
Fr. Schulte was a pilot and flew dangerous missions “over thousands of miles of Arctic wastes” bringing aid to those who needed it. Of his many stories, “his longest and greatest flight, probably, was when he flew 2,200 miles to Arctic Bay to reach a French missionary brother, Father Cochard, who was dangerously ill, and fly him to medical aid,” an 18 hour plane ride away.
It should be remembered what an extraordinary thing flight still was in those days. Wilbur and Orville’s famous flight in 1903 was only 45 years before this interview. This was quite a remarkable and daring feat. Because of it, this priest was to be awarded France’s medal of heroism, an honor rarely bestowed.
The flying priest was in town trying to raise funds for another plane. It was to be the first flying chapel in the world. He was a colorful man with an equally colorful history. He had made his first flight aboard the great German airship “Hindenburg,” which had met its fiery end the year before this article was written. He had also flown in what was known then as the Great War. “I flew for Germany, but without machine guns. But let us not talk of war.”
But the silence on the topic would not last long. War broke out in Europe the very next year on September 1st, 1939 and the “Great War” would no longer stand out as a unique word event, gaining for itself the numeral I to distinguish it from what would become Word War II.
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