Greayer Clover

He graduated from Los Angeles High School in 1915, winning the state interscholastic tennis cup as a senior.

He left Yale in his sophomore year to join the American Field Service in Europe as an ambulance driver.

On the United States entry into the war he joined the American service as a second lieutenant[3] and began training as an aviator.

[5] An aspiring writer, he kept a diary while serving which was published in 1919 under the title A Stop at Suzanne's: And Lower Flights, with an introduction by his father, Samuel Travers Clover.

Greayer's Oak Park, named for him, is located where West Avenue 38 dead-ends into North Figueroa Street in Los Angeles.

From the Memorial Volume of the American Field Service in France, 1921