Before the American Escadrille became an established fact,
Thaw and Cowdin, who had mastered the Nieuport, managed to be
sent to the Verdun front. While there Cowdin was credited with
having brought down a German machine and was proposed for the
Médaille Militaire, the highest decoration that can
be awarded a non-commissioned officer or private.
After completing his training, receiving his military pilot's
brevet, and being perfected on the type of plane he is to use at
the front, an aviator is ordered to the reserve headquarters near
Paris to await his call. Kiffin Rockwell and Victor Chapman had
been there for months, and I had just arrived, when on the 16th
of April orders came for the Americans to join their escadrille
at Luxeuil, in the Vosges.
The rush was breathless! Never were flying clothes and fur
coats drawn from the quartermaster, belongings packed, and red
tape in the various administrative bureaux unfurled, with such
headlong haste. In a few hours we were aboard the train, panting,
but happy. Our party consisted of Sergeant Prince, and Rockwell,
Chapman, and myself, who were only corporals at that time. We
were joined at Luxeuil by Lieutenant Thaw and Sergeants Hall and
Cowdin.
For the veterans our arrival at the front was devoid of
excitement; for the three neophytes--Rockwell, Chapman, and
myself--it was the beginning of a new existence, the entry into
an unknown world. Of course Rockwell and Chapman had seen plenty
of warfare on the ground, but warfare in the air was as novel to
them as to me. For us all it contained unlimited possibilities
for initiative and service to France, and for them it must have
meant, too, the restoration of personality lost during those
months in the trenches with the Foreign Legion. Rockwell summed
it up characteristically.
"Well, we're off for the races," he remarked.
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