STATIONS.

The following are the stations at which Marine aviators operated, showing whether they operated independently, with the Navy, or with the Army:

Independently.Navy.Army.
Marine flying field, Miami, Fla.Marine section naval air station, Miami, Fla.Roosevelt Field, Mineola, Long Island.
Balloon Company, Marine Barracks, Quantico, Va.Day Wing, Northern Bombing Group, France.Gerstner Field, Lake Charles, La.
Naval Base No. 13, Azores.Naval air station, Pensacola, Fla.Army balloon schools at St. Louis, Mo., and Omaha, Nebr.
Marine flying field, Philadelphia, Pa.
Naval air station, Cape May, N. J.

PLANES OPERATED BY MARINES.

The number of planes operated by Marine aviators at Pensacola, Fla., on April 6, 1917, was four, and the type, AH Curtiss.

On November 11, 1918, the following planes were operated by the personnel of Marine Aviation:

Marine flying field, Miami, Fla.:
De Haviland 4’s, Curtiss JN’s, Thomas-Morse scouts, and M-1 defense planes 118
Naval air station, Miami, Fla.:
HS-1-L, and HS-2-L flying boats, and R-6 Curtiss seaplanes24
Balloon Company, Quantico, Va.:
N-9 and R-6 seaplanes3
Caquot and kite balloons4
Naval base No. 13, Azores:
R-6 and N-9 seaplanes and HS-2-L, and HS-1-L flying boats18
Northern Bombing Group, France:
De Haviland 4’s and 9’s177

At other times the following planes were operated by Marine pilots:

At Philadelphia, Pa.:
Curtiss JN’s6
Curtiss R-6’s2
Curtiss N-9’s2
At Roosevelt field, Mineola, Long Island:
Army land planes12
At Gerstner field, Lake Charles, La.:
Army land planes12
At Cape May naval air station:
R-6 and N-9 seaplanes8
Total planes operated by Marine pilots386