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Lafayette Escadrille

The La Fayette Escadrille (French: Escadrille de La Fayette) was the name of the French Air Force unit escadrille N 124 during the First World War (1914–1918). This escadrille of the Aéronautique Militaire was composed largely of American volunteer pilots flying fighters. It was named in honor of the Marquis de Lafayette, French hero of the American Revolutionary War. In September 1917, the escadrille was transferred to the US Army under the designation 103rd Aero Squadron. In 1921, The French Air Force recreated a N124 unit who claimed lineage from the war-time La Fayette escadrille and is now part of the escadron 2/4 La Fayette.

Escadrille La Fayette
Insignia of the N 124
La Fayette Escadrille
Active1916–1917
AllegianceFrance
BranchAéronautique Militaire
Military Aeronautics
TypeFighter Squadron
Engagements
World War I
Lafayette Escadrille Pin (Escadrille N 124) with bust of Chief Sitting Bull. Chief Sitting Bull N124 was conserved by EC 2/4 La Fayette of the French Air Force.

History edit

 
Dr. Edmund Gros
 
Kiffin Rockwell, Capt. Georges Thenault, Norman Prince, Lt. Alfred de Laage de Meux, Elliot Cowdin, Bert Hall, James McConnell and Victor Chapman (left to right)
 
The mascots of the Lafayette Escadrille were the two lion cubs Whiskey and Soda
 
Edmond Charles Clinton Genet was the first American to die after America entered the war against Germany.

Dr. Edmund L. Gros, a founder of the American Hospital of Paris and organizer of the American Ambulance Field Service, and Norman Prince, a Harvard-educated lawyer and an American expatriate already flying for France, led the attempts to persuade the French government of the value of a volunteer American air unit fighting for France. The aim was to have their efforts recognized by the American public and thus, it was hoped, the resulting publicity would rouse interest in abandoning neutrality and joining the fight. Authorized by the French Air Department on March 21, 1916, the Escadrille de Chasse Nieuport 124 (Escadrille Américaine) was deployed on April 20 in Luxeuil-les-Bains, France, near Switzerland's border.[1][2] Despite the unit's weak notorious status in the United States, the Escadrille proved useful for the French and Americans, taking into consideration that before the First World War, aircraft were not considered combat units. Initially, there were seven Americans pilots: Victor E. Chapman, Elliott C. Cowdin, Bert Hall, James Rogers McConnell, Norman Prince, Kiffin Rockwell, and William Thaw II.[3] The full roster included 38 pilots.[citation needed]

The unit's aircraft, mechanics, and uniforms were French, as was the commander, Captain Georges Thénault. Five French pilots were also on the roster, serving at various times in command positions. Raoul Lufbery, a French-born American citizen, became the squadron's first, and ultimately their highest scoring flying ace, with 16 confirmed victories.[4]

Two unofficial members of the Escadrille Américaine, lion cubs named Whiskey and Soda, provided countless moments of relief from battle stress to fliers.[5]

A German objection filed with the U.S. government, over the actions of a supposed neutral nation, led to the name change to La Fayette Escadrille in December 1916, as the original name implied that the U.S. was allied to France rather than neutral.[6]

The Escadrille was disbanded on 18 February 1918. The American personnel transferred to the United States Army Air Service as the 103d Aero Squadron, while the French formed the Escadrille SPA.124 Jeanne d'Arc. A total of 224 Americans served in the unit. Of those, 51 died in combat, while another 11 died of other causes. Fifteen became prisoners of war. Eleven pilots became aces.[7]: 193 

Not all American pilots were in the Lafayette Escadrille; over 200 fought for France as part of the La Fayette Flying Corps.[N 1] On 3 April 1918, eleven American pilots from the Air Service of the American Expeditionary Force were assigned to Escadrille N.471, an air defense squadron stationed near Paris.[N 2] American flyers served with this French unit until 18 July 1918, and it is sometimes referred to as the Second Escadrille Américaine.[11]

Later, the Escadron de Chasse 2/4 La Fayette retook the unit designation of "La Fayette", this time however in the French Air Force.[12]

Combat edit

 
La Fayette Escadrille banner.

The first major action seen by the squadron was 13 May 1916 at the Battle of Verdun and five days later, Kiffin Rockwell recorded the unit's first aerial victory.[6] On 23 June, the Escadrille suffered its first fatality when Victor Chapman was shot down over Douaumont.[6][13] The unit was posted to the front until September 1916, when the unit was moved back to Luxeuil-les-Bains in 7 Army area. On 23 September, Rockwell was killed when his Nieuport was downed by the gunner in a German Albatros observation plane[14] and in October, Norman Prince was fatally injured after crashing on final approach to his airfield.[15] The squadron, flying Nieuport, later Spad, scouts, suffered heavy losses, but it received replacements until a total of 38 American pilots eventually served with the squadron. So many Americans volunteered to fly for France that they were eventually farmed out to other French squadrons. As a group, the Americans who flew in the war for France's air service, the Aéronautique militaire, are collectively known as the La Fayette Flying Corps. Altogether, 265 American volunteers served in the corps.[citation needed]

On 8 February 1918, the squadron was disbanded, and 12 of its American members inducted into the U.S. Air Service as members of the 103rd Aero Squadron. For a brief period, it retained its French aircraft and mechanics. Most of its veteran members were set to work training newly arrived American pilots. The 103rd was credited with a further 45 kills before the Armistice went into effect on 11 November.[16] The French Escadrille SPA.124, also known as the Jeanne d'Arc Escadrille, continued Lafayette Escadrille's traditions in the Service Aéronautique.[citation needed]

 
Nieuport 17 flown by René Dorme while with escadrille N.3 during the battle of the Somme, late 1916
WW1 equipment in service
Equipment Beginning End
Nieuport 11 – Bébé January 1916 March 1916
Société Pour L'Aviation et ses Dérivés SPAD VII May 1916 1928
Nieuport 17 January 1916 November 1928

Casualties edit

Nine pilots died in the Lafayette Escadrille while others perished after leaving the unit. More sustained non-fatal injuries. The planes flown were flimsy, and not as safe as those of later years. Engines and other parts failed, and machine-guns often jammed when they were needed. One man asked to be moved back to his infantry unit, where "he could be safe." The first pilot to be killed in action was Victor Chapman.[17] Edmond Genet became the first American casualty of World War I following the U.S. entry into the war. Other Americans had died previous to the U.S. declaration of war, but since Genet had been active in the Escadrille since before the U.S. entry into the war, his death only a few days after the U.S. declaration of war made him the first official U.S. casualty.[citation needed]

Members edit

 
Standing (left to right) Soubiron, Doolittle, Campbell, Persons, Bridgman, Dugan, MacMonagle, Lowell, Willis, Jones, Peterson and de Maison-Rouge. Seated (left to right) Hill, Masson with "Soda," Thaw, Thénault, Lufbery with "Whiskey," Johnson, Bigelow and Rockwell
 
Lafayette Escadrille pilots with Fram and a Nieuport 17, March 1916. V. Chapman, E. Cowdin, Wm. Thaw, N. Prince, K. Rockwell, B. Hall, Lt. Delnage, J.K. McConnell, Capt. Thenault
 
James Norman Hall (1887–1951) of the Lafayette Escadrille, 1917

After the Great War, membership in the Escadrille Lafayette was claimed by over 4,000 people, "including a dozen well-known Hollywood personalities and several high government officials.[18]

Also, from the beginning there was a great deal of confusion between American pilots who were members of the Lafayette Escadrille, a designated all-American aviation squadron of the French Service Aeronautique; and the Lafayette Flying Corps, an unofficial paper organization highlighting in its roster published during the war the names of approximately 231 American volunteer aviators who flew with more than 90 French operational escadrilles.[19][20] Already existing confusion was exacerbated after a screening of the film Flyboys in 2006.

Five French officers and 38 American pilots, also known as "The Valiant 38", were members of the Lafayette Escadrille.[21][22]

French officers edit

American pilots edit

A dagger (†) indicates that the individual was killed in action, including those who subsequently entered the Air Service, or died of wounds received.

  1. 1Lt. Stuart Emmet Edgar
  2. 1Lt. Frank Luke Jr. †
  3. Horace Clyde Balsley
  4. Stephen Sohier Bigelow
  5. Ray Claflin Bridgman
  6. Andrew Courtney Campbell Jr. †
  7. Victor Emmanuel Chapman
  8. Elliott Christopher Cowdin II
  9. Charles Heave Dolan
  10. James Ralph Doolittle †
  11. John Armstrong Drexel
  12. William Edward Dugan Jr.
  13. Christopher William Ford
  14. Edmond Charles Clinton Genet
  15. James Norman Hall
  16. Bert Hall
  17. Willis Bradley Haviland
  18. Thomas Moses Hewitt Jr.
  19. Dudley Lawrence Hill
  20. Edward Foote Hinkle
  21. Ronald Wood Hoskier †
  22. Charles Chouteau Johnson
  23. Henry Sweet Jones
  24. Walter Lovell
  25. Raoul Lufbery
  26. James Rogers McConnell
  27. Douglas MacMonagle †
  28. Kenneth Archibald Marr
  29. Didier Masson
  30. Joseph P Murphy
  31. Edwin C. "Ted" Parsons
  32. Paul Pavelka
  33. David M. Peterson
  34. Frederick Henry Prince Jr.
  35. Norman Prince
  36. Kiffin Yates Rockwell
  37. Robert Lockerbie Rockwell
  38. Laurence Dana Rumsey Jr.
  39. Robert Soubiran
  40. William Thaw
  41. Harold Buckley Willis
  42. Frank E. Starrett

Citations edit

The Group La Fayette totalized eight citations at the orders of Air Army, bearing the right to wear the Fourragere with ribbon colors of the Croix de guerre 1914–1918 (France), as well as the Fourragere with ribbon colors of the Médaille Militaire.

Summary edit

 
"La Fayette Escadrille" Memorial Arch was built between 1926 and 1928, and was inaugurated on July 4, 1928, U.S. Independence Day, in the notable presence of Ferdinand Foch and Paul Doumer. Inscribed in French on top in capital letters "In memory to the Heroes of Escadrille La Fayette dead for the Defense of Right and Liberty".

At the decommission of the unit on January 1, 1918, the following registry noted:

  • 267 Americans volunteered in French aviation;
  • 255 received their pilot brevet;
  • 108 served at the front;
  • 66 were killed, out of which 51 killed in action;
  • 19 were wounded;
  • 15 were made prisoners of war;
  • 199 victories were known to be officially recognized.

Honorary members edit

  • Amelia Earhart on June 6, 1932, a couple of days after becoming the first female aviator to fly solo across the Atlantic, was made an honorary member of the Escadrille La Fayette.[24]
 
Thomas M. Hewitt Jr

World War II edit

 
Black and white pictorial of 12 Fighters (French: Chasseurs) of the U.S.AAF aligned on an aerodrome in front of an official group. The ceremony marked the official transfer of 12 Curtiss P-40 Warhawks to the Groupe de Chasse 2/5, at Casablanca, on January 9, 1943.

La Fayette Escadrille became the third flight unit (Escadrille) of the Groupe de Chasse 2/5 La Fayette.

Commandant of the third flight unit (escadrille)
Nom Commandment Start Commandment End
Captain Monraisse September 1939 October 3, 1940
Lieutenant Villacèque October 4, 1940 January 19, 1944
Lieutenant de Monplanet January 20, 1944 May 8, 1945
Equipment in service in the flight unit (escadrille)
Equipment Beginning End
Curtiss H75 September 1939 November 1942
  Curtiss H75A1 July 1940 September 1940
  Dewoitine D.520 October 1942 November 1942
  Curtiss P-40 Warhawk-F November 1942 March 1943
  Curtiss P-40 Warhawk-L March 1943 March 1944
Republic P-47D Thunderbolt May 1944 May 1945

Tributes edit

  • La Fayette Escadrille Memorial Cemetery, Villeneuve-l'Étang Imperial Estate, in Marnes-la-Coquette, Hauts-de-Seine, outside of Paris, the final work of French architect Alexandre Marcel, 1928. The memorial commemorates the birthplace of American combat aviation, and serves as a symbol of the Franco-American comradeship during World War I. This site honors the American volunteer pilots who flew with French squadrons during the Great War, and is the final resting place for some of America's first combat aviators and their French officers. Dedicated in 1928, the memorial cemetery consists of an ornate central arch, half the size of the Arc de Triomphe in Paris, with a French inscription on the facade, and an English translation on the rear. The central arch is flanked by wings on either side that include open hallways terminating in end pavilions. A reflecting pool runs the length of the structure. Behind the memorial is a semi-circular terrace that forms the roof of the crypt below. Stained-glass windows in the crypt depict the major battles of the Western Front. In the memorial crypt are 68 sarcophagi, one for each of the aviators of the Lafayette Flying Corps who lost their lives during World War I. Forty-nine of these aviators are entombed in the crypt along with two of their French commanding officers. The remainder rest in other locations, or their remains were never recovered. By the early 21st century, decades of delayed maintenance to the memorial had led to structural damage, water intrusion and corrosion that required large-scale repair. Understanding its significance in the history of American military aviation, the American Battle Monuments Commission (ABMC), through an agreement with the Lafayette Escadrille Memorial Foundation and the French government that included financial support, led restoration efforts in 2015 and 2016, in time for the 100th anniversary of the formation of the squadron. In January 2017, ABMC officially assumed ownership and responsibility for the Lafayette Escadrille Memorial Cemetery, making it the 9th commemorative World War I cemetery administered by this federal agency.
  • Memorial to the American Volunteers. On 4 July 1923, the President of the French Council of State, Raymond Poincaré, dedicated a monument in the Place des États-Unis, Paris, to the Americans who had volunteered to fight in World War I in the service of France.
  • A statue by the sculptor Gutzon Borglum titled Aviator (1919) was erected on the grounds of the University of Virginia in Charlottesville in the memory of James R. McConnell, who was killed during the war.
  • Two other memorials are dedicated to McConnell and located in Carthage, North Carolina. The first is a granite column flanked by two cannon, the other is a granite stone inscribed in French at the community house.
 
Community House Monument to James R. McConnell

The group was the subject of one of the "We Were There" historical books for young adults.==Fictional accounts== The story of the Lafayette Escadrille has been depicted in three feature films:

The Lafayette Escadrille also appears in "Attack of the Hawkmen", an episode of The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles in which Indy is temporarily assigned to the group as an aerial reconnaissance photographer.

The exploits of the Lafayette Escadrille are also captured in several works of historical fiction including: Falcons of France by Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall (1929) and To the Last Man by Jeffrey Shaara .

Legacy edit

The Lafayette Escadrille is part of the 2018 short documentary Raoul Lufbery: Fighter Ace. The film subject is fighter ace Raoul Lufbery, it was directed by Alexander Zane Irwin and produced by Daniel Bernardi with the collaboration of El Dorado Films and the Veteran Documentary Corps.[25]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Compared with the Lafayette Escadrille, larger numbers of American volunteers served with the Royal Flying Corps, Royal Naval Air Service and Royal Air Force during World War I.
  2. ^ Escadrille N.471 is listed by authoritative, Les escadrilles de l'aéronautique militaire française: symbolique et histoire, 1912–1920 (2004).[8] Names of American pilots are provided in Lafayette Escadrille: America's Most Famous Squadron (2012).[9] As for insignia, an American pennant on a staff crossed by an arrow and then a black buffalo on a yellow oval background with a black border were used. Walter A. Avery and Lancing C. Holden served with Escadrille N.471, among others.[10]

Citations edit

  1. ^ "The Lafayette Escadrille: Conflict Locations". from the original on 2014-01-02. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
  2. ^ Guttman, Jon. SPA124 Lafayette Escadrille: American Volunteer Airmen in World War I. Oxford: Osprey, 2004.
  3. ^ "National Museum of the U.S. Air Force: Escadrille Americaine". from the original on 2017-07-18. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
  4. ^ Flammer, Philip M. The Vivid Air, the Lafayette Escadrille. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1981.
  5. ^ Janus, Allan. Animals Aloft: Photographs from the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum 2014-06-23 at the Wayback Machine. Piermont, NH: Bunker Hill, 2005, p. 35.
  6. ^ a b c Duffy, Michael. "Lafayette Escadrille." 2011-04-29 at the Wayback Machine firstworldwar.com. Retrieved: 20 May 2013.
  7. ^ Farwell, Byron (2000). Over There: The United States in the Great War, 1917–1918. W. W. Norton & Company. p. 193. ISBN 978-0393320282.
  8. ^ France, David Jean, Georges-Didier Rohrbacher, and Bernard Palmieri. Les escadrilles de l'aéronautique militaire française: symbolique et histoire, 1912–1920. Vincennes: SHAA, 2004.
  9. ^ Narayan Sengupta. (2012). Lafayette Escadrille: America's Most Famous Squadron. Appendix C: Escadrille N.471.
  10. ^ Miller, Roger G. Like a Thunderbolt: The Lafayette Escadrille and the Advent of American Pursuit in World War I. Washington, D.C.: Air Force History and Museums Program, 2007.
  11. ^ Charles Wooley. The Second Escadrille Américaine, Cross & Cockade, Vol. 11, No. 1, Spring 1970, pp. 1–8.
  12. ^ [1] 2018-01-23 at the Wayback Machine, |Traditions de la N 124, Traditions-Air, November 14, 2013
  13. ^ The Story of the Lafayette Escadrille. 2014-05-09 at the Wayback Machine Told by its Commander, Captain Georges Thénault. Translated by Walter Duranty. Boston: Small, Maynard & Company (1921).
  14. ^ "Kiffin Y. Rockwell, World War I Aviator, Lafayette Escadrille: Biography & Photographs." 2011-05-26 at the Wayback Machine Virginia Military Institute. Retrieved: 20 May 2013.
  15. ^ Gordon, Dennis. Lafayette Escadrille Pilot Biographies. Missoula, MT: Doughboy Historical Society, 1991.
  16. ^ Miller, Roger G. Like a Thunderbolt: The Lafayette Escadrille and the Advent of American Pursuit in World War I. Washington, D.C.: Air Force History and Museums, 2007.
  17. ^ Flood, Charles (2015). First to Fly.
  18. ^ The Escadrille Lafayette and its 'ringers' 2017-08-13 at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, September 7, 1983.
  19. ^ The Lafayette Flying Corps 2016-03-26 at the Wayback Machine, New England Aviation Museum
  20. ^ The Lafayette Flying Core Member Roster 2016-07-02 at the Wayback Machine, New England Aviation Museum
  21. ^ "List of Pilots." 2009-12-29 at the Wayback Machine pagesperso-orange.fr. Retrieved: 19 August 2010.
  22. ^ ‘My burial is of no import’: The American pilots who fought for France in WWI 2017-08-22 at the Wayback Machine, The Washington Post, May 29, 2017.
  23. ^ a b c d e f May 1, 1928, directory published by Memorial De L'Escadille Lafayette
  24. ^ [2], Amelia becomes honorary member of La Fayette Escadrille, November 14, 2013.
  25. ^ "Major Raoul Lufbery (Short 2018)". IMDb. Before there was an Air Force, there was Lafayette Escadrille.

Bibliography edit

  • Azzou, El-Mostafa. "L'Escadrille Lafayette: Des aviateurs Americains dans la Guerre du Rif (1921–1926) (in French)". Guerres Mondiales et Conflits Contemporains, Volume 53, Issue 209, January 2003, pp. 57–63.
  • Bowen, Ezra. Knights of the Air. New York: Time Life Books Aviation Series, 1980. ISBN 0809432528.
  • Brown, Walt, Jr. An American for Lafayette: The Diaries of E.C.C. Genet, Lafayette Escadrille. Charlottesville Virginia: University Press of Virginia, 1981. ISBN 0813908930.
  • "Lafayette Escadrille." firstworldwar.com, 2009. Encyclopedia Software, 1 March 2011.
  • Flammer, Philip M. The Vivid Air: The Lafayette Escadrille (University of Georgia Press, 1981). ISBN 0820305375
  • Flood, Charles Bracelen. First to Fly: The Story of the Lafayette Escadrille, the American Heroes who Flew for France in World War I (Grove/Atlantic, Inc., 2015). ISBN 978-0802123657
  • Hall, Bert. En L'air. New York: The New Library, Inc, 1918. ASIN B000M1DSJM
  • Hall, Bert. One Man's War: The Story of the Lafayette Escadrille. London: J. Hamilton, 1929. ASIN B00087AA7I
  • Hennessy, Juliette A. "Men and planes of World War I and a history of the Lafayette Escadrille" Air Power History 61.2 (2014): 14–27.
  • Hynes, Samuel. The Unsubstantial Air: American Fliers in the First World War (2014). ISBN 978-0374278007
  • Mason, Herbert Molloy. The Lafayette Escadrille. New York: Smithmark Publishers, 1995. ISBN 0831757124
  • McConnell, James R. "Flying For France: Further Experiences Of An Aviator In The American Escadrille In France". The World's Work: A History of Our TimeXXXIII, March 1917, pp. 497–509. Retrieved: 4 August 2009.
  • McConnell, James. "Flying For France: With The American Escadrille At Verdun". The World's Work: A History of Our Time XXXIII, November 1916, pp. 41–53. Retrieved: 4 August 2009.
  • Miller, Roger G. Like a Thunderbolt: The Lafayette Escadrille and the Advent of American Pursuit in World War I. Washington, D.C.: Air Force History and Museums Program, 2007. OCLC 163120934
  • Morse, Edwin W. America in the War: The Vanguard of American Volunteers in the Fighting Lines and in Humanitarian Service, August, 1914–April, 1917. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1919.
  • Murphy, T. B. Kiffin Rockwell, the Lafayette Escadrille and the Birth of the United States Air Force (McFarland, 2016). ISBN 978-1476664019
  • Nasuti, Guy. "Motivations of the Lafayette Escadrille Pilots." militaryhistoryonline.com, 2006. Article Software, 1 March 2011.
  • Nordhoff, Charles and James Norman Hall. The Lafayette Flying Corps. Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1920.
  • Parsons, Edwin C. I Flew with the Lafayette Escadrille. Indianapolis, Indiana: E. C. Seale and Company, Inc., 1930 first edition, reprint 1953.
  • Shaara, Jeff. To the Last Man: A Novel of the First World War. New York: The Random House Publishing Group, 2004. ISBN 0345461347.
  • Thenault, Georges. The Story of the LaFayette Escadrille – Told By its Commander Captain Georges Thenault (Translated by Walter Duranty, with An Introduction By Andre Tardieu; High Commissioner of Franco–American Affairs). Boston: Small, Maynard & Company, 1921.
  • Veil Charles H, "Adventure's A Wench" – The Autobiography of Charles Herbert Veil as told to Howard Marsh, Grosset & Dunlap Publishers, New York, 1934
  • Wilson, Thomas. Kickapoo. Thomaston, Maine: Dan River Press, 2006. ISBN 978-0897542166.

External links edit

  • Lafayette Escadrille 2013-10-30 at the Wayback Machine, New England Air Museum Online Exhibit
  • Lafayette Escadrille 2014-01-02 at the Wayback Machine, American Aviators of World War I
  • Escadrille La Fayette N 124/Spa 124, Les escadrilles françaises de la guerre 1914–1918
  • The Lafayette Escadrille Memorial

lafayette, escadrille, this, article, about, french, force, unit, american, flyers, american, flyers, french, force, lafayette, flying, corps, film, film, lafayette, squadron, redirects, here, confused, with, brigade, fayette, fayette, escadrille, french, esca. This article is about the WWI French Air Force unit of American flyers For the American flyers of the WWI French Air Force see Lafayette Flying Corps For the film see Lafayette Escadrille film Lafayette Squadron redirects here Not to be confused with Brigade La Fayette The La Fayette Escadrille French Escadrille de La Fayette was the name of the French Air Force unit escadrille N 124 during the First World War 1914 1918 This escadrille of the Aeronautique Militaire was composed largely of American volunteer pilots flying fighters It was named in honor of the Marquis de Lafayette French hero of the American Revolutionary War In September 1917 the escadrille was transferred to the US Army under the designation 103rd Aero Squadron In 1921 The French Air Force recreated a N124 unit who claimed lineage from the war time La Fayette escadrille and is now part of the escadron 2 4 La Fayette Escadrille La FayetteInsignia of the N 124La Fayette EscadrilleActive1916 1917AllegianceFranceBranchAeronautique MilitaireMilitary AeronauticsTypeFighter SquadronEngagementsWorld War I Lafayette Escadrille Pin Escadrille N 124 with bust of Chief Sitting Bull Chief Sitting Bull N124 was conserved by EC 2 4 La Fayette of the French Air Force Contents 1 History 2 Combat 3 Casualties 4 Members 4 1 French officers 4 2 American pilots 5 Citations 5 1 Summary 6 Honorary members 7 World War II 8 Tributes 9 Legacy 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Notes 11 2 Citations 11 3 Bibliography 12 External linksHistory edit nbsp Dr Edmund Gros nbsp Kiffin Rockwell Capt Georges Thenault Norman Prince Lt Alfred de Laage de Meux Elliot Cowdin Bert Hall James McConnell and Victor Chapman left to right nbsp The mascots of the Lafayette Escadrille were the two lion cubs Whiskey and Soda nbsp Edmond Charles Clinton Genet was the first American to die after America entered the war against Germany Dr Edmund L Gros a founder of the American Hospital of Paris and organizer of the American Ambulance Field Service and Norman Prince a Harvard educated lawyer and an American expatriate already flying for France led the attempts to persuade the French government of the value of a volunteer American air unit fighting for France The aim was to have their efforts recognized by the American public and thus it was hoped the resulting publicity would rouse interest in abandoning neutrality and joining the fight Authorized by the French Air Department on March 21 1916 the Escadrille de Chasse Nieuport 124 Escadrille Americaine was deployed on April 20 in Luxeuil les Bains France near Switzerland s border 1 2 Despite the unit s weak notorious status in the United States the Escadrille proved useful for the French and Americans taking into consideration that before the First World War aircraft were not considered combat units Initially there were seven Americans pilots Victor E Chapman Elliott C Cowdin Bert Hall James Rogers McConnell Norman Prince Kiffin Rockwell and William Thaw II 3 The full roster included 38 pilots citation needed The unit s aircraft mechanics and uniforms were French as was the commander Captain Georges Thenault Five French pilots were also on the roster serving at various times in command positions Raoul Lufbery a French born American citizen became the squadron s first and ultimately their highest scoring flying ace with 16 confirmed victories 4 Two unofficial members of the Escadrille Americaine lion cubs named Whiskey and Soda provided countless moments of relief from battle stress to fliers 5 A German objection filed with the U S government over the actions of a supposed neutral nation led to the name change to La Fayette Escadrille in December 1916 as the original name implied that the U S was allied to France rather than neutral 6 The Escadrille was disbanded on 18 February 1918 The American personnel transferred to the United States Army Air Service as the 103d Aero Squadron while the French formed the Escadrille SPA 124 Jeanne d Arc A total of 224 Americans served in the unit Of those 51 died in combat while another 11 died of other causes Fifteen became prisoners of war Eleven pilots became aces 7 193 Not all American pilots were in the Lafayette Escadrille over 200 fought for France as part of the La Fayette Flying Corps N 1 On 3 April 1918 eleven American pilots from the Air Service of the American Expeditionary Force were assigned to Escadrille N 471 an air defense squadron stationed near Paris N 2 American flyers served with this French unit until 18 July 1918 and it is sometimes referred to as the Second Escadrille Americaine 11 Later the Escadron de Chasse 2 4 La Fayette retook the unit designation of La Fayette this time however in the French Air Force 12 Combat edit nbsp La Fayette Escadrille banner The first major action seen by the squadron was 13 May 1916 at the Battle of Verdun and five days later Kiffin Rockwell recorded the unit s first aerial victory 6 On 23 June the Escadrille suffered its first fatality when Victor Chapman was shot down over Douaumont 6 13 The unit was posted to the front until September 1916 when the unit was moved back to Luxeuil les Bains in 7 Army area On 23 September Rockwell was killed when his Nieuport was downed by the gunner in a German Albatros observation plane 14 and in October Norman Prince was fatally injured after crashing on final approach to his airfield 15 The squadron flying Nieuport later Spad scouts suffered heavy losses but it received replacements until a total of 38 American pilots eventually served with the squadron So many Americans volunteered to fly for France that they were eventually farmed out to other French squadrons As a group the Americans who flew in the war for France s air service the Aeronautique militaire are collectively known as the La Fayette Flying Corps Altogether 265 American volunteers served in the corps citation needed On 8 February 1918 the squadron was disbanded and 12 of its American members inducted into the U S Air Service as members of the 103rd Aero Squadron For a brief period it retained its French aircraft and mechanics Most of its veteran members were set to work training newly arrived American pilots The 103rd was credited with a further 45 kills before the Armistice went into effect on 11 November 16 The French Escadrille SPA 124 also known as the Jeanne d Arc Escadrille continued Lafayette Escadrille s traditions in the Service Aeronautique citation needed nbsp Nieuport 17 flown by Rene Dorme while with escadrille N 3 during the battle of the Somme late 1916WW1 equipment in service Equipment Beginning EndNieuport 11 Bebe January 1916 March 1916Societe Pour L Aviation et ses Derives SPAD VII May 1916 1928Nieuport 17 January 1916 November 1928Casualties editNine pilots died in the Lafayette Escadrille while others perished after leaving the unit More sustained non fatal injuries The planes flown were flimsy and not as safe as those of later years Engines and other parts failed and machine guns often jammed when they were needed One man asked to be moved back to his infantry unit where he could be safe The first pilot to be killed in action was Victor Chapman 17 Edmond Genet became the first American casualty of World War I following the U S entry into the war Other Americans had died previous to the U S declaration of war but since Genet had been active in the Escadrille since before the U S entry into the war his death only a few days after the U S declaration of war made him the first official U S casualty citation needed Members editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Lafayette Escadrille news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Standing left to right Soubiron Doolittle Campbell Persons Bridgman Dugan MacMonagle Lowell Willis Jones Peterson and de Maison Rouge Seated left to right Hill Masson with Soda Thaw Thenault Lufbery with Whiskey Johnson Bigelow and Rockwell nbsp Lafayette Escadrille pilots with Fram and a Nieuport 17 March 1916 V Chapman E Cowdin Wm Thaw N Prince K Rockwell B Hall Lt Delnage J K McConnell Capt Thenault nbsp James Norman Hall 1887 1951 of the Lafayette Escadrille 1917After the Great War membership in the Escadrille Lafayette was claimed by over 4 000 people including a dozen well known Hollywood personalities and several high government officials 18 Also from the beginning there was a great deal of confusion between American pilots who were members of the Lafayette Escadrille a designated all American aviation squadron of the French Service Aeronautique and the Lafayette Flying Corps an unofficial paper organization highlighting in its roster published during the war the names of approximately 231 American volunteer aviators who flew with more than 90 French operational escadrilles 19 20 Already existing confusion was exacerbated after a screening of the film Flyboys in 2006 Five French officers and 38 American pilots also known as The Valiant 38 were members of the Lafayette Escadrille 21 22 French officers edit Col Philippe Fequant 23 Lieut Col Antonin Brocard 23 Capt Georges Thenault 23 Lt Alfred de Laage de Meux 23 Lt Charles Nungesser Lt Antoine Arnoux de Maison Rouge 23 Lt Louis Verdier Fauvety 23 American pilots edit A dagger indicates that the individual was killed in action including those who subsequently entered the Air Service or died of wounds received 1Lt Stuart Emmet Edgar 1Lt Frank Luke Jr Horace Clyde Balsley Stephen Sohier Bigelow Ray Claflin Bridgman Andrew Courtney Campbell Jr Victor Emmanuel Chapman Elliott Christopher Cowdin II Charles Heave Dolan James Ralph Doolittle John Armstrong Drexel William Edward Dugan Jr Christopher William Ford Edmond Charles Clinton Genet James Norman Hall Bert Hall Willis Bradley Haviland Thomas Moses Hewitt Jr Dudley Lawrence Hill Edward Foote Hinkle Ronald Wood Hoskier Charles Chouteau Johnson Henry Sweet Jones Walter Lovell Raoul Lufbery James Rogers McConnell Douglas MacMonagle Kenneth Archibald Marr Didier Masson Joseph P Murphy Edwin C Ted Parsons Paul Pavelka David M Peterson Frederick Henry Prince Jr Norman Prince Kiffin Yates Rockwell Robert Lockerbie Rockwell Laurence Dana Rumsey Jr Robert Soubiran William Thaw Harold Buckley Willis Frank E StarrettCitations editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Group La Fayette totalized eight citations at the orders of Air Army bearing the right to wear the Fourragere with ribbon colors of the Croix de guerre 1914 1918 France as well as the Fourragere with ribbon colors of the Medaille Militaire Summary edit nbsp La Fayette Escadrille Memorial Arch was built between 1926 and 1928 and was inaugurated on July 4 1928 U S Independence Day in the notable presence of Ferdinand Foch and Paul Doumer Inscribed in French on top in capital letters In memory to the Heroes of Escadrille La Fayette dead for the Defense of Right and Liberty At the decommission of the unit on January 1 1918 the following registry noted 267 Americans volunteered in French aviation 255 received their pilot brevet 108 served at the front 66 were killed out of which 51 killed in action 19 were wounded 15 were made prisoners of war 199 victories were known to be officially recognized Honorary members editAmelia Earhart on June 6 1932 a couple of days after becoming the first female aviator to fly solo across the Atlantic was made an honorary member of the Escadrille La Fayette 24 nbsp Thomas M Hewitt JrWorld War II editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Black and white pictorial of 12 Fighters French Chasseurs of the U S AAF aligned on an aerodrome in front of an official group The ceremony marked the official transfer of 12 Curtiss P 40 Warhawks to the Groupe de Chasse 2 5 at Casablanca on January 9 1943 La Fayette Escadrille became the third flight unit Escadrille of the Groupe de Chasse 2 5 La Fayette Commandant of the third flight unit escadrille Nom Commandment Start Commandment EndCaptain Monraisse September 1939 October 3 1940Lieutenant Villaceque October 4 1940 January 19 1944Lieutenant de Monplanet January 20 1944 May 8 1945Equipment in service in the flight unit escadrille Equipment Beginning EndCurtiss H75 September 1939 November 1942 nbsp Curtiss H75A1 July 1940 September 1940 nbsp Dewoitine D 520 October 1942 November 1942 nbsp Curtiss P 40 Warhawk F November 1942 March 1943 nbsp Curtiss P 40 Warhawk L March 1943 March 1944Republic P 47D Thunderbolt May 1944 May 1945Tributes editLa Fayette Escadrille Memorial Cemetery Villeneuve l Etang Imperial Estate in Marnes la Coquette Hauts de Seine outside of Paris the final work of French architect Alexandre Marcel 1928 The memorial commemorates the birthplace of American combat aviation and serves as a symbol of the Franco American comradeship during World War I This site honors the American volunteer pilots who flew with French squadrons during the Great War and is the final resting place for some of America s first combat aviators and their French officers Dedicated in 1928 the memorial cemetery consists of an ornate central arch half the size of the Arc de Triomphe in Paris with a French inscription on the facade and an English translation on the rear The central arch is flanked by wings on either side that include open hallways terminating in end pavilions A reflecting pool runs the length of the structure Behind the memorial is a semi circular terrace that forms the roof of the crypt below Stained glass windows in the crypt depict the major battles of the Western Front In the memorial crypt are 68 sarcophagi one for each of the aviators of the Lafayette Flying Corps who lost their lives during World War I Forty nine of these aviators are entombed in the crypt along with two of their French commanding officers The remainder rest in other locations or their remains were never recovered By the early 21st century decades of delayed maintenance to the memorial had led to structural damage water intrusion and corrosion that required large scale repair Understanding its significance in the history of American military aviation the American Battle Monuments Commission ABMC through an agreement with the Lafayette Escadrille Memorial Foundation and the French government that included financial support led restoration efforts in 2015 and 2016 in time for the 100th anniversary of the formation of the squadron In January 2017 ABMC officially assumed ownership and responsibility for the Lafayette Escadrille Memorial Cemetery making it the 9th commemorative World War I cemetery administered by this federal agency Memorial to the American Volunteers On 4 July 1923 the President of the French Council of State Raymond Poincare dedicated a monument in the Place des Etats Unis Paris to the Americans who had volunteered to fight in World War I in the service of France A statue by the sculptor Gutzon Borglum titled Aviator 1919 was erected on the grounds of the University of Virginia in Charlottesville in the memory of James R McConnell who was killed during the war Two other memorials are dedicated to McConnell and located in Carthage North Carolina The first is a granite column flanked by two cannon the other is a granite stone inscribed in French at the community house nbsp Community House Monument to James R McConnellNorman Prince tomb Washington National Cathedral Washington D C There is a plaque in the memory of Kiffen Yates Rockwell in Lee Chapel at Washington and Lee University in Lexington Virginia the college Rockwell attended before the war The group was the subject of one of the We Were There historical books for young adults Fictional accounts The story of the Lafayette Escadrille has been depicted in three feature films The Legion of the Condemned 1928 a William A Wellman film Lafayette Escadrille 1958 a Wellman film starring Tab Hunter and Flyboys 2006 directed by Tony Bill and starring James Franco The Lafayette Escadrille also appears in Attack of the Hawkmen an episode of The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles in which Indy is temporarily assigned to the group as an aerial reconnaissance photographer The exploits of the Lafayette Escadrille are also captured in several works of historical fiction including Falcons of France by Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall 1929 and To the Last Man by Jeffrey Shaara Legacy editThe Lafayette Escadrille is part of the 2018 short documentary Raoul Lufbery Fighter Ace The film subject is fighter ace Raoul Lufbery it was directed by Alexander Zane Irwin and produced by Daniel Bernardi with the collaboration of El Dorado Films and the Veteran Documentary Corps 25 See also editMoroccan Division Marching Regiment of the Foreign Legion RMLE Active in WWI and WWII Escadron de Chasse 2 4 La Fayette Escadron de Chasse 1 4 Gascogne Eagle Squadrons American volunteers in the RAF during World War II Kosciuszko Squadron American volunteers fighting for Poland in the Polish Soviet War 1919 1921 Flying Tigers American volunteers who fought for the ROC in the Sino Japanese War Patrouille de FranceReferences editNotes edit Compared with the Lafayette Escadrille larger numbers of American volunteers served with the Royal Flying Corps Royal Naval Air Service and Royal Air Force during World War I Escadrille N 471 is listed by authoritative Les escadrilles de l aeronautique militaire francaise symbolique et histoire 1912 1920 2004 8 Names of American pilots are provided in Lafayette Escadrille America s Most Famous Squadron 2012 9 As for insignia an American pennant on a staff crossed by an arrow and then a black buffalo on a yellow oval background with a black border were used Walter A Avery and Lancing C Holden served with Escadrille N 471 among others 10 Citations edit The Lafayette Escadrille Conflict Locations Archived from the original on 2014 01 02 Retrieved 2017 05 28 Guttman Jon SPA124 Lafayette Escadrille American Volunteer Airmen in World War I Oxford Osprey 2004 National Museum of the U S Air Force Escadrille Americaine Archived from the original on 2017 07 18 Retrieved 2017 05 28 Flammer Philip M The Vivid Air the Lafayette Escadrille Athens University of Georgia Press 1981 Janus Allan Animals Aloft Photographs from the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum Archived 2014 06 23 at the Wayback Machine Piermont NH Bunker Hill 2005 p 35 a b c Duffy Michael Lafayette Escadrille Archived 2011 04 29 at the Wayback Machine firstworldwar com Retrieved 20 May 2013 Farwell Byron 2000 Over There The United States in the Great War 1917 1918 W W Norton amp Company p 193 ISBN 978 0393320282 France David Jean Georges Didier Rohrbacher and Bernard Palmieri Les escadrilles de l aeronautique militaire francaise symbolique et histoire 1912 1920 Vincennes SHAA 2004 Narayan Sengupta 2012 Lafayette Escadrille America s Most Famous Squadron Appendix C Escadrille N 471 Miller Roger G Like a Thunderbolt The Lafayette Escadrille and the Advent of American Pursuit in World War I Washington D C Air Force History and Museums Program 2007 Charles Wooley The Second Escadrille Americaine Cross amp Cockade Vol 11 No 1 Spring 1970 pp 1 8 1 Archived 2018 01 23 at the Wayback Machine Traditions de la N 124 Traditions Air November 14 2013 The Story of the Lafayette Escadrille Archived 2014 05 09 at the Wayback Machine Told by its Commander Captain Georges Thenault Translated by Walter Duranty Boston Small Maynard amp Company 1921 Kiffin Y Rockwell World War I Aviator Lafayette Escadrille Biography amp Photographs Archived 2011 05 26 at the Wayback Machine Virginia Military Institute Retrieved 20 May 2013 Gordon Dennis Lafayette Escadrille Pilot Biographies Missoula MT Doughboy Historical Society 1991 Miller Roger G Like a Thunderbolt The Lafayette Escadrille and the Advent of American Pursuit in World War I Washington D C Air Force History and Museums 2007 Flood Charles 2015 First to Fly The Escadrille Lafayette and its ringers Archived 2017 08 13 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times September 7 1983 The Lafayette Flying Corps Archived 2016 03 26 at the Wayback Machine New England Aviation Museum The Lafayette Flying Core Member Roster Archived 2016 07 02 at the Wayback Machine New England Aviation Museum List of Pilots Archived 2009 12 29 at the Wayback Machine pagesperso orange fr Retrieved 19 August 2010 My burial is of no import The American pilots who fought for France in WWI Archived 2017 08 22 at the Wayback Machine The Washington Post May 29 2017 a b c d e f May 1 1928 directory published by Memorial De L Escadille Lafayette 2 Amelia becomes honorary member of La Fayette Escadrille November 14 2013 Major Raoul Lufbery Short 2018 IMDb Before there was an Air Force there was Lafayette Escadrille Bibliography edit Azzou El Mostafa L Escadrille Lafayette Des aviateurs Americains dans la Guerre du Rif 1921 1926 in French Guerres Mondiales et Conflits Contemporains Volume 53 Issue 209 January 2003 pp 57 63 Bowen Ezra Knights of the Air New York Time Life Books Aviation Series 1980 ISBN 0809432528 Brown Walt Jr An American for Lafayette The Diaries of E C C Genet Lafayette Escadrille Charlottesville Virginia University Press of Virginia 1981 ISBN 0813908930 Lafayette Escadrille firstworldwar com 2009 Encyclopedia Software 1 March 2011 Flammer Philip M The Vivid Air The Lafayette Escadrille University of Georgia Press 1981 ISBN 0820305375 Flood Charles Bracelen First to Fly The Story of the Lafayette Escadrille the American Heroes who Flew for France in World War I Grove Atlantic Inc 2015 ISBN 978 0802123657 Hall Bert En L air New York The New Library Inc 1918 ASIN B000M1DSJM Hall Bert One Man s War The Story of the Lafayette Escadrille London J Hamilton 1929 ASIN B00087AA7I Hennessy Juliette A Men and planes of World War I and a history of the Lafayette Escadrille Air Power History 61 2 2014 14 27 Hynes Samuel The Unsubstantial Air American Fliers in the First World War 2014 ISBN 978 0374278007 Mason Herbert Molloy The Lafayette Escadrille New York Smithmark Publishers 1995 ISBN 0831757124 McConnell James R Flying For France Further Experiences Of An Aviator In The American Escadrille In France The World s Work A History of Our TimeXXXIII March 1917 pp 497 509 Retrieved 4 August 2009 McConnell James Flying For France With The American Escadrille At Verdun The World s Work A History of Our Time XXXIII November 1916 pp 41 53 Retrieved 4 August 2009 Miller Roger G Like a Thunderbolt The Lafayette Escadrille and the Advent of American Pursuit in World War I Washington D C Air Force History and Museums Program 2007 OCLC 163120934 Morse Edwin W America in the War The Vanguard of American Volunteers in the Fighting Lines and in Humanitarian Service August 1914 April 1917 New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1919 Murphy T B Kiffin Rockwell the Lafayette Escadrille and the Birth of the United States Air Force McFarland 2016 ISBN 978 1476664019 Nasuti Guy Motivations of the Lafayette Escadrille Pilots militaryhistoryonline com 2006 Article Software 1 March 2011 Nordhoff Charles and James Norman Hall The Lafayette Flying Corps Boston and New York Houghton Mifflin Company 1920 Parsons Edwin C I Flew with the Lafayette Escadrille Indianapolis Indiana E C Seale and Company Inc 1930 first edition reprint 1953 Shaara Jeff To the Last Man A Novel of the First World War New York The Random House Publishing Group 2004 ISBN 0345461347 Thenault Georges The Story of the LaFayette Escadrille Told By its Commander Captain Georges Thenault Translated by Walter Duranty with An Introduction By Andre Tardieu High Commissioner of Franco American Affairs Boston Small Maynard amp Company 1921 Veil Charles H Adventure s A Wench The Autobiography of Charles Herbert Veil as told to Howard Marsh Grosset amp Dunlap Publishers New York 1934 Wilson Thomas Kickapoo Thomaston Maine Dan River Press 2006 ISBN 978 0897542166 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lafayette Escadrille Lafayette Escadrille Archived 2013 10 30 at the Wayback Machine New England Air Museum Online Exhibit Lafayette Escadrille Archived 2014 01 02 at the Wayback Machine American Aviators of World War I Escadrille La Fayette N 124 Spa 124 Les escadrilles francaises de la guerre 1914 1918 The Lafayette Escadrille Memorial Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lafayette Escadrille amp oldid 1204349098, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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