Dallas Public Library

Slats Rodgers and the Love Field Lunatics, Jim Gatewood

Label
Slats Rodgers and the Love Field Lunatics, Jim Gatewood
Language
eng
Illustrations
illustrationsportraits
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Slats Rodgers and the Love Field Lunatics
Responsibility statement
Jim Gatewood
Summary
"Slats grew up tough in mind, body and spirit, but constantly in and out of trouble. When he reached the age of eighteen, he hitched up his pants, left the farm, married a fifteen year old girl, lied about his age and got a job with the railroad. His strong will and keen mind enabled him to slug his way from yard-boy to engineer with the railroad. The young soldier of fortune discovered he could make extra money hauling bootleg whiskey in the cab of his locomotive. He used the money to construct the first airplane built in Texas. At the end of World War I, Love Field became a Mecca for gypsy barnstorming pilots and a flying circus was formed called Slats Rodgers and the Love Field Lunatics. The circus was used as a cover for the delivery of his bootleg whiskey. When Roosevelt was elected President of the United States in 1933, he repealed the Volstead Act. The sixteen year window of time for bootleggers slammed shut. Mexico beckoned to Slats and he became a gun runner involved in a small revolution. Later he left Mexico, a rich man. With the gold he brought out of Mexico, he purchased an airfield in Mission, Texas and went into the crop dusting business. When Slats reached the age that his eye sight dimmed and his reflexes slowed, he decided to sell his Mission airfield and the crop dusting business. He tried ranching, and it was a disaster. So, he opened a steak house with a dice table in the back room. In no time, he was able to recover from his financial loss. He then bought lake front property at Zapata, Texas where he retired"--Jacket

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