
Russell T. Hitt (1905–1992)
Author of Jungle Pilot
About the Author
Russell T. Hitt had a long and distinguished career in journalism. He died in 1992 at the age of 87.
Works by Russell T. Hitt
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Hitt, Russell T.
- Birthdate
- 1905-09-16
- Date of death
- 1992
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Medill School of Journalism (M.S.)
- Occupations
- journalist
editor (Eternity) - Organizations
- Eternity magazine
- Map Location
- USA
Members
Reviews
Jungle Pilot: The Gripping Story of the Life and Witness of Nate Saint, Martyred Missionary to Ecuador by Russell T. Hitt
First rate and unusual missionary biography. Hitt does such a good job at including formative experiences and skills that served Nate Saint on the mission field. Read this out loud to our children, in particular because Saint's life showed you don't have to be a preacher to have a heart for missions.
Nate Saint's short, intense life was as full of incident and accident as any active young American's could be, but it was also full of entire dedication to the cause that claimed it: that of offering the Gospel of Christ to the last and loneliest outpost of man. Here is the whole amazing story, from harum-scarum boyhood to the last burst of activity in planning the memorable airborne mission to the Aucas - much of it told in Nate's own vivid language. Nate Saint was early destined for his show more role as a pioneer. He came from a long line of inventors and was born into a family where art, mechanics, and deep religious faith seemed mixed in equal proportions. After a tour of duty in the Air Force, cut short by a recurrence of osteomyelitis, he joined the now well-known Missionary Aviation Fellowship in its early days as mechanic-pilot. Before long he became the planner and logistics expert of "Operation Auca." It was he who worked out dozens of ingenious aids to their missionary enterprises and as pilot perfected the now-famous "bucket drop" for plane-to-ground communication. Nate was as curious, impulsive, and experimental a boy as ever pushed daylight in an American small town. His love of "gimmicks" ofttimes dismayed, sometimes blessed his playmates and associates as he grew older. But the slightest incident might uncover his deep seriousness, his passion for soul-winning, for supporting God's people in their attack on ignorance and savagery. Having given his love so often and so freely, he found it easy to accept the Greater Love offered him as he and his four teammates met their god on "Palm Beach" in Auca-land. show less
Interesting biography of the life of Nate Saint and his work as a pilot in Ecuador. This book really encompassed his whole life, not just his time as a missionary. It was great to get to know the man. It contained many parts of letters he had written, so some of the book is first hand, which was interesting.
He was killed by a native group called "Aucas" in a group of men including Jim Elliot (husband of author Elizabeth Elliot).
Worthwhile read.
He was killed by a native group called "Aucas" in a group of men including Jim Elliot (husband of author Elizabeth Elliot).
Worthwhile read.
Jungle Pilot: The Gripping Story of the Life and Witness of Nate Saint, Martyred Missionary to Ecuador by Russell T. Hitt
Even if you're not religious, this is a gripping account of a group of missionaries' attempt to contact a little-known tribe in Ecuador and the tragic (and eventually, not-so-tragic) events that followed. The book it well written and researched, even containing some relevant photographs. It concludes with an epilogue by one of the missionaries' sons.
Lists
Ambleside Books (1)
Ambleside Year 8 (1)
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Statistics
- Works
- 11
- Members
- 1,452
- Popularity
- #17,698
- Rating
- 4.1
- Reviews
- 18
- ISBNs
- 17
- Languages
- 2











