimand from his boss, D.
B. Colyer, over a recent forced landing. Postal officials
were often exasperated by their pilots' occasional focus
on their flying skills over the need to move mail according
to the schedule. After Barnes made a forced landing having
spent what Colyer determined was too much time trying to correct
the problem himself, he chided the pilot that "it appears
that you passed over several fields in which a safe landing
could have been made after your motor quit; that possibly
too much effort and time was wasted in attempting to get the
motor back instead of selecting a suitable landing field."
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