Like all worth-while institutions, the American Escadrille, of
which I have the honour of being a member, was of gradual growth.
When the war began, it is doubtful whether anybody anywhere
envisaged the possibility of an American entering the French
aviation service. Yet, by the fall of 1915, scarcely more than a
year later, there were six Americans serving as full-fledged
pilots, and now, in the summer of 1916, the list numbers fifteen
or more, with twice that number training for their pilot's
license in the military aviation schools.
The pioneer of them all was William Thaw, of Pittsburg, who is
to-day the only American holding a commission in the French
flying corps. Lieutenant Thaw, a flyer of considerable reputation
in America before the war, had enlisted in the Foreign Legion in
August, 1914. With considerable difficulty he had himself
transferred, in the early part of 1915, into aviation, and the
autumn of that year found him piloting a Caudron biplane, and
doing excellent observation work. At the same time, Sergeants
Norman Prince, of Boston, and Elliot Cowdin, of New York--who
were the first to enter the aviation service coming directly from
the United States--were at the front on Voisin planes with a
cannon mounted in the bow.
Sergeant Bert Hall, who signs from the Lone Star State and had
got himself shifted from the Foreign Legion to aviation soon
after Thaw, was flying a Nieuport fighting machine, and, a little
later, instructing less-advanced students of the air in the Avord
Training School. His particular chum in the Foreign Legion, James
Bach, who also had become an aviator, had the distressing
distinction soon after he reached the front of becoming the first
American to fall into the hands of the enemy. Going to the
assistance of a companion who had broken down in landing a spy in
the German lines, Bach smashed his machine against a tree. Both
he and his French comrade were captured, and Bach was twice
court-martialed by the Germans on suspicion of being an American
franc-tireur--the penalty for which is death! He was
acquitted but of course still languishes in a prison camp
"somewhere in Germany." The sixth of the original sextet was
Adjutant Didier Masson, who did exhibition flying in the States
until--Carranza having grown ambitious in Mexico--he turned his
talents to spotting los Federales for General Obregon.
When the real war broke out, Masson answered the call of his
French blood and was soon flying and fighting for the land of his
ancestors.
Of the other members of the escadrille Sergeant Givas Lufbery,
American citizen and soldier, but dweller in the world at large,
was among the earliest to wear the French airman's wings.
Exhibition work with a French pilot in the Far East prepared him
efficiently for the task of patiently unloading explosives on to
German military centres from a slow-moving Voisin which was his
first mount. Upon the heels of Lufbery came two more graduates of
the Foreign Legion--Kiffin Rockwell, of Asheville, N.C., who had
been wounded at Carency; Victor Chapman, of New York, who after
recovering from his wounds became an airplane bomb-dropper and so
caught the craving to become a pilot. At about this time one Paul
Pavelka, whose birthplace was Madison, Conn., and who from the
age of fifteen had sailed the seven seas, managed to slip out of
the Foreign Legion into aviation and joined the other Americans
at Pau.
There seems to be a fascination to aviation, particularly when
it is coupled with fighting. Perhaps it's because the game is
new, but more probably because as a rule nobody knows anything
about it. Whatever be the reason, adventurous young Americans
were attracted by it in rapidly increasing numbers. Many of them,
of course, never got fascinated beyond the stage of talking about
joining. Among the chaps serving with the American ambulance
field sections a good many imaginations were stirred, and a few
actually did enlist, when, toward the end of the summer of 1915,
the Ministry of War, finding that the original American pilots
had made good, grew more liberal in considering applications.
Chouteau Johnson, of New York; Lawrence Rumsey, of Buffalo;
Dudley Hill, of Peekskill, N.Y.; and Clyde Balsley, of El Paso;
one after another doffed the ambulance driver's khaki for the
horizon-blue of the French flying corps. All of them had seen
plenty of action, collecting the wounded under fire, but they
were all tired of being non-combatant spectators. More or less
the same feeling actuated me, I suppose. I had come over from
Carthage, N.C., in January, 1915, and worked with an American
ambulance section in the Bois-le-Prêtre. All along I had
been convinced that the United States ought to aid in the
struggle against Germany. With that conviction, it was plainly up
to me to do more than drive an ambulance. The more I saw the
splendour of the fight the French were fighting, the more I felt
like an embusqué--what the British call a
"shirker." So I made up my mind to go into aviation.
A special channel had been created for the reception of
applications from Americans, and my own was favourably replied to
within a few days. It took four days more to pass through all the
various departments, sign one's name to a few hundred papers, and
undergo the physical examinations. Then I was sent to the
aviation depot at Dijon and fitted out with a uniform and
personal equipment. The next stop was the school at Pau, where I
was to be taught to fly. My elation at arriving there was second
only to my satisfaction at being a French soldier. It was a vast
improvement, I thought, in the American Ambulance.
Talk about forming an all-American flying unit, or escadrille,
was rife while I was at Pau. What with the pilots already
breveted, and the élèves, or pupils in the
training-schools, there were quite enough of our compatriots to
man the dozen airplanes in one escadrille. Every day somebody
"had it absolutely straight" that we were to become a unit at the
front, and every other day the report turned out to be untrue.
But at last, in the month of February, our dream came true. We
learned that a captain had actually been assigned to command an
American escadrille and that the Americans at the front had been
recalled and placed under his orders. Soon afterward we
élèves got another delightful thrill.
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