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Brothers at War - by Alan Hammond Nichols & Alan Nichols (Hardcover)

Brothers at War - by  Alan Hammond Nichols & Alan Nichols (Hardcover)
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Last Price: 40.00 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br><p>The story of two brothers as volunteers in the French Army during World War I. </p><p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>At </p><p> the beginning of the First World War there was much sympathy in America </p><p> for the French, British and Russians against the Germans, Austrians and </p><p> Turks. But the United States Neutralization Act made it a felony for </p><p> citizens to support either the Allies or the Huns except for </p><p> humanitarian assistance to either side. To avoid the proscriptions of </p><p> the Neutralization Act many wealthy, prominent Americans bought </p><p> ambulances for the French Army and recruited college students from the </p><p> nation's top colleges and prep schools to man them. Jack and Alan </p><p> Nichols lived at home with their parents Walter Hammond Nichols and </p><p> Eleanor C. Nichols in the small town of Palo Alto, California, and were </p><p> students at Stanford just across the then street. Both were avid pro </p><p> "Allies". Alan, a Junior at Stanford, was older and left for France </p><p> first while Jack, a Freshman, followed some months later. For two small </p><p> town young teenage boys who had never left Palo Alto, crossing the </p><p> country for a ship to France was in itself an extraordinary adventure. </p><p> They both joined the French Army Ambulance Corps at first. Once they </p><p> were in France with the French Army the American Neutralization Act no </p><p> longer applied nor its prohibition of participation on either side of </p><p> the conflict. Alan later transferred to the French Army Air Corps and, </p><p> after the U.S. joined the fight on the Allies side, Jack to the American </p><p> Tank Corps. Both brothers functioned as "junior journalists." Alan wrote </p><p> long letters from France to his father about his experiences which were </p><p> then published by the Palo Alto Times from its "foreign corespondent." </p><p> They were then collected, edited and appeared as Letters Home: From the </p><p> Lafayette Flying Corps. Jack wrote his own book Two Years: World War I </p><p> Experiences in France. This book is now combined with a selection of </p><p> Alan's letters and the collaborative effort titled Brothers At War. It </p><p> is the story of their war lives serving, each in his own different way, </p><p> the French army, but with shockingly different endings.</p>

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