JAMES C. MARS
1876-1944

AKA "Bud" Mars
 
 
James C. Mars
 
 
JAMES C. MARS - 1910
Library of Congress Collection, 10-9-06
 

 
   
  Fort Smith, AK
1910
Sheepshead Bay
1910
Montana
1910
 

 
   
  Manila Carnival
1911
Early Bird Meeting
ca 1937
Online Resources  

 
   
  Centennial Proclamation
2010
 

 
 
 
 
JAMES C. MARS DIES - 1944
     A heart ailment ended the life of James C. Mars, picked as a member of the American team at Belmont in 1910. As a first lieutenant in the aviation section of the Signal Corps in World War I, Mars trained soldiers to fly. After his discharge from the army in 1918, he built an airport in Westchester County, New York, and acted as instructor there until the airport was bouoght by the Westchester Park Commission in 1924. For a time he was a real estate operator in New York and Florida, then he went into the gas engineering business. He lived in Los Angeles until 1942, when he moved to South Pasadena. Mars died in the Los Angeles Veterans Hospital on 25 July, 1944 at age sixty-eight.
from Blue Ribbon of the Air
by Henry Serrano Villard, 1987

     Editors Note: I was privileged to know Henry during several years before his death.
He was an fascinating companion and a lifetime friend of aviation. I heartily recommend his book to you for more on Mars and for the complete story of the Gordon Bennett Race.
 
 
Editor's Note:
If you have any more information on this Early Bird,
please contact me.
E-mail to Ralph Cooper
 
BackNext Home