High Flew The Falcons
High Flew The Falcons
High Flew The Falcons
HIGH FLEW
THE FALCONS
THE FRENCH ACES OF WORLD WAR I
THE AUTHOR
Herbert Molloy Mason, Jr., was
born in Texas in 1927, the son of a
World W ar I pilot. He served in the
Marines during W orld W ar II, attended
lhe American University of Beirut in
Lebanon, and was graduated from
Trinity University in San Antonio,
Texas.
Mr. Mason began his career as a news
writer for a San Antonio radio station
and later became aviation editor for
True Magazine. He has flown at supersonic speeds with the U.S.A.F. Thunderbirds and was a crew member on one
of three war-weary B-17 Flying Fortresses during a 1961 Atlantic crossing.
H e has traveled widely and has lived in
Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, France, and
Norway, and is now living in Cocoa
Beach, Florida, with his wife and daughter.
J.
B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
Jr.
First Edition
Printed in the United States of America
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 65-13698
Wfl
Foreword
w;t
agent), and Edwin Charles Parsons, sole member of the Lafayette Escadrille to stay under French colors after the U. S.
entered the struggle. These men gave generously of their time,
their files, their memories-as did David vVooster King and
Paul Ayres Rockwell, early volunteers who fought hard as
riflemen with the Legion Etrangere.
For certain background material, the author is indebted to
custodians of the Service Historique, Armee de l'Air at Versailles, to Royal D. Frey of the Air Force Museum, WrightPatterson AFB, Ohio, and to Colonel George V. Fagan of the
U.S. Air Force Academy Library.
Very special thanks are due to Martin Caidin, with whom
the author has shared some incredible flying experiences, for
expeli editorial advice and access to a truly unusual archive.
H.M.M.
Holleby, Norway
1964
Contents
Foreword
page 7
1 A Sound of Hunting
15
22
3 Penguins
53
63
77
99
118
8 The Wager
137
9 Black Icarus
151
Index
169
For I dipt into the future, far as human eye could see,
Saw the Vision of the world, and all the wonder that would be;
Saw the heavens fill with commerce, argosies of magic sails,
Pilots of the purple twilight, dropping down with costly bales;
Heard the heavens fill with shouting, and there rain'd a
ghastly dew
From the nations' airy navies grappling in the central blue.
ALFRED, LoRD TENNYSON ( 1809-1892 )
'11
15
A Sound of Hunting
SERGEANT-PILOT FHANTZ, of the French Service Aeronautique, began dressing for a reconnaissance Hight on that
cool moming of October 5, 1914, he had no way of knowing
that within less than a hour he would create military historyand in so doing would make liars of a highly respected French
marshal and the German High Command as well. In the preceding seven weeks of warfare on the Westem Front, Frantz
had learned that penetrations of enemy air space were occasionally dangerous, sometimes boring-but were never epochmaking. The greatest danger to a pilot, Frantz knew, came
from the murderous machine-gunning from the ground; and at
the suicidally low altitudes at which he was forced to fly, a
hosing from post-mounted Maxim guns was never taken
lightly. There was his friend, Garaix, who had been shot from
the sky by German ground fire only twelve days after the war
began, during those frantic days of the Battle of the Marne,
and there had been others.
But Frantz was not a man obsessed by the dangers inherent
in this new war in the air; he was not so much concerned with
what the enemy might do to him as with what he might do to
the enemy. When Garaix's smashed plane was examined, the
salvage crew discovered that the French pilot had taken aloft a
Hotchkiss machine gun and 200 rounds of ammunition. Had
Garaix meant to become the first military aviator to blast a GerWHE
16
A Sound of Hunting
17
18
Wfl
A Sound of Hunting
Wfl
19
20
A Sound of Hunting
wtt
21
22
""ff
wtl
23
24
against illness; as an aviator, a battle against vexations, mishaps, the elements, skeptics, hypocrites and, finally, against the
enemy.
Carras spent his childhood in the steamy dampness of IndoChina, where his father tutored young lawyers, and when he
was twelve years old his family moved to Paris. Carras, frail to
begin with, found his health running rapidly downhill in the
chilly drizzle of the capital. Doctors inaccurately diagnosed
Garros as a tubercular, and he was sent off with his mother to
the warmth of the Cote d'Azur, where other physicians prescribed perpetual rest-or a possible early death.
Nonsense! Garros thought, and went out and bought himself
a soccer ball. Alone, he went to the flat sandy stretches of
beach lapped by the blue Mediterranean and began to kick the
ball. After fifteen minutes, he fell, exhausted; but soon got up
again and kicked some more. Every day he so tortured himself
-and every day he found he could stay longer on his feet. As
the months passed, he felt himself growing stronger and longer
winded; his chest filled out, his color grew coppery and the
fever left his eyes, replaced by another fire: the fire of ambition
to excel. He created a championship bicycle racing team at the
Nice Lycee, and raced to victory when he was 18. Sheer will,
he discovered, enabled him to conquer a crippling illness;
idleness was a word he struck from the Carras lexicon.
A brilliant student, Garros was preparing for a lawyer's life
when chance took him to Issy-les-Moulineaux on the outskirts
of Paris. They Hew airplanes at Issy, and although Garros had
heard of these linen, wood and wire contraptions, he had never
seen one. Garros had barely arrived at Issy that Sunday in 1909
when he was treated to the sight of a Voisin swooping down
toward the grass for a landing. Carras's heart thrilled-then
skipped a beat-as the hig biplane bumped down on the field
and smashed head-on into a taxi driven carelessly across the
airplane's landing path. The splintering crash was followed
moments later by shrill Gallic oaths as the pilot, Leon Delagrange, waded through the wreckage of his airplane to flay the
shaken, dumbfounded taxi driver with his not-inconsiderable
vocabulary.
Garros, at twenty-one, was not conscious of the remains of
Wfl
25
26
""ii
""ii
27
29
30
..-.c
..-.c
31
~rowds .that gather~d wherever there was an exhibition of flyI~g. Th1s apparent ICY reserve made Garros perhaps less well-
liked than the other heroes of the day-but no aviator was more
respected."
~aymon d Saulnier, one of France's pre-eminent aircraft
des1gners, recalled Garros's brusque dedication to business
when the fa~ous pil~t visited the Saulnier works, seeking a
record-breakmg machme to replace his discarded Bleriot from
which he had squeezed the last ounce of performance. S;ulnier
picked out a new monoplane, and Garros got in and flew two
quick circuits of the field and landed.
"How much does this machine weigh?" he asked.
"Empty, seven hundred and forty-eight pounds in the air
eleven hundred."
'
'
"How fast is it?"
"No less than seventy-five mph," Saulnier said proudly. "But
w~,uld you lik~ it to go fa~ter,~ We have other wings ...."
N~t faster, Garros sa1d, slower. And lighter. Lighten this
machme by two hundred and twenty pounds, and I'll come
back and fly with you. If fragile machines are dangerous, they
are. less so th~n heavy ones; when an engine stops, each pound
we1ghs heavily on my anns and lessens the time I have to
choose a place to land."
By Novemb.er, G~rros .was equipped with a modified 50-h.p.
Morane-Saulmer. His altitude record had recently been broken
by Georges Legagneux, who had pushed his way to an unprecedented 17,440 feet, and Carras was hell-bent to regain his
crown as the Highest Man in the World. He arrived in Marseilles, where the glacial cold and high winds of the mistral
blew ~is plans literally across the sea : Garros shipped himself
and hiS plane to Tunisia, where the warmer climate and rising
thermal~ from the desert floor would give him every advantage.
On his first attempt, he reached only 13,370 feet. Garros
blamed the failure on an imperfectly tuned engine and on his
own lack of foresight in bringing only two small sealed tubes of
oxygen with him from France; oxygen, he felt, was indispensable to any future attempt on the record. He scoured the
pharmacies of Tunis for steel tubes of oxygen compressed to
32
Wfi
130 atmospheres, but was met with negative shakes of the head
inside each acrid-smelling store. With the half-bottle of stale
oxygen remaining, Garros decided on one more attempt.
The morning of December 11 broke cool and clear over
Tunis-a perfect day for flying. Garros mounted the Morane,
settled himself into the seat and started up the newly tuned
engine. He left the earth in a swirl of yellow dust and soon was
climbing into the rich blue sky. As he passed through 10,000
feet he began to take careful sips of oxygen through the tube
clenched between his lips; he nursed his breath carefully, his
eyes darting from the altimeter and back to the chonometer; it
was a race with time, a gamble with his engine.
Garros's plane, a tiny speck in the vastness of the sky, inched
painfully upward in the thinning atmosphere. Garros's hands
were stiff with cold and his breath came in shallow gasps;
above him was nothing but the limitless pale blue sky; below,
the distant and deeper blue of the Mediterranean. He was
somewhere between Carthage and Bizerte when he gulped the
final draught of oxygen. He shot a glance at the altimeter,
smiled through chattering teeth, then began his descent to
earth. The barograph he had carried aloft confirmed the altimeter reading: Garros had reached 17,950 feet for a new
world's record.
Having thus conquered the freezing heights, Garros next
challenged the awesome stretches of the open sea. At 5:50A.M.
on September 23, 1913, Garros climbed into his Morane and set
off alone to fly the Mediterranean from St. Raphael on the
French Riviera to Bizerte on the North African coast. No pilot
had ever flown the 480-mile overwater route nonstop-but Garros was going to try. The attempt required a fantastic faith in
the nine-cylinder Gnome rotary engine that powered Garros's
Morane.
Garros left the coast of France, his nose pointed into a clear
sky; behind him blew a light wind. A quarter of an hour after
his wheels left the ground, he made out the shadowy outline of
Corsica, partially obscured by a developing fog. He quickly
climbed up to 4,500 feet, and was again in the clear. An hour
later the first rush of excitement had lapsed and he felt himself
growing sleepy. Immobilized in the cramped confines of the
Wfi
33
cockpit,_ becom~ng numb with cold, Garros had to fight off the
t~mpt~hon to srmply drop his head and doze off. He kept snappmg his head upward, prodding himself back to consciousness
but the st~ady roaring of the faultlessly running engine, th~
cold em~tmess _of the featureless sky, the increasing chill that
worke~ Itself mto the marrow of his bones-all combined
se~uchvely to lull hi~ into a s_tupor and the plane began to
drift._ Garros, unknowmg, uncarmg, let his mind slip away into
a vord.
He was s~dd~nly jerked awake by a sharp blow on the head
and the reahzahon that the engine was running in a discordant
key. Startled, frightened, puzzled, Garros snapped alert. Some
small piece of the Gnome had broken off and had been flung
b~ck from the c~ntrifugal force of the whirling cylinders; that
prece, whatever It was, had pierced his helmet like a rifle shot.
Th~ en?ine ~icked up again and ran smoothly as before; but
the entire airframe was now vibrating slightly and without
cease. In between the broken cloud, Garros could see the
southern end of Corsica sliding by, and he was irresistibly
drawn to that bit of land that spelled safety. But, as the vibration did not worsen, Garros firmly pushed the nose of the
Morane back on course for Africa.
But his indecision had cost him time and precious fuel. And
n?w the wind had shifted, no longer helping him, but cutting
his speed to 60 mph from his cruising speed of 75 mph. Ahead
loomed the mountainous bulk of Sardinia. Should. he land there
and refuel? Have his engine checked? But that would rob him
of the nonstop Bight he had set out to make. Garros calculated
his remaining fuel, estimated that he stood at least a 50-50
c~ance to make it if he cruised at optimum altitude. Pushing
asid_e thoughts that the head wind might increase, that the
engme might fail, Garros hauled back on the stick and climbed
until ~e was at 7,500 feet; there he leveled off, and pointed the
~lanes nose directly at the sun. He would keep it there, followmg. the sun on its westward journey until he either reached
Afnca or until his fuel gave out and he was forced into the
water. Slowly, the solid haven of Sardinia faded behind him
and Garros was over the open sea.
'
"Where was I? What was happening? Was I advancing, or
34
Wfl
was I flying into a violent and contrary wind that was pushing
me off my course? But these disagreeable and upsetting
thoughts could not affect my flight. I forced myself into a state
of calm that I well knew bordered on the absurd," Garros said
later.
After an eternity of waiting, of agonizing, Garros saw
through a hole in the clouds three dark specks below him; they
disappeared, then came into view again. Ships! They were
Arab dhows, and Garros knew he had made it. He let down
through the clouds and in an extravagant waste of fuel, circled
the small vessels twice, before pulling up and flying straight for
the sun, now large and glowing a deep orange as it settled
lower on the horizon.
After nearly six and a half hours of uninterrupted flight,
Garros set down on the golden sands of Tunisia. Curious, he
examined his fuel tank; he had made it with five quarts to
spare.
Garros had demonstrated to the world a rare courage and an
unaccountable trust in the Gnome rotary engine. But his epic
flight across the Mediterranean was not, as some believed,
merely a dangerous stunt to earn the richly deserved Legion of
HonoP-it was a glimpse into the future, a future Garros saw
with startling clarity. He turned his vision towards another
continent, nearly 4,000 miles away.
"It is possible," he announced, "to fly the Atlantic with the
machines now at our disposal. One must go by way of Ireland
and Greenland, with reprovisioning bases established at those
places beforehand. The risk? No more and no less than three
successive crossings of the Mediterranean . . . the same
machine can leave for America with the same chances of success, divided by three.
"No machine exists today that can carry the fuel required
for a nonstop flight of thirty to thirty-five hours' duration, but
without doubt one can be built. The chief hazards the pilot will
face are weather, engine failure, and navigational errors."
Fourteen years later, Charles Lindbergh would find all that
Garros had predicted would come true; his own crossing of the
Atlantic pierced the Frenchman's time estimate dead center.
Wfl
35
36
37
38
....,
....,
39
40
Wfi
Wfi
41
A week later, Garros got a German plane down out of control, then turned his attention to a pair of two-seaters that fled
terrified at his approach, crash-landing just inside their own
lines to escape the relentless pursuit of the now-deadly Parasol.
Word spread quickly across the way that the French had somehow discovered the magic of firing a machine gun through a
wooden propeller whirling at more than a thousand revolutions
per minute, and for a week the skies remained strangely empty
of reconnaissance machines, helpless against this unnerving
development. But, on April 14, the awesome thunder of the
guns began and hordes of helmeted troops wearing feldgrau
began advancing across the icy mud of Flanders toward Ypres.
The offensive had begun, and machines observing for the artillery had to take to the air, whether their crewmen liked it or
not.
On April 15, Garros jumped a brace of Aviatik two-seaters
and attacked them in rotation. One slipped away from the
deadly stream of machine-gun fire pouring from the nose of the
Parasol and headed for home; the other stayed to fight, but
after a few seconds of firing, Garros was rewarded by the sight
of the Aviatik spinning suddenly away to crash a mile inside
its own lines just north of Ypres.
And that was two.
Not content with decimating the enemy planes in the daylight sky, Garros struck them on the ground at night. Nightflying was in its infancy, and Carras's Parasol lacked both
flight instruments and landing lights; non etheless, he loaded
up his plane with 155-mm. shells and took off just as the sun
went down, headed for Ostend, nearly sixty miles distant. He
had little trouble finding his target, the main railroad station,
and unloaded the heavy missiles directly over the terminal
while in a shallow glide only 500 feet from the ground ... consternation below! He pulled up and swung over to the coast,
hounded by probing white fingers of light seeking to track and
hold him for the suddenly awakened antiaircraft batteries. He
flew through a soft black sky eerily lighted with flashing red
blossoms of bursting shrapnel until he reached the lines. From
there until he set down on the flare path at Dunkirk, his engine
42
wtt
43
44
'11
'11
45
which had only partially burned, was carefully gone over and
the mystery solved. Although I found the idea ingenious-if
cmde-it was not the ultimate answer.. . ."
Fokker turned his hand to the problem, and within fortyeight hours produced a working model of a true synchronizer
-one using cams and gears driven off the engine-and once
this mechanism was put into action by the Germans the war in
the air turned bloody indeed.
The German sentry at the main gate of the maximum security military prison at Magdeburg stamped his feet in the snow
and kept glancing at his watch with impatience; it was just
past 5 P.M. on the afternoon of February 14, 1918, and it was
bitter cold. His stomach growled with hunger and he relished
the idea of relief. Suddenly he straightened up as he saw two
officers approaching from inside the compound. One was
barking gutturally and making angry gestures with his hands;
the other nodding dumbly. The sentry saluted them and got an
earful of the taller officer's tirade directed against the swinish
French who openly insulted Colonel von Brixen, the camp
commandant, and made light of the German Army as a whole,
including, he added in a rage, inspecting officers such as they.
During the tirade, the shorter officer stood silent, only nodding
his head affirmatively. Then the tall officer waved his hand
impatiently for the gates to be opened. Impressed with the
officer's choleric outburst, and certainly not wishing to have
such wrath directed his way, the sentry quickly swung open
the gate and pushed aside the outer apron of barbed wire. As
the officers stomped off in the snow, the sentry observed that,
for ranking members of the Army hierarchy, the inspectors'
uniforms certainly seemed moth-eaten and of irregular color
... but by then, 1918, nothing in Germany was as correct as it
had been when the war started. He watched without interest
as the two figures faded into the gloom beyond the camp.
Thus Garros and Lieutenant Anselme Marchal walked away
from captivity and began a nightmarish flight for freedom.
And little wonder their uniforms appeared shabby: the coats
were made from French officer's capes dyed gray with potassium permanganate; the collars bristled with fur ripped from
46
Wit
Wfl
47
48
49
50
'Tm late in catching up," he replied. "I must give them double mouthfuls!"
The uncertain weather of fall offered days of wet gloom
broken by freakishly clear periods when the sky overhead was
a cold, brilliant blue marred only by traces of stratospheric
cloud. Such a day was October 5. Garros bundled himself in
worn, oil-stained leather and fur and walked stiffiy out to the
line where the Hispano-Suiza engines were crackling into life,
nursed to full-blooded power under the sensitive, caressing
hands of the mechanics ... hands blue with cold and marked
with angry red welts where they had contacted flaming hot
exhaust stacks or cylinder heads. Garros swung himself up and
lowered his body into the snug-fitting cockpit. He pulled the
ends of the wide web belting across his abdomen and snapped
shut the heavy catch. He dropped the fur-rimmed goggles over
his eyes and moved the throttle forward, immediately feeling
the powerful blast of cold air washing back across his face,
tugging at his leather helmet. He ran the engine up to full rpm,
listening critically to its unbroken snarl while watching the
fuel and oil-pressure gauges. Satisfied, he cut back the throttle
until the engine was ticking over. All around him the sounds of
engines being run up, then left to idle, rose and fell ... the
sounds of a squadron patrol abirthing. While Garros sat in the
cockpit pounding his mittened hands against his thighs to keep
his circulation going, he had a few minutes to think while waiting for Captain de Sevin's signal for take-off.
Tomorrow he would reach his thirtieth birthday; today he
stood with four credited kills beside his name. He had lost
three precious years of time in which to fly-years vanished
forever. The war was getting old, and so was he ... there was
no more time to lose.
De Sevin shot his hand in the air and swung the nose of his
Spad into the wind, firewalling the throttle. The heavy, flatwinged fighter bumped down the field, got its tail off the
ground and suddenly left the earth in a clatter of sound. Garros followed close behind, and soon the half-dozen Spads were
airborne and rushing northward over the green sprawl of the
Argonne. They climbed steadily into the icy blue and a half
hour later were seven miles inside the Ge1man lines.
51
Garros saw them first: seven Fokker D-VIIs drifting in echelon toward France some 2,000 feet below. He dropped away
from the formation and fell through space toward the Germans
from out of the sun. But the Germans were not novices; they
waited until he came within firing range, then split apart, letting him streak past without giving him a good shot. The German patrol leader, keeping an eye on the five Spads sliding by
over his head, then closed up the formation as before.
De Sevin, sensing a trap, held the others above, hoping Garros would swing around and rejoin. But Garros was not to be
enticed away from the Germans; he clawed his way upward
and once again came on at the Germans, firing. De Sevin could
see the blue-white tendrils of tracer smoke from Garros's guns
as he bored in. Again, the Germans split-not so widely this
time-letting Garros pass on the flanks of the formation. German tracers arced after Garros's Spad as he turned to come on
again.
Five times de Sevin watched Garros hurl his airplane at the
Germans, and five times he waited for the Germans to commit
themselves, or for Garros to come to his senses. On the sixth
pass, de Sevin came down to join Garros, to get him away, to
do something that would halt the nerve-jangling game of Russian roulette. Now the Germans split apart to fight. Garros
picked a German and dived full throttle, with de Sevin's Spad
diving down his back. The other Spads plunged down, and
soon the sky was alive with the angry snarl of engines and the
erratic stuttering of frantically served machine guns.
De Sevin's attention was jerked away from Garros and the
vertically diving Fokker by the sudden appearance of six fresh
enemy fighters on the scene. Where had they been hiding?
With only six against thirteen, de Sevin now directed his energies toward gathering the Spads together to fight their way
home.
All made it home save one. The Storks waited until the sun
went down, but Garros'~ Spad did not return, and no word
came. He had been swallowed up in the maelstrom.
Two weeks later, the Germans announced that Roland Garros had fallen to his death inside their lines. Advancing French
infantry found his neatly marked grave near Vouziers, where
52
'""tl
his Spad had plunged to the ground. Garros had done his
utmost to earn that coveted accolade of ace for his birthday,
and in this he had failed. But it was his only failure.
What had happened? After the war, de Sevin learned from
the Germans that Garros had not been shot down; witnesses
rep01ted that Carras's propeller had seemed to disintegrate
and that the vibration coupled with the violent aerodynamic
stresses he was subjecting his plane to at the time caused the
Spad to partially break up in the air. The conclusion drawn
was that the hydraulically operated synchronizer had malfunctioned, causing Garros to shoot his own propeller to bits.
And what of Marchal, the man who had led the way out of
Germany from the camp at Magdeburg? He lived through the
war to become-perhaps not so coincidentally-the first man to
fly nonstop across the Mediterranean in a floatplane.
It was the kind of tribute Garros would have appreciated.
'""tl
53
Penguins
Penguins
"'""
55
56
which vertiginous height he nosed straight down again to clatter against the earth in what approximated a power landing.
But engines, he was told, did not always function as one
wished. Enfin, up again to cut the switch at the apex of the
climb to try it-as he would so many times in his flying careerwith no engine at all . . . the roaring, the sudden silence, the
stomach-heaving drop, the sighing of the wind in the wires, the
rattling crash and the painful shock running up a now-tender
spine . . . and the emergency landing was done-to be done
again and again.
Then the challenge broadened . . . take off and attain 100
feet as before-but this time circle the field before landing.
Mind! use the rudder only; no warping of the wings! ( Bleriots
had no ailerons, but the fragile wings warped easily, which
achieved the same effect.) The flat turns, sloppy as they were,
enabled the student for the first time to exercise full directional
control over a machine in flight, and it was a moment forever
remembered. Only when a student had demonstrated an
awakening spatial judgment and a developing instinct for controlling flight attitude was he allowed to put on a moderate
degree of bank-thus taking the skid out of the turns-for wings
warped unwisely inevitably led to disastrous sideslips directly
into the ground.
Thus, hesitant maneuverings became accomplished flight
patterns, and the day dawned when the sometime ribbon clerk
or subway conductor realized that he had virtually taught himself to fly; his will, his brain, his hands had accomplished this
miracle, and with this feeling imbedded inside him, he thereafter walked and flew with the solid confidence shared by all
self-taught men.
But the wreathed wings of the Service Aeronautique were
not yet his; there remained the frustrating trial of proving that
he could successfully make his way cross country, connecting a
triangle whose points were 60 miles apart. Now, a daytime
flight of less than 200 miles may not seem much of a test, but
the engines on the school planes were worked to death and it
was rare that one could be kept running without letup for the
three-cornered flight, a trip that included stops at Chartres
and Evreux for signed verification that the aspirant had,
Penguins
57
58
""f!
Penguins
""f!
59
60
'""tl
Penguins
'""tl
61
pled with unwanted doses of castor oil flung back by the engine
often left students green with nausea at the end of the day-but
the sickness was as nothing when compared with the flush of
pride that accompanied the realization that, par le bon Dieu,
they were becoming pilots!
Following Roland Carras's spectacular successes in 1915, it
became obvious that the fundamental role of the single-seater
fighter was that of a flying gun platform from which fire could
be directed against the enemy. In the Nieuport the French aircraft industry delivered into the hands of the combat squadrons a plane that admirably fulfilled its mission . . . up to a
point. The critical failure of this airplane lay in its armament;
the science of aerial gunnery lagged far behind aircraft design
in the home country and-what was far worse-far behind what
was being done in Germany. Tony Fokker's feat of converting
Garros's crude idea to its ultimate development, the synchronized machine gun, was not to be duplicated in France until the
summer of 1916, and the stopgap armament system aboard the
Nieuport was maddeningly difficult to handle.
Centered on the dorsal wing was a single .303-caliber Lewis
gun, fed by a spring-loaded revolving drum containing 47
rounds of ammunition. There were no sights; the pilot aimed
the nose of his plane at the enemy, squeezed the trigger and
hoped for the best. This method of directing fire can be compared to guess-aiming a .45-caliber pistol held over your head,
trying to hit a tea cup fifty feet away; it can be done with sufficient practice, but initially the firing will be wildly inaccurate.
Not only did the pilot have only about five seconds' continuous firing at his disposal but changing drums proved to be a
feat for a contortionist. At Pau and at Cazaux, where the final
gunnery training was carried out, the first day's firing practice
in the air was a revelation. Aiming his nose at a red-and-white
barrel tethered in the middle of the lake, the pilot clamped
down on the trigger grip and felt the Nieuport shudder slightly
from the recoil. At first ham-handed, the pilot usually fired off
the whole drum in one long burst, dismayed at the gouts of
water and spray that appeared on the lake's surface so far away
from the target. Pulling up, he leveled out and reached up for
62
Wfl
the rear of the gun to bring it down so the nose was pointing
straight up. With left hand on the stick and straining hard
against the belt, he noticed with vexation that his gloved right
hand could barely reach the empty drum, and that one hand
was not enough to extract the drum and replace it with a full
one. Both hands, then . ... Now, the stick was between his
knees, and he was half-standing in the cockpit, wrestling clumsily with the empty drum with both hands. Finally loose, it was
replaced with difficulty in the container on the outside of the
cockpit and a new one lifted upward. The loaded drum, weighing five pounds, was subjected to the terrific blast from the
propwash, and if the flat side was inadvertently turned into this
hurricane of wind, a sprained wrist was not unlikely-nor was it
uncommon to have the stubbornly resisting ammunition container torn from the most determined grasp to fly away into
space. Then, with the drum seated on the spindle, the pilot was
free to sit down again and concentrate on flying the airplane.
It was after a few such struggles that the thought suddenly
struck the pilot: But what will the Germans be doing while I
am thus engaged?
The answer was as obvious as it was disquieting.
After gunnery, there remained a brief and somewhat cursory
introduction to the demands of formation flying-50 yards
above, 50 yards behind and 50 yards to the left of the plane in
front . . . and mind the slipstream-before the student was
graduated and sent from Pau to Le Plessis-Belleville, the great
replacement pool 21 miles northeast of Paris and tantalizingly
near the Front.
Freshly outfitted in a handsomely cut uniform of his own
design, complete from the stiff, short-visored cap to the gleaming knee-length boots, the French-trained pilot arrived at
Plessis cocky, supremely confident and exuding an aura of
aggressiveness.
And why not?
He had 80 hard-earned hours in his logbook, and he was a
corporal-pilot earning 30 cents a day in the most exclusive
combat service since the day of the long bow at Agincourt.
63
64
!or
65
66
67
68
69
70
Wfi
Wfi
71
From that moment on, the exhilaration went out of flying for
him. A bitter taste filled his mouth, and it was with difficulty
that he kept from retching.
It was war-and he loathed it.
Navarre became an ace before the month was out, but the
accolades from the nation seemed to mean as little to him as
the growing number of bronze palms he was required to wear
on the green and red ribbon of the Croix de Guerre. When
someone asked him how it felt to bring down a German he
snapped out: "I fly because I must. But this killing is not a matter a man can be proud of." He was delighted when-for the
second time-he was able to cripple an enemy machine and
force it to land intact behind French lines, there to capture the
crew.
While the battle was raging at its highest before Verdun,
Navarre swept out of the sky and fastened himself on the tail of
a solitary Aviatik directing an artillery shoot on Pepper Hill.
His first few rounds thudded into the German engine and he
watched gleefully as the propeller jerked abruptly to a stop.
With Navarre staying thirty yards behind him, the German
pilot had no choice except to land in a shell-torn field behind
the French reserve trenches. Navarre lightly sat his plane down
beside the disabled Aviatik and vaulted from the cockpit to
confront the sour-looking German pilot and observer.
In bad French, the observer asked where Navarre's machine
gunner was-surely not still in that small airplane with only one
cockpit? Navarre told him he was looking at the machine
gunner.
'What?" said the German. "You alone? Then accept my congratulations. You are an admirable shot; never would I have
believed that a man could fly an airplane and at the same time
operate a machine gun with such dash!"
It was to Navarre that the term vi1tuoso naturally applied.
His method of attack was vividly described by Jacques Mortane, Europe's pre-eminent pioneer air reporter, who knew
Navarre and his style of aerial fighting intimately. Wrote
Mortane:
"Navarre subscribed to the principle that he must first
astound the enemy prior to the knock-outer. He first wheeled
72
Wfl
Wfl
73
74
'""f!
'""f!
75
recovery. Navarre was on the town every night, and there was
hardly a bistro or restaurant that was not familiar with the
somewhat stooped figure carrying a cane and festooned with
medals who came in and ordered champagne by the case. Once
Navarre was arrested for driving an appropriated taxicab on
the sidewalks. The gendarmes were astonished to see that the
culprit, when brought to bay after a hectic chase, was the
famed aviator. And they were further flabbergasted when they
discovered that Navarre had pinned all his medals to the rear
of his tunic.
Then word came that Navarre's brother had been killed at
the Front. Something snapped in Navarre, and overnight he
changed from a madcap youth to an apparently vacant middleaged man. He developed a maniacal urge for wanton destruction that replaced mere playboy escapades, and he was
painfully refused admission to places that had once welcomed
him with open arms. Finally, Navarre was taken away to a
sanitarium, where he brooded darkly on the war and the death
of his brother.
Two years passed, and Navarre seemed to have emerged
from the shadows. He returned to the Front, but his superb
reflexes had been dulled from the stultifying idleness, and the
bright light of his skill was dimmed. He shot down no more
Germans, and when the war ended shortly after his arrival in
the combat zone those who respected him were glad. With the
luster of his skill tarnished, he doubtless would have been an
easy victim to German guns.
In the spring of 1919, Navarre was given a job as test pilot
for Morane-Saulnier. He flew well enough, but those who had
known him in 1914 tried very hard to keep the sadness from
their eyes as they watched the former virtuoso fighter pilot put
the Moranes through their paces at Villacoublay. All his finesse
was gone, leaving only a suicidal kind of daring.
Then, when Navarre learned that a mammoth victory parade
was to be staged on the Champs-Elysees on Bastille Day, a
spark of interest shone in his dark eyes. He would, he said in a
rare burst of enthusiasm, By a Morane through the portals of
the Arc de Triomphe! Day after day, he practiced high-speed
runs past telegraph poles, skimming just underneath the
76
""tt
""tt
77
78
wrc
wrc
79
80
wtt
81
biplanes. With the cloud of disgrace now forever lifted from his
head-or so he believed-Madon was put in for promotion to
Adfudant (equivalent to warrant officer ) and written up for
the Medaille Militaire. Promotions! Medals! A new airplane!
Life was certainly looking up for the one-time potato peeler.
Madon ordered a new uniform in Paris and on April 5 1915
picked up the new Farman at Le Bourget and took off fo~ Toul:
where the squadron was to begin a life of directing fire for
long-range artillery. With much greater range now at his disposal, M_adon'~ spirits began to soar at the thought of the deep
penetratwn raids he could now carry out against the enemy.
So intent was Madon upon planning for the future that he
?e~l~cted the immediate present. A fog had begun to creep
ms1d10usly across the countryside and, when his attention was
drawn to this lamentable fact, Madon found that he was lost.
A quick glance at his watch told him that he should be near
Toul, or a little past. But had he been fighting a head wind
since he left Paris? Or had he been pushed along by a tail
wind? And where was the wind coming from now? With the
ground covered over by the impenetrable fog, he had no way
of telling. He cursed the inattention that had led him into this,
and realized he would have to land and ask directions. Now, he
would arrive late at Toul and face the displeasure of the CO.
Madon eased the stick over, cut back the throttle, pushed a little on the rudder bar and began letting down in a gradual
spiral.
A few minutes later the Farman was swallowed up in the
wetness of the fog. Madon kept spiraling downward, trusting
to luck, and after a few minutes broke into the clear almost
over a small village. Definitely not Toul. He picked out a
cleared field and slid the big Farman down to a faultless landing. Killing the engine, Madon hauled himself out of the bathtub-like crew nacelle and dropped to the ground.
Madon quickly found out where he was when a squad of
infantrymen wearing strangely shaped helmets appeared and
made him prisoner. He had landed beside the town of Porrentruy in Switzerland-fully one hundred miles southeast of Toul.
The Farman was confiscated, and Madon was marched off to
internment camp.
82
83
84
Wfl
Wfl
85
the war, and h.e told me he was a carpenter earning four francs
a day. I told him that in France I could guarantee him ten and
at that he brightened. And, resigned, he became himselF a
n
escaper. "
The .car rolled into Lausanne at eight-thirty that night, and a
few mmutes later found them at the ferry landing. Madon had
a bad moment when a Swiss customs official approached them
but saved the situation by yelling to the driver that he should
return to the "chateau" and tell "Madame" that he and his
friend had decided to visit friends at Lausanne and that h
the chauffeur, should return for them at the landing at eleve~
that night. Convinced that Madon and the guard, whom
Madon had outfitted with a cap and a civilian overcoat, were
wea~thy adventurers out for a night on the town, the customs
official watched the car drive away and then continued on his
way. Madon and the Swiss waited until he had faded into the
fog, then quickly hopped aboard the ferry. Forty-five minutes
later, Georges Madon was once again on French soil.
Once more, the future shone brightly for Madon. Not only
"":ould the ?romised Medaille Militaire be coming through but
hi~ promo~wn to adjudant as well. And who knew what praise
might b~ m store now that he had executed a difficult escape
from a life of ease in order to again offer himself up to the gods
of war? Flushed with success, elated at the unlimited prospects
that surely loomed before him, Madon put in a request for
transfer to a fighter squadron.
He was instead awarded sixty days in jail.
The reason? For ". . . having strayed from his route and
landed on neutral territory." The implication was as clear as it
was absurd: that Madon had deliberately sought to evade
combat by absenting himself in Switzerland, that he had
la~ded th~re on purpose. Madon, cut to the quick, realized that
~mds wh1ch could draw such a conclusion would be totally
~ncapable of grasping the logical argument against it. He realIzed that he was fighting two wars-one against the Germans,
the other against his own rear echelon-in which rashness
would earn him only defeat. He went off, unprotesting, to serve
out his time.
Madon returned to the air war on the day the great German
86
'""tl
'""tl
87
One of the two-seaters broke away and dived for safety, but
the other stayed to fight. As Madon bored in he saw tracers
Hashing past his wings. He leveled out, came straight at the
German's tail, and opened fire from only 50 yards. He held the
trigger down until the drum had been emptied, then banked
away to reload. Quickly he wrestled a fresh drum into place
and came on again, firing. This time the German plane was hit
squarely. It plunged straight down with the engine running
full out. Madon followed the plane down and saw it rise drunkenly, then nose over again and continue diving vertically until
it tore itself to pieces on the ground north of Sommepy. The
kill was never confirmed, however.
On September 28, Madan's luck was better. He jumped a
Fokker busily engaged in shooting up a Caudron returning
from a bombing raid, and sent it spinning down to crash near
Pomacle in sight of hundreds of excited French poilus. It was
his first official victory. The second came a month later when he
attacked two Fokkers, knocking one from the sky with fifteen
rounds. Awarded the Medaille Militaire and handsomely cited
in the Orders of the Army, Madon now knew that his worst
enemy-headquarters-had been vanquished; from now on he
could give his full energies to battling the Germans.
He got one German plane down in Hames, but it could not be
confirmed. Then another enemy plane broke up in the air,
catapulting the luckless pilot through space, kicking like a man
demented, and that one went in the book as official. On December 1, Madon shot a two-seater down out of control. Nine days
later he Hamed another over Sainte-Menehould, and that made
four official kills. Madon received the news of his promotion to
warrant officer happily, but told his CO he would be happier
still to bag his fifth Boche and elevate himself to the rank of the
ace.
The year ended in some of the foulest weather on record,
and Hying came to a halt along almost all the Front. Madan's
frustration was relieved somewhat when the squadron was
re-equipped with Spads-powerful, chunky fighters with 150h.p. Hispano-Suiza engines and armed with a Vickers machine
gun synchronized to fire through the propeller. Here was a
machine to answer Madan's prayers. He could dive it full out,
88
Wfl
wtC
89
haul the stick back into his stomach for fear the hurtling airplane would disintegrate.
Barely 50 feet away from total disaster the Spad jerkily leveled out and Madan heaved on the stick. The Spad floundered,
then smashed against the earth belly down, bounced, struck
again and then flipped over in a long, grinding tail slide that
ripped away what remained of the wings. In the unearthly
silence that followed, Madan realized he was still alive. He
unfastened the safety belt and fell heavily headfirst to the
ground. Crawling from the wreckage he stood up to inspect the
damage to himself: a swollen lip, a broken finger; otherwise,
not a mark.
As the war dragged on, Madan showed a contempt for danger that awed his friends and impressed his enemies; no odds
were too great, no challenge too fearsome, no risk too great for
him to pit his strength, his skill and-above all-his incredible
luck against.
Early on the morning of April 23 he was prowling among the
clouds above Sainte-Genevieve-en-Champagne and got the
jump on a varicolored Albatros piloted by Lothar von Richthofen, brother of the German national hero and a ranking air
fighter in his own right. Madan waded in and his first burst
ripped through the cockpit. Von Richthofen was struck in the
back and knocked giddy by a slug that creased his head near
the right eye. He spun down out of control and crash-landed
behind his own lines, put out of action for months.
The following morning found Madan once again over SainteGenevieve. Judging from the look of things, Lothar von Richthofen's squadron ached for revenge, for, below him, Madan
saw seven Albatros fighters winging toward France in a flawless vee fmmation. Down hurtled the Spad. Madan fastened
his sights on the rearmost plane and triggered his Vickers gun.
The Albatros went down in a ball of flame. The second plane
in line saw Madan coming, took a burst from his machine gun,
dived and broke apart in the air. Madan flattened out and
bored in on the two enemy fighters remaining on the left side of
the vee. His Vickers hammered out a long burst and a third
German headed earthward on fire. With only a pause in the
strident barking of his gun, Madan sent the fourth Albatros
90
....,.
....,.
91
92
"""
.....
93
94
often than not Madon could not be bothered. Each time that
one of his successes was registered, however, he felt that he
had somehow "put one over" on the authorities.
On September 5, 1917, Madon again challenged overwhelming odds. While at 18,000 feet he saw below a patro~ of ni~e
Albatros D-V fighters, streamlined machines mountmg twm
Maxim machine guns and-in this instance-piloted by the
crack pilots of the von Richthofen Hying circus. Seve~ of the
fighters were in vee formation 2,000 feet below Madon s Spad,
while two others Hew above the main formation, apparently as
top protection. Madon, with the sun and altitude in his favor,
peeled off and went after the two topmost Albatros.
He picked the one farthest away first, and sent it down in a
vertical dive. The second turned to meet the Spad head-on, but
Madan kept his altitude advantage, rolled over on his back
and riddled the brightly painted enemy plane from less than
fifty feet away. The Albatros broke apart in the air and went
down in a loose-winged Hop. The downing of neither plane was
confirmed, but after the war Madon learned that one of the
Albatros had been piloted by Kurt Wolff, credited with
.
thirty-three kills.
Despite the seeming impossibility of gaining confirmatwns,
by the beginning of 1918, Madan's official score stood. at
twenty. It crept upward to twenty-five, then followed a penod
frustrating beyond belief: in the eleven weeks between March 9
and May 26, Georges Madon shot down thirteen Germa~ aircraft, not one of which he was able to have confirmed by higher
authority.
But, on May 27, his luck began to improve. He downed a
pair of single-seaters before lunch, then in the afternoon he
bagged a two-seater near Fismes and a fighter over Craonne
. . . four down, two confirmed .
On June 1, a torrid day, Madon went aloft with another
N. 38 pilot, Jean Casale, and they delivered a simultane~us
attack upon a fat black German observation balloon Hoatmg
serenely in the warm summer sky. When they ~ulled away
under a hail of machine-gun bullets and explodmg 77-mm.
shells the balloon was a mushrooming ball of oily smoke and
saffron Hames.
95
96
'""tl
'""tl
97
that fluttered away in the sky. Madan Hew through the debris
and wheeled around to deal with the remaining fighter, a
Pfalz. The German pilot, doubtless shocked beyond the ability
to react intelligently, immediately put the nose of the Pfalz
down and tried to outdive the oncoming Spad. Before Madan
had a chance to fire, the weaker Pfalz lost a lower wing, then
another, then the top wing ripped loose and the naked fuselage
plummeted vertically earthward with the engine howling like a
banshee and with the pilot sitting alive but helpless in the cockpit. Madan's score: three down, and not one shot fired.
A few days later Madan bounced seven Fokkers from altitude, diving through the middle of the threatening formation.
As his guns hammered out a long burst, he saw one of the Fokkers lurch in the air, felt drops of rain, a shock against his plane
-and he was through the enemy gaggle and diving like hell
for home. The brief splatter of rain puzzled him until he
landed and inspected his airplane: vaporized blood had
sprayed across his top wing. And wrapped firmly around a
bracing wire on the starboard side clung a pair of fur-lined
German goggles, a macabre souvenir Madan cherished for the
rest of his life.
The victories continued to mount: a triplane in Hames over
Nogent-l'Abbesse, a Fokker D-VII near Breuil, a two-seater
south of Dizy-le-Gros ....
When the last shot had been fired Madan stood fourth on the
list of great French aces with 41 credited kills; but in his private
log he had noted 105 that he was sure had gone down to
destruction. And not once throughout the whole fantastic business had he been harmed by enemy fire. His was the kind of
luck an Irishman could envy.
Six years after the war the French government finally got
around to recognizing the contribution Roland Carras had
made to aviation, and planned a simple memorial to that pioneer to be unveiled at Bizerte. Fittingly enough, the ceremony
was to be held on November 11, 1924. Georges Madon volunteered to fly past the monument, low over the crowd, in a warweary biplane. Although the engine of his chosen plane was
98
"'"ff
wtl
99
AT THE OUTBREAK of the First World War, few men would have
seemed less likely to earn eternal glory than Georges Marie
Ludovic Jules Guynemer. He was nineteen years old-but
looked fifteen-and when seen approaching from a distance
was often mistaken for a girl. He was thin to the point of frailty;
his narrow shoulders sloped alarmingly, and his chest seemed
caved in as if from a blow. White, nearly translucent skin covered his fine-boned hands, and his elegantly tapered fingers
were after the mold of a violinist. His long, pitifully thin legs
seemed incapable of supporting even so slight a figure .. . at
any moment, it seemed, they would collapse under him and he
would toss forward onto the pavement and possibly shatter like
glass.
Above his collar, however, Georges Guynemer was something else again: the face, long and chiseled in hard angles; the
nose, straight and Haring at the nostrils; the mouth, firm over a
chin that projected with a determined thrust. But above all, the
eyes bespoke his heritage-th ey burned from their deep sockets
with a kind of black liquescence that caused one pilot later in
the war to remark: "When preparing for Hight, the glances
from Guynemer's eyes are like the strokes of a hammer."
But recruiting sergeants on the eve of conflagration seldom
peer into the window of a man's soul to see what may be lurking there; instead, bodies are poked and prodded to see if their
100
"""tt
"""tt
101
102
103
On July 19, 1915, Guynemer and Guerder attacked a twoseater Albatros over Soissons. Guynemer coolly placed the
Parasol fifty yards above and to the left of the enemy plane
and Guerder opened fire. The Lewis gun jammed, but Guynemer stuck to the German's tail, feeling the sharp little jolts
as slugs from a carbine fired by the German observer ripped
into the Parasol. Guerder cleared the stoppage, got off a full
drum into the Albatros, and Guynemer saw the German's rille
fall over the side, the pilot slump forward, and the plane drop
sharply downward. It crashed in Hames in no man's land.
When they landed, Guynemer poked a finger through a hole in
Guerder's stiff leather crash helmet; a half inch lower and
Guerder would not have been alive to receive the Medaille
Militaire he and Guynemer were awarded a few days later.
Squadron M.S. 3 was not a fighter squadron and the opportunities for engaging German aircraft in aerial combat were
rare; however, due to the growing reputation of his pilots,
Brocard was entrusted with special missions-for many of
which Guynemer volunteered.
On October 1, he took off carrying a passenger who was
wearing civilian clothes and cradling a heavy box under his
arm. Their destination was an empty field eighteen miles inside
the German lines. On the way to the target Guynemer's Hight
was aided by a terrific tail wind that pushed them to the northwest so fast that Guynemer had difficulty in controlling the airplane. They reached the designated field unmolested and
Guynemer spiraled down to land. Just in time he saw that the
smooth, apparently unobstructed field was a trap for the
unwary: the Germans had laced it with tightly strung barbed
wire that crisscrossed the landing area from corner to corner;
Guynemer put on full throttle and zoomed away to land on a
rocky, stump-sh'ewn nightmare of a landing ground a half mile
away. He sat down with difficulty and discharged his passenger, who scurried away into a nearby patch of woods carrying
his box of dynamite and fuses with which to blow up German
goods trains. Guynemer dodged among the rocks and stumps
and managed to get the Morane into the air, where the real
struggle began.
The wind was blowing hard and steadily, and below him the
104
'""!I
earth barely crawled past his wings. His plane shook this way
and that under the constant buffeting it was subjected to, and
frequent glances at his watch and his map convinced him th~t
the odds were against his reaching friendly ground before hrs
fuel was exhausted. Two hours later, with his plane's engine
gasping at the dregs of remaining gasoline, Guynemer reach~d
home. word came that the saboteur had indeed blown a tram,
but had been captured immediately afterward, stood up
against a farmhouse wall and shot. Five days later, Guy~e~er
ferried a second disreputable-looking individual deep msrde
enemy territory; again returning unharmed.
Although cited for these missions-and others equally as hazardous-Guynemer brooded over the fact that he had so little
chance to come to grips with the enemy. It wasn't until ea~ly
November that the opportunity came again-an opportumty
seized, lost . . . nearly fatal.
It was while he was flying at 10,000 feet over Chaulnes that
Guynemer saw the pretty L.V.G. two-seater on its way home.
The Germans saw him at the same time, and the alert gunner
swung his swivel-mounted 7.92-mm; Parabellum machine .gun
upward, waiting for the Frenchman s attack. Guynemer wrsely
avoided diving at the L.V.G.'s rear; instead he rolled over and
came down in a long slanting dive in front of the two-seater,
intending to spray the pilot and the engine with his wingmounted Lewis machine gun. But as he came within range and
pressed the release the Lewis failed to fire. As he shot past the
L.V.G. tracers reached for him, and he knew the Germans were
aggressively inclined; worse, they were flying a faster airplane.
Guynemer searched all around him, but the nearest clouds
were miles away. There was no hiding place in the sky .. or
was there? Yes, one: Guynemer swung the Morane steeply
around and climbed back up and took up station six feet
directly underneath the bigger German plane. He recalled
later:
"I regulated my speed to theirs and from afar we resembled
one gigantic airplane. Et alors! I had not even a revolver-else
the Boche would have been at my mercy. They had not missed
a single move on my part, and were now not. so bellige:ent ..
fearing that a wrong move would enmesh theu plane wrth mme
'""!I
105
106
wtt
roasted German pilot being catapulted from his seat, his safety
belt eaten away by the gasoline-fed inferno. The L.V.G.
plunged to earth a hundred yards behind the German first
line, its bomb load going up with a thunderous roar and showering the trenches with flaming debris. The charred remains of
the German crewmen were found inside the French lines, lying
in the mud three miles apart.
On Christmas Eve, 1915-it was his 21st birthday-Guynemer was awarded the cross of the Legion of Honor, his country's highest award. The accompanying citation, read off by a
general, was so extravagant in its praise that Guynemer lowered his long-lashed eyes and blushed furiously.
When the Storks were sent to the beleaguered skies over
Verdun in March, Guynemer's score stood at eight-eclipsed
only by the flamboyant Jean Navarre, who had been working in
that sector since the battle had begun a month before. Guynemer's spasmodic aerial combats of the preceding weeks were
but a foretaste of the aerial war that raged above the contested
ground on both banks of the Meuse.
The morning of March 13, 1916, dawned clear and cold.
Sharp gusts of wind blew puffs of powdered snow across the
rutted field. A few miles to the north the ceaseless rumble of
the guns heralded the new day, but as Guynemer struggled
into heavy sweater, fur-lined combination, and boots his optimism found voice in a calm statement to Brocard that today,
the 13th, he would get two Boche just to start things rolling for
the squadron.
Over the Mort Homme he put to flight a group of reconnaissance machines which didn't stay around to test his mettle.
A few minutes later he cornered a brace of two-seaters coming
from out of the sun. Swinging around to begin his attack from
the rear, Guynemer believed he would have his double in time
to fly back to the field for breakfast. He bored in on the rearmost target, fired seven rounds and saw the plane sideslip violently and begin to spin earthward. The German observer in
the second plane vented his spleen with a long burst of fire that
sent tracers skittering over Guynemer's head like speeded-up
fireflies. Seeking to avoid this deadly sheam, Guynemer dived
underneath the two-seater, intending to pull up and machine-
wtt
107
gun the craft in the belly. But he had sadly misjudged his
speed, and before he could correct it his Nieuport shot from
underneath the blind spot and emerged in front of and slightly
below the German plane. The enemy pilot reacted swiftly. He
dropped his plane's nose and opened fire.
The windscreen exploded in Guynemer's face. The cowling
rang dully with the strikes. A ricochet ripped into his cheek
and blood momentarily blotted out his vision. Two hammer
blows crashed against his left arm. Something slammed against
his jaw. Quickly he shoved the stick forward and dived away
from the terrible assault. A thousand feet lower, he pulled up
and wiped away the blood from his eyes and his goggles. Was
the deadly two-seater still after him? No; to his relief the German pilot, believing him dead, was nowhere in sight. With his
left arm dangling numb and useless at his side, Guynemer
fought the Nieuport down with one hand to a landing inside
his own lines, near Brocourt. He was lifted, pale and bloody,
from the cockpit and placed on a stretcher for the rough ride to
the field hospital at Vadelaincourt. As the crudely sprung,
hard-tired ambulance bounded over the front-line roads, away
from the war, Guynemer's only thought was that he had failed
the squadron at a time when he was needed most.
The facial wounds proved superficial, only faint scars and a
small piece of metal forever imbedded in his jaw muscles
remained to remind him of those hellish few seconds over Verdun. And the Maxim slugs that had slammed through his arm
had missed the bone. But the shock to so frail a body was great,
and he lay for weeks in the hospital looking drawn and helpless. He dutifully rested and ate much of the hospital diet, and
slowly the strength flowed back into his system. With strength
came restlessness, and his black eyes burned with impatience
to be away from the reek of ether and formaldehyde and back
to the pungent odor of castor oil, cordite, and gasoline, back to
the squadron fighting so hard at Verdun. The doctors were
alarmed; this extraordinary man clothed in the body of a child
needed twice the convalescence period of most and-worse still
-they feared that Guynemer was afi:I.icted with tuberculosis.
They appealed to the elder Guynemer, and the old man visited
Georges at the hospital and pleaded with him to spend some
108
109
110
Wfl
Wfl
111
The plane was siev~d, but Guynemer miraculously was no':here to~~hed. Mra1d every moment that his airplane would
s1mply d1smtegrate around him, he began to nurse it downward, fighting ~ontrols that seemed to be supported in syrup.
He got the loose-jointed wreck down behind his own lines and
ski~ed across a shell-torn field, only to catch the wheels in
the lip of a shell crater. The control-less fighter flipped over and
shot forward tailfirst in a shower of mud. Guynemer crawled
from underneath the shambles and limped away covered with
bruises. Afterward, he laughed and wondered what happened
t~ the gunners who might have had the temerity to claim an
a1rcra~t ~estroyed over Fescamps that day. Considering Guynemer s Immense popularity, a lynching might have been not
unlikely.
Th~ wi?t~r of. that year of 1916 began early. The cold was
numbmg m Its bitterness and days fit for flying grew fewer and
fe~er.' But Guynemer was always up before dawn, nervously
drm~g coffee and smoking cigarettes, waiting for a possible
break m the heavy gray clouds that blanketed France from
Switzerland to the sea. Guynemer flew in weather that was
ma~gi~al. for geese, pressing his luck, his aircraft, his body to
therr hmrts. By the end of the year, his score stood at twentyfive and there wasn't a school child in France who was not
familiar. with his photograph-so often seen in the daily newspapers, m weekly magazines and in newsreels. He was the idol
of women of all ages, the envy of less able men, and to the gray
veterans of the bitter defeat of 1870, he was vengeance incarnate. His every victory was minutely chronicled by the press, a
popular song sprung up celebrating his deeds, and his fan mail
grew to monumental proportions.
Thus it is not surprising that when, in early January, his
name vanished from the communiques, something like a minor
panic struck the populace. What has become of our beloved
Guynemer? they asked in the cafes. Rumor had it that he had
been killed in some desperate combat and that the government
-perhaps fearing national collapse-was keeping the news
from the people. But no! Guynemer had not died at the hands
of les sales Boches; he had been killed by a jealous husband
who had blundered into a tryst in Pigalle; the murderer's name
112
Wfi
was being kept secret lest an outraged Paris track him down
and tear him to bits. The mystery deepened with each passing
day that saw the hero's name still missing from public print.
Oblivious to all this, Guynemer was busy at the Spad factory
seeing to the installation of a 37-mm. cannon inside a specially
constructed Spad VII built to accommodate the outsize weapon between the cylinders of its V-8 Hispano-Suiza engine. He
was warned that reloading the single-shot cannon would be
hard work while in the air and that the cockpit would be filled
with acrid fumes after each shot, but Guynemer waved aside
all opposition. When he returned to the Storks later that month
he blew apart an Albatros in the air with one well-placed shot.
His Spad, le Vieux Charles ("Old Charlie"), became famous on
both sides of the lines. In fact, there were several "Charlies"
at Guynemer's disposal; he sometimes flew in the Spad
equipped with the cannon and sometimes in a 150-h.p. model
mounting a single Vickers gun. As more powerful models came
out, the factory sent up the first of each production batch for
his personal use. He drove his planes as unmercifully as he
drove himself, and while he was flying one plane, the others
were being re-rigged and tuned up by his worshipful
mechanics.
When guns failed him-as they often did when fighting in
the subzero temperatures found at 15,000 feet and aboveGuynemer relied on audacious bluff. On January 26, a freezing
day and threatening snow, Guynemer went aloft alone and
bounced an Albatros two-seater at 12,000 feet. His Vickers
feebly loosed off ten rounds, then froze solid. Guynemer hammered at the feed block and worked the charging handle, but
to no avail. The brightly painted Albatros seemed suddenly an
object of overwhelming desire, and Guynemer detennined that
it should be his, jammed gun or no. He swooped down on the
German plane's tail and sawed his rudder menacingly back
and forth as if to say, You're mine ... a false move and you
are dead. He was so close that the German observer could
clearly see the grim white face beneath the goggles; the silent
Vickers gun, black and ominous, was only yards away, and
they were flying toward the French lines with the wind behind
them .... What to do? Although Guynemer's gun remained
Wfi
113
silent, the German pilot could reach up and poke his fingers
through the holes made in his top wing by the Frenchman's
first ten rounds. Not wanting to risk another dose of the same
telling marksmanship, the Albatros pilot started letting down,
straight for France.
The captured German craft came to earth between Montdidier and Compiegne, and Guynemer had his thirtieth.
As the winter gave way to spring, it seemed that Guynemer
was running a race with death; there were never enough hours
in the day, enough days in the week, or weeks in the month to
satisfy his burning compulsion for flight into the deadly area
three miles above the earth. Now twenty-two years old, he
looked thirty-five, and when on the ground he spent much of
his time resting his frail body for the morrow. Seeing him
slumped listless and exhausted, no one would have believed
him to be the greatest fighting pilot the war had produced.
Rather, it appeared he was a fit case for a rest home-as indeed
he was-but repeated requests from headquarters that he give
up combat flying received only a wan smile for an answer.
Dragging himself out to "Old Charlie" at dawn, he was a man
struggling with himself ... but once seated in the cockpit with
the engine roaring for take-off, he became in command of his
every faculty; sheer will hammered down fatigue and he
became, for those precious two hours of flight that lay ahead,
the Germans' greatest nemesis.
The following communique, issued by Grand Quartier
General in the spring of 1917, indicates the pace:
In the period from 17 to 31 May, Captain Guynemer has destroyed five enemy aircraft, of which four were brought down in the
same day. Two of these machines were accounted for in a oneminute interval, perhaps for the first time in this war. These five
new victories raise to 43 the number of German machines destroyed
to date by this valiant officer.
On July 7, Guynemer returned to his field after a hardfought, seemingly never-ending day that had seen the sky
swirling with enemy fighters at all altitudes; he had dueled just
under stratus clouds where it was so cold that his hands
numbed and his guns chugged sluggishly, and he had
114
wtt
115
tender eyes in your direction; you follow their glance, supposing it is your face that has attracted such sweet and compelling
observation ... not at all! They are merely counting the number of palms attached to the ribbon of the Croix de Guerre.
What sauce!"
Guynemer returned to the Front, and within ten days felled
two more German fighters to raise his official tally to the halfhundred mark. This magic figure, added to the fact that Guynemer had never looked worse in his life, triggered anew a
campaign to retire him from the arena ... perhaps to be sent
back to command the fighter school. "Never speak to me of the
rear!" he feverishly snapped out. "To quit the Front would be
an act of desertion." He went on flying and, on August 20,
bagged a D.F.W. over Poperinghe to bring the record to 53.
If GQG could not remove this latter-day Joan of Arc from
the lists, it thought to at least cut down his time in the air:
Guynemer, at twenty-three, was promoted to command of
SPA. 3. Things began to go wrong at once: he found himself
immersed in the trivia of paperwork that piled up on his worn
desk and thus the beckoning cockpit remained empty; when he
did have time to take to the air, the uncertain FlandeJ:S
weather made hunting next to impossible; and, to cap it all, his
favorite cannon Spad had to go into the shop for an overhaul.
Guynemer built up a dangerous head of steam inside, and on
the morning of September 11, he summoned one of the Stork
pilots, Lieutenant Bozon-Verduraz, and told him they were
going up on patrol ... just to find trouble. Guynemer climb.ed
into one of his spare machines, a much-used Spad XIII with
twin Vickers guns that were forever giving him trouble, and
with Bozon-Verduraz trailing him, left the ground at 8:25A.M.
Not many minutes later, over the shattered Belgian town of
Poelcapelle, Bozon-Verduraz saw Guynemer slide away and
down, hurtling after a German two-seater seen briefly through
a break in the clouds. Then the clouds closed together, and
"Old Charlie" was swallowed up in the cotton wool. BozonVerduraz went after Guynemer, but became lost in the clammy
oppressiveness of the clouds. When he finally broke out into
the clear there was no sign of the Spad or of the enemy plane.
Bleriots w ere used at the Front in 1914, but later were relegated to
a training role. To be breveted on Bleriots was considered a mark
of esteem. (USAF)
Dual instruction in the French Service Aeronautique was given on
the two-seater Nieuport ( left ) and twin-engined Caudron ( right) .
Few French pilots were sent into combat with less tlwn eighty
hours in the air-far more time than pilots of the British R.F.C. had.
( Paul Ayres Rockwell )
Mid-field collisions were common but seldom fatal. One pilot, dazed
and morose, sits on wing awaiting Gallic tongue-lashing from instructor. ( Robert Soubiran )
First solo in firefly -like Nieuport was long-remembered thrill. ( Martin Caidin Archives)
Late1', Voisins we1'e a1'med with quick-fi1'ing 37-mm. cannons intended for knocking out machine-gun nests and a1'tillery emplacements. Note eady employment of shock struts and heavy-duty tires.
(Thomas G. Miller, Jr.)
)
('
'
Appropriately named "nurse balloons" were kept near by to replenish the highly flammable gas of the larger "sausages." (George
Dock, Jr. )
French pilot Mamice Boyau was armed with Vickers gun synchronized to fire through the propeller as well as a wing-mounted
Lewis gun. Early Nieuports, however, were fitted with Lewis guns
only. To change drums in midst of combat was an event ludicmus
in appearance and dangerous in execution. (Air Force Museum,
Wright-Patterson AFB)
... -. . ":.. ..
... :
Rakish M orane-Saulnier was one of few high-wing monoplane designs to see combat in World War I. Downward visibility was
unexcelled and plane responded eagerly to controls-but pilots
were afraid of them. Said one pilot: "You have to fly the machine
every minute ... or else!" (Martin Caidin Archives)
Winter flyin g was cruel to men and machines. This chilly scene was
taken near Cachy Wood, along the Somme. Cracked blocks on
water-cooled Hispano-Suiza engines were not uncommon, and the
engines were always preheated before patrol. Upstairs, frostbite
was every man's enemy. (Edwin C. Parsons )
The Farman "Shorthorn" was slow (65 mph) and unwieldy in flight,
easy prey for German fighters-but it performed yeoman service as
a photographic mconnaissance plane untill917. (Robert Soubiran )
Fitted with bomb racks and four .303-caliber machine guns, the
Salmson was effective infantry-support aircraft. Here, the pilot runs
up the engine to check synchronization of forward guns. (The
National Archives )
(USAF)
Muddy fields; high touch-down speed, made landing Spads a difficult business: This one slew ed off the strip, smashed into barrack .
( Robert Soubiran )
"You can lead a horse to water . ..." This Nieuport, its back broken,
stopped fust short of irrigation ditch after crash landing. (Edwin
C. Parsons)
French winters often saw man's oldest war steed towing the newest. Many German aces began careers on Albatros G-Ill. (Peter
M. Bowers )
T echnically advanced Germany provided pilots with oxygen systems to enable them to fly and fight at high altitudes for long
periods of time. This Fokker D-VII pilot demonstrates mouthbreathing tube, metal nose-clip. Oxygen cylinder is on outside of
cockpit. (The National Archives)
In late 1918, while French, British and American fiiers were roasting in fiame-wrapped airplanes, German pilots were saving their
lives by fumping with parachutes. It is one of war's mafor mysteries
why Allied airmen were denied this salvation. (The National
Archives)
On his twenty-first birthday, Guynemer was awarded Cross of Legion d'Honneur to add to his
Medaille Militaire and Croix de
Guerre with numerous palms. He
had 600 aerial encounters with
enemy planes in two years. (H.
Hugh Wynne)
(USAF)
The Fokker D-VII was the greatest German fighter of the war and
inspired healthy respect from F1'ench aces. Its appearance in the
summer of 1918 marked the beginning of ha1'd fighting all along
the W estern Front. Thick airfoil section and 185-h.p. engine enabled the D-VII to wage effective combat at altitudes above 20,000
feet . (The National Archives)
More than two hundred Americans served with the French before
the United States finally declared war. Most began as ambulance
drivers or as riflemen in the Foreign Legion. Here, an American
ambulance awaits cargo of wounded from offensive in Champagne.
( George Dock, Jr. )
~ -
Frank Baylies (left) and Ted Parsons were two of three Americans
to fly with Guynemer's squadron. Both became aces, but only one
survived the war. Parsons, form er Lafayette Escadrille pilot, retired from U. S. Navy after World War II with rank of rear admiral. He was awarded French L egion of Honor in 1962 for outstanding combat record in 1918! ( Edwin C. Parsons)
Eugene Jacques Bullard forty-five years after his first combat patrol
with SPA. 93. The poor boy from Georgia fought his way through
the world with fists, bayonets, and
wings. He was world's first Negro
military pilot and won honors for
gallantry at Verdun while serving
as rifleman with French Foreign
Legion. (Author's collection)
Paths of glory. Cost of war was high. This military cemetery near
Fere-en-T ardenois is but one of scores found today scattered
throughout the length of the old Western Front. (Robert Soubiran )
116
Wfl
He swept back and forth over the blasted terrain, which even
then was empting under the pounding of British artillery, but
he had the sky to himself. He turned and Hew for home, to wait.
As the long, anxious minutes dragged by, the Storks put
forth various explanations to account for Guynemer's failure to
return on the heels of Bozon-Verduraz: the most popular being
that he had stayed out by himself on one of the solo patrols he
loved so well. After two hours had passed-and with it, the
limit of the Spad's ability to stay aloft-this was rejected in
favor of the explanation that Guynemer had landed on another
field, perhaps with engine trouble. However, a call to every
field in the vicinity turned up nothing. Had he, then, been
wounded and taken to a hospital? Again, the telephone offered
no balm; Guynemer was nowhere to be found. Shot down and
lying wounded in a German field hospital? Days passed, and
there was no word. Silence absolu.
Not only his friends but the nation as a whole was plunged
ihto gloom. It passed belief that their skilled lionhearted idol
could have fallen. Indeed, some among the younger worshipers
created the wonderful legend that Guynemer had simply flown
so high that he could not come down again: he was one among
the gods.
The truth-as supplied by the Germans-emerged in bits and
pieces. Three weeks after Guynemer's disappearance, the Germans reported that Guynemer's Spad had fallen beside the
cemetery at Poelcapelle. Three German infantrymen had
dashed out under heavy artillery fire to examine the wreckage.
They found Guynemer's body still strapped inside the crumpled remains of "Old Charlie," a bullet through his head, one
leg broken and bent at an awkward angle. They found his
identity card on the body and then hurriedly got away from
the cemetery as the thunderous barrage rolled onward. Shortly
afterward, the infantrymen said, the wreckage of the Spad was
pulverized by the shelling. Afterward, no trace of the airplane
or the body was ever found.
But how had it happened? Nearly a year passed before a
satisfactory explanation was given, this time by a German pilot
shot down and captured on July 25, 1918. The pilot, Lieutenant Karl Menchkoff (with 39 credited kills ) told his captors
"'"ff
117
that Guynemer had been killed by a twenty-four-year-old flying officer named Kurt Wisseman, who had been bounced by
Guynemer from fifty yards only to have his guns jam when
Wisseman believed his last moments had come. Wisseman
had then turned on Guynemer and fired the fatal burst. Elated,
he wrote his mother, "Now I need have no further fear in this
war." Eighteen days later, he lay dead in the Flanders mud.
118
Wit
-..;t
119
f~r South America, .there to seek out an uncle who might put
h1m on the road to nches in the New World.
But when th~ youthful Nungesser offloaded in Rio carrying
one battered smtcase, h e found no trace of the relative. And he
was utterly friendless in that huge, strange city. He went on to
Buenos Aires, for there he believed his relation had moved. But
again no trace. Nearly broke, he could go no farther, so he set
about to find a job. He took a bus to an airfield, looking for
mechanic's work, but found instead a fellow Frenchman who
had just landed in a Bleriot. "Can I learn to fly that?" he asked.
Seeing his youth, his rumpled clothes, his obvious poverty, the
pilot only laughed and waved his hand away as though to
brush off a nettlesome insect. Nungesser's anger flared. He
climbed into the cockpit and began rolling erratically down
the field. The Bleriot staggered into the air and Nungesser
found himself alone in the sky with a tiger by the tail. Lightning reflexes coupled with a frantic desire to live enabled him
to somehow reach the earth again in something approximating
a landing attitude, and after several spine-jarring bounces the
Bleriot stayed glued to the grass and with nothing shattered.
Flight! This was surely meant for him. He spent the last of his
money on a Hying lesson given by an itinerant German, who
departed owing Nungesser several more hours in the air. So
there he was in Argentina without a peso.
His degree obtained him a job as an assembler in an automotive p lant, and he lived frugally, saving his money in order to
learn to fly. When he was seventeen, the company tried him
out as an assistant racing driver, and his skill was so great that
he was made first driver and began winning prizes in the big
competition races held every Sunday in Buenos Aires. His free
time was given over to keeping in shape and in going to the
prize fights.
One night, when the main attraction was a scheduled
twelve-rounder between a favorite Argentine light-heavyweight and a challenger from France, Nungesser demonstrated that slurs on the national honor were not to be
tolerated. The French boxer was knocked silly in the first
round, and the sneering Argentine, with his glove raised in victory, apologized to the crowd for such a poor contest. "But as
120
""it
""it
121
122
the horse behind, they walked south along the road for perhaps
twenty minutes, then once again Bopped by the side of the
road at the sound of an approaching motor. Nungesser peered
over the lip of the ditch and saw a large, black Mors open sedan
barreling down the road toward them. Black-and-white pennants flapped from the fenders-a German staff car. Up ahead
was a gate across the road, now open. Nungesser crouched and
ran down the ditch and slammed the gate shut, then dashed
back to the others and waited. The car slowed, then stopped.
Inside was a colonel of the Imperial Guards, a captain of
Cuirassiers and two lieutenants of infantry. Big game, indeed!
One of the lieutenants got out of the car to open the gate, and
at that moment Nungesser opened fire with his carbine and the
poilus with their long-barreled Lebels. The lieutenant fell to
the ground at once, and the captain rose from the back of the
car and toppled forward. The colonel and the surviving lieutenant drew their revolvers and started shooting, but Nungesser coolly dispatched the two of them with his carbine. The
shooting was over in perhaps five seconds, and all four Germans lay dead.
Nungesser barked out orders to strip the Germans of their
tunics and trousers and dispatch cases. This done, the booty
was Bung inside the car, the bodies were quickly rolled into the
ditch, and Nungesser got behind the wheel with the poilus sitting in back. He started the powerful engine, and shot through
the gate and down the road toward Couey. They soon came to
a French rear guard and he slowed the car, shouting that he
was en route to headquarters with important papers for the
general. He let out the clutch and roared ahead. The French
soldiers didn't know whether to believe him or not, and after a
few seconds of heated arm-waving, turned and fired at the
back of the speeding Mors. In the confusion of that great
retreat, they passed alternately Germans and Frenchmen, and
were fired on impartially. After a hair-raising two hours, they
came to the French main line and were admitted to the presence of the general commanding the 53rd Division. Nungesser
and his companions were at once arrested as spies. But when
the general took a good look at the captured papers, some of
which were marked with arrows showing the direction of the
Wfi
123
124
Wft
once had the toe of his boot shot clean away ... but always he
returned. Within three months he had completed fifty-three
day- and night-bombardment missions, and on July 31, he and
Pauchon bagged the squadron's first German aircraft.
On this occasion they were at 5,000 feet above the field, trying out a Voisin fresh from the depot, when Nungesser made
out a formation of five enemy two-seater bombers flying high
against the early morning sun. They were too high to reach, so
Nungesser turned toward the Moselle, hoping to catch them
when they returned. Over Beaumont, one of the Germans
peeled off and went after a French observation balloon tethered to the earth near a patch of woods. Nungesser pushed the
control column and the Voisin responded with a creaking of
wood and a sigh of bracing wires as it slanted downward. The
German plane, busy with attacking the balloon, failed to discover the lunging Voisin until it was less than sixty feet away.
Pauchon got off a long burst, and the German plane dived
abruptly for the earth. Nungesser followed it down to 1.'000
feet and watched it crash. He Hew home through a hail of
shrapnel and machine-gun fire and reported the kill, only to
learn that a French antiaircraft battery was trying to steal the
victory. Nungesser jumped in an automobile and drov~ up to
the balloon lines and there talked to an observer who signed a
.
statement giving the Voisin all the credit.
Now his appetite for the chase was whetted; day bombmg
was all very well, but. ...
Nungesser asked for transfer to fighters, and after less tha~ .a
week's training in the rear, where he mastered the eccentnclties of the Morane Parasol, be was issued a new Nieuport and
reassigned to N. 65. The skittish little Nieuport was ~ superb
machine in the hands of a skilled pilot, and Nungesser s enthusiasm at escaping from Voisins overcame his good sense: on his
first pass at the field where N. 65 was based he indulged in
hair-raising acrobatics scarcely a hundred feet off the g~ou~d.
Again and again he put the fighter through its p~ces, thmkmg
to dazzle his new commanding officer. He d1d: when he
landed, the CO stormed over and told him that if he wished to
impress somebody with his flying skill he should arrange to
frighten the enemy and not other Frenchmen. Nungesser
Wft
125
126
tracers streaked into the dirty gray fuselage and he saw the
pilot throw up his hands and fall lifeless against the control
column. As the plane nosed sharply over, "... the observer, still
alive, clung desperately to the mounting ring to which his
machine gun was attached. Suddenly the mounting ripped
loose from the fuselage and was flung into space, taking with it
the helpless crewman. He clawed frantically at the air, his bo.dy
working convulsively like a man on a trapeze. I had a qmck
glimpse of his face before he tumbled away through the clouds
... it was a mask of horror."
The vision haunted Nungesser for days; he stayed away
from the mess table, and he dreaded the coming of the night
and the ordeal of attempted sleep: every time he closed his
eyes he saw the flailing arms of the German gunner, the white
terror-stricken features, the mouth opened wide in a soundless
scream. Before the war ended Nungesser would kill upward of
a hundred men to become the third-ranking ace in the French
galaxy of great aerial hunters, but never again would he react
as he did on that day over Nomeny when he had a macrophotographic view of fate's ugly capriciousness.
Nungesser's victory bore fruit in the award of the scarlet
ribbon of the Legion of Honor-he was first taken off arrest
status-and in a question put to him by the group comm~nde~:
Would Adfuclant Nungesser care to test fly a new Ponmer btplane fighter just arrived from the factory? The answer was
foregone, for Nungesser had never refused a ch~llenge. He
strapped himself in the rakish little fighter, the engme fired up
with a roar, the chocks were pulled and Nungesser thundered
off the field in the beginnings of one of his famous climbing
turns. Then, disaster. The Pannier, woefully unstable, dropped
heavily out of the turn and spun viciously into the. ground.
They extricated Nungesser from the wreckage looking more
dead than alive and loaded him into an ambulance for a fullthrottle ride to the hospital. He was stripped of his flight suit,
and when the doctors completed assessing the damage, they
shook their heads. Both legs were broken, his jaw was smashed
and hanging unhinged, most of his teeth had been knocked out
and his palate was punctured from having had the top of ~he
control column shoved into his mouth. His breath was commg
127
in short, agonized gasps and blood ran darkly from his nostrils
and from the corners of his mouth ... God only knew what the
internal injuries were. The doctors said it would be a miracle
if he lasted through the night.
That was on January 29, 1916. Three days later, Nungesser
was hobbling around his room on crutches; two weeks later he
left the hospital and began driving his car from Paris to Le
Bourget airport almost daily to watch the coming and going of
airplanes. Less than a month after his supposedly fatal crash he
arrived at the field and eased himself from the car fully dressed
for flight. He shuffied across the tarmac on crutches. His head
was swathed from chin to cranium with heavy bandages. His
speech was little more than a rasping mumble, for his jaw was
wired together and his gums were still raw and painful from
extensive dental surgery. He thumped over to a group of
shocked mechanics and made it known he wanted a Nieuport
readied for flight. "But you are mad!" they told him.
"Shut up," he gurgled, "and help me in the cockpit." A Nieuport was rolled out and three men hoisted him into ~e airplane. When they were finished, what could be seen of his face
was deathly white and beaded with sweat. He got off ~e
ground quickly and climbed to 500 feet-and k~pt the was~1sh
little fighter at that altitude while he wrung 1t out: vertical
turns, loops, rolls, Immelmanns ... everything in the book. He
touched down flawlessly a quarter of an hour later and cut the
switches, motioning for somebody to come and help him out
of the airplane. One of his friends, the aviation correspondent
Jacques Mortane, rushed over and heard Nungesser say, "Tha,~
wasn't too bad. In two weeks I'll be back with the squadron.
"But why," asked Mortane, "do you insist on suicide?"
Nungesser smiled crookedly and replied, "Mon vieux, I .m ust
get back up there and start knoc.king the~ down. My fnends
will have Croix de Guerres hangmg to therr stomachs; I have
no time to lose."
Eight weeks to the day after the smashup of the Ponnie~,
Nungesser returned to N. 65. He climbed out of the cockp1t
unassisted but was forced to hobble across the field with the
aid of a c~ne. He was nattily outfitted in a new black uniform
that seemed to set off the fresh scar tissue that ridged his face,
128
129
gave it up and broke the circle, and Nungesser dived away for
home.
The controls were sickly and the engine stuttered badly,
threatening to quit altogether. He skimmed across the trenches,
pursued by ground fire, and staggered back to his home field
with only five cylinders firing. Small wonder: his plane had
been struck twenty-eight times-seven slugs were pried from
the engine assembly alone. Fuel was leaking out from the
holed tank which, by some miracle, had not ignited. There was
a hole in his helmet, another in his flying boot, and incredulous
N. 65 pilots counted five more tears in Nungesser's fur-lined
flying suit-but nowhere was he scratched himself. It seemed
that Charles Nungesser was blessed with all the luck in the
world a combat pilot could have.
Well, yes and no. . . .
In the early summer, over Verdun, Nungesser tangled with
two Fokkers flown by experts. Back and forth the battle raged,
the air filled with the snarl of rotary engines and the steady
crackle of machine guns. Something slammed into Nungesser's
mouth and he began swallowing blood; a Maxim slug had
caught his mouth at an angle, almost tearing away his upper
lip. He stuffed his silk scarf inside his mouth, clamped down on
it with his gold teeth and kept flying. Most aerial duels were
decided within minutes, but this one roared across the sky for
nearly an hour. In the end, maddened with pain, Nungesser
shot down both Germans and limped home. Some time later,
when he was released from the hospital with orders to take a
one-month convalescence leave, Nungesser returned to Verdun
and attached himself to the already famous Escadrille Americaine (later renamed the Escadrille Lafayette ) and, on July
21, bagged his tenth German plane.
In the autumn, over the Somme, Nungesser brought down
two aircraft and one balloon on the same day ... but shortly
afterward crashed on take-off and suffered the agony of
resmashing his aheady fractured jaw. Back in the hospital
again, the surgeons decided to undo all the work that had been
done on Nungesser before: they rebroke his badly set leg and
attempted to set it straight. Then they went to work on his face.
The new break in the lower jaw was open and suppurating ...
Wf!
Wf!
131
132
Wft
on the spur of the moment to drive into Paris; the Front was
closed down by the usual foul French autumn weather, and
there was little enough to do in the little Flanders towns. The
two men climbed into the car; Pauchon behind the wheel,
Nungesser in the back seat. They were speedin? along. the
highway leading to the capital when Pauchon, stncken With a
heart attack, gasped and fell unconscious against the wheel.
Out of control, the car bounded across the road, bounced from
the bottom of a shallow ditch and smashed head-on into a solid
tree trunk. Pauchon died instantly, his neck broken, and when
Nungesser came to and felt his face, sli~p~ry with bl~od,. he
knew that, once again, he had broken his 1aw . . . This time
Nungesser didn't return to the Front until New Year's E~e,
which he celebrated by staging a one-man trench-strafing mission on the German front lines.
For Nungesser, 1918 was like all the other years: a day-in,
day-out kaleidoscope of whirling propellers, the roar of
engines, the chatterirlg of machine guns-plus the usual forced
landings, outright crashes, and fresh wounds ... and,. always,
the throbbing pain that would never go away. Certam days,
however, stood out:
-June 13, when he shot down two three-seaters in the space
of four seconds.
-August 14, when he performed the dangerous and unprecedented feat of burning four balloons: two before breakfast,
two after lunch.
- The day when he stood before the massed ran~s of a full
battalion of French infantry and was decorated With the rosette of the class of Officer of the Legion d'l:Ionneur.
General Robert Nivelle fixed his eye on Nungesser's battered
face and asked, "Lieutenant, can you tell me by what miracle
of tactics you have managed to bring down so many of the
Boche?"
.
.
"
Nungesser's answer was as candid as It was revea~mg: Man
general, when I am behind the adversary an~ believe that I
have his airplane well and truly centered m front of my
machine guns, I close my eyes and open fire. "'_hen I open
them again, sometimes I see my oppon~nt hurtl~g thr~~gh
space ... and at other times I find myself m a hospital bed.
Wft
133
May 8,1927:
It is before dawn at Le Bourget airfield, and floodlights shine
across the darkened field that still gleams wetly from the winddriven rains that had swept over the city the night before. A
hangar door screeches open and a great white airplane is rolled
out. A dozen men strain to wheel the shining craft around and
start it trundling toward the far end of the field. They push the
heavy, creaking machine to the very limit of the runway, and
when they swing it around, the tail is almost butting up against
the fence. These ground crewmen know that the airplane will
need every available foot of the field if it is to leave the earthand there are those who doubt that it can. It is a special plane,
to be flown by special men. Oiseau Blanc, she is called, and at
stmrise she will be summoned to hurdle the vast gray stretches
of the Atlantic.
White Bird has been well-designed for her mission: the
wings are long and broad; the fuselage is like a boat hull, fitted
aft with watertight compartments, cramped amidships where
the crew will sit, and forward there is jammed a solid wall of
tanks to accommodate 1,000 gallons of fuel. A purist might
scowl at the undercarriage, which looks crudely made and even
flimsy, but it is meant for one take-off only and is to be shed in
flight. It is not needed for the water landing in New York Har-
134
wtt
bor 3,700 miles away. Bolted atop the dorsal wing is anchored
the hope of France: an eight-cylinder, in-line, water-cooled
450-h.p. Lorraine-Dietrich engine that is so new the blue-gray
paint on the exhaust manifolds has not had time to be scorched
away. The designer of this airplane, Levasseur, has consulted
his slide rule more than once, and each time the tiny etched
black figures tell him that the Oiseau Blanc has more than
enough range to arc the Atlantic ... especially today, when the
meteorologist confirms that there is a strong tail wind which
will help push the airplane 1,500 miles along its trajectory.
Thus there seems nothing to stand in the way of success; the
least of the worries is the crew.
At thirty-five years of age, Charles Nungesser would be hard
to top as an experienced flyer, a man blessed with that mixture
of daring and phenomenal luck in the air. To him the signing
of the Armistice had not been a signal to retire, but a spur to
bring aviation to the people. The flying school at Orly that
Nungesser opened in 1919-and closed that same year-and
the frantic barnstorming that carried him the breadth of the
United States had, he said, been far from wasted enterprises;
he had learned refinements in the art of piloting, and he had
stirred countless thousands of younger men with the challenge
of the upper reaches. Every hour in the air had been a milestone on the road to today, when he would literally rise to
accept the greatest challenge he had yet imposed upon himself.
And his navigator, Captain Raymond Coli-there was none
better. Coli had lost one eye in the war, but with the other he
could find his way around the world using the crudest of
instruments. Coli had proved himself by navigating Henri
Roget in a double crossing of the Mediterranean on January
26, 1919; four months later he and Roget had set a distance
record in a nonstop flight of 1,320 miles from Paris to Kenitra
in Morocco. Few would deny that Coli had no peer as a navigator anywhere in Europe.
The only question in the minds of those at Le Bourget is
whether or not Levasseur's bird can get off the ground, loaded
as she is with so much fuel. To eliminate every excess ounce,
Nungesser and Coli empty their pockets of everything; they
carry with them not even a scrap of change. Should they arrive
135
in New Yo~k safel~, they _will not even be able to buy a cup of
co~ee. Coli, standmg beside the fuselage, grins and says: "Oh
we 11 muddle through somehow down there."
'
. At exactly 5 A.M., Nungesser and Coli squeeze themselves
mto the narrow fuselage. Sitting side by side, there "isn't
enough room to force a cigarette paper between their elbows."
Nung~sser flicks on the ignition switch and cracks the throttle.
The big wooden prop is pulled through and then the Lorraine
explodes into life. Nungesser slowly moves the throttle forward
listening with his ears to the song of power overhead, while hi~
eyes dart around the instrument panel:"The tachometer needle
swings ov~r to 1,650 and hangs there, steady; the oil pressure
gauge registers normal; fuel gauges read "Full." The sun is now
a huge arc of red, magnified by the ground haze that covers
the field. But up there, a mile above the earth, the sun is
~lread_Y shining brightly in a clear, blue sky. Nungesser is
Impatient to get rolling, but he waits until 5: 17 before signaling
for the chocks to be pulled, waiting to be sure the Lorraine is
ready for its ultimate test.
With the blocks jerked away and the throttle bent all the
way to the fire wall, the White Bird begins to gather momentum as it plunges forward down the field lined with thousands
of cheering Frenchmen whose enthusiasm cannot be dampened by the bits of muddy turf that are flung at them in the
wake of the propwash.
One hundred .. . two hundred . .. three hundred ... four
hundred yards and the gleaming white craft is still glued to the
earth, although the tail is already elevated due to the floatplane design. At the six-hundred-yard marker, Nungesser tentatively applies back pressure to the stick, but this only drops
the tail without getting the wheels off the ground. The stick is
quickly moved forward again. With the throttle as far forward
as it can go, there is nothing Nungesser can do except pray that
Levasseur's slide rule will not let them down.
Seven hundred ... eight hundred-and the wheels begin to
ease from the earth. At the end of nine hundred yards, Nungesser feels that the plane is ready for flight and he eases the
stick back. The wheels shake off the mud and Oiseau Blanc is
airborne. Below, the throngs cheer themselves hoarse; hats are
136
'11
HIGH
thrown deliriously into the air and total strangers are seen kissing one another. The thousands stand in the open field until
the distant drone of the Lorraine can no longer be heard. Then
they drift away, and the sprawling Le Bourget somehow seems
forlorn, like a ghost town in the American West.
At 6:48, coastwatchers at Le Havre see the Oiseau Blanc
pass overhead, clearly outlined against the bright blue sky, and
flying straight to westward. They, too, wave and cheer until the
airplane disappears over the horizon. Then they, with all of
France-and indeed the world-go home to await the news.
It comes in Paris at 7 the following evening-but it is cruelly
false: Nungesser and Coli are in New York! Paris goes mad; it
is Armistice night all over again. Then the retraction: Nungesser and Coli are nowhere to be found. The beautiful White
Bird, in fact, has not been seen since it cleared the coast of
France. Nor is it ever seen again.
Did they-as some believe-reach Newfoundland only to
land in the wilderness and there perish for lack of sustenance?
With Coli navigating, this seems not likely. Did some terrible
turbulence reach out and crush them? Was there a sudden,
horrifying fire in mid-Atlantic that consumed the plane and
the men inside? Or did the Lorraine betray them in the dead
of night so that they landed badly on the angry sea to be battered to pieces by mountainous waves until all were sent to the
bottom?
Nobody will ever know. The ocean keeps its secrets.
'11
137
The Wager
138
...
The Wager
...
139
140
Wfl
The Wager
Wfl
141
Rene Fonck, at twenty-four, was at the same time the greatest living ace in the French Service Aeronautique and its most
disliked star. His conceit was unbearable, his ego unpuncturable, and his lust for confirmations unquenchable. Fonck, short
and swarthy, strutted around as if he were ten feet fall, and his
words-no matter where uttered or to whom-were touched
either with piousness ( when he talked about himself, which
was often) or with contempt (when he spoke of others, which
was rare). But no matter how much Fonck got on the nerves of
those around him, there was no denying the fact that he was
one of the deadliest pilots on the Western Front: from May 3,
1917, when Fonck had first joined SPA. 103 of the Storks
Group, to April12, 1918, he had shot down thirty-five German
planes that were confirmed-but he had claimed half again as
many that were not. In combat, Fonck was as coldly detached
as a surgeon preparing to attack some diseased portion of a
strange body; no motion was wasted, no excess ammunition
expended, unnecessary maneuvers were never indulged in.
There was no warmth in his soul; only a fierce dedication to
efficiency burned in his compact body, which he babied like an
athlete.
"One must be in constant training," Fonck once told an
inquiring reporter. "Always fit, always sure of oneself, always
in perfect health. Muscles must be in good condition, nerves in
perfect equilibrium, all the organs exercising naturally. Alcohol
becomes an enemy-even wine. All abuses must be avoided. It
is indispensable that one goes to a combat without fatigue,
without any disquietude, either physical or moral.
"It must be remembered that combats take place at altitudes
as high as twenty to twenty-five thousand feet. High altitudes
are trying on one's organisms. This indeed, at bottom, is the
reason that keeps me from flying too continuously. And I never
fly except when in perfect condition; I am careful to abstain
when I am not exactly fit. Constantly I watch myself.
"It is necessary," Fonck concluded, "to train as severely for
air combats as for any other athletic contest, so difficult is the
prize of victory. Yet, if one finds oneself in prime condition, all
the rest is play."
142
Wfl
.How different from the sentiments expressed by that rambling wreck, Charles Nungesser! "One reads in the papers,"
N.ungesse~ on~e rema:ked, "precepts on the art of the fighter
pilot: don t dnnk, don t smoke, get up early, go to bed early, no
excesses, lead a peaceful existence. Hol As for me . . . a good
roasted pheasant-with truHles, if possible-a bottle of champagne, a Romeo and Juliet cigar. Afterwards, if I have an
engine turning over to its heart's content and a machine gun
that won't jam, I feel ready to attack!"
And how different from Georges Guynemer, who was never
truly fit a day in his life, who forced himself to fly in combat
day after day when he should have been in a sanitarium
instead!
With a carburetor where his heart should have been it is little wonder that Rene Fonck was not taken in warm .embrace by
the French nation, to whom soul is everything and dazzling
victories only admirable appendages.
When Fonck strolled into the bar, Rockwell and Duranty
him to sit down and have a glass of champagne.
Although Fonck very seldom drank," remembered Parsons, "it
was not in him to refuse anything free ... he had some sort of
throat afHiction that kept him, ever, from asking others if they
wanted something.
"We got to arguing about who were the better flyers, Frenchmen or Americans. It started off innocently enough-such razzing usually does- but that ever-present edge of arrogance of
Fonck's soon got Baylies and me riled. The air around the table
grew heated, almost acrimonious, and Baylies and I wound up
betting that between us we could get a Hun that afternoon
before Fonck did. Fonck wanted to make tl1e stakes cash but
w_e insisted on a bottle of good champagne. Fonck, toying 'with
his glass, shrugged and accepted the bet . . . warning us that
we were simply throwing our money away. That didn't set well,
so we bet him a second bottle of champagne that not only
would we score first, but by the time the sun went down we
would have more confirmations than he. Fonck shrugged and
smiled that tight little smile of his, then got up from the table
and walked away."
~vited
The Wager
Wfl
143
144
'11
to dig into his pinch-purse and ante up for the bottle of Piper
Heidsieck we intended to order. Oh, how we chortled and beat
each other on the back! But where was Fonck, anyway? He
had taken off shortly after we had, and-unless he had been
shot down, which wasn't likely-should have been back about
the same time. Just at the point when we were getting a bit
uneasy, when our brows were beginning to wrinkle and the
coals on our cigarettes were glowing unnaturally hard, we
heard the unmistakable, incoming roar of a Hispano-Suiza.
"It was Fonck. He came in low over the field, opening and
closing his throttle. Ruumph! Ruumphl Ruumphl The victory
signal ... at this, our concern for Fonck's safety changed to
worry about the outcome of the bet, and our elation at our own
kill had some of the edge rubbed off. Then, incredibly, he beat
back across the field twice more, each time goosing the throttle
for all it was worth. Three? Three in the same afternoon?"
It was all too true. Fonck had left the field at Hetromesnil
with two other SPA. 103 pilots, Battle and Fontaine, and he led
them straight for the lines. After a restless hunt, Fonck spotted
a two-seater observation plane protected by a pair of fighters
cruising some distance below. With altitude and surprise in his
favor, Fonck immediately dived. Not a man to overlook utilizing the totally unexpected to throw the enemy off balance,
Fonck flattened out in front of the three German planes and
went for the leader head-on. At a closure rate of 250 mph the
planes rushed for each other, and it was Fonck who fired first.
His guns chattered briefly, so briefly in fact the others may
have thought they had jammed. But the two-seater flopped
crazily out of formation and went spinning for the earth. Fonck
whipped his Spad around in a screaming vertical turn and
bored in on the two fighters. Again the Vickers guns chugged,
and the nearest German plane lurched in the air and fell away
through the clouds. The remaining Geiman pilot, no doubt
shocked to the point of numbness, put the nose of his plane
down and tried to dive for home. Fonck had only to shift his
controls slightly to line up his sights; the guns barked a few
times, the German plane broke up in the air. It had all happened so fast-in less than sixty seconds-that neither Battle
nor Fontaine had had time to bring his guns to bear; they were
The Wager
Wfi
145
dumbfounded spectators at an incredible demonstration of flying skill and aerial gunnery. When Fonck landed, Parsons and
Baylies walked over to his Spad and were astonished to discover that he had scored his triple kill using an economical
fifty rounds of ammunition. The shattered hulks of the three
German airplanes were found near Grivesnes, and the longest
line connecting the three points of impact was less than four
hundred yards.
"F?nck slyly, suggested," continued Parsons, "that although
the timekeepers records showed that we Americans had gotten
our Hun first, he shouldn't have to pay ... at least not until the
flying for the day was over. In our stunned state, this sounded
fair-especially since Rockwell and Duranty eagerly brought
out their wallets and bought a bottle for all of us to share. They
were, as can be imagined, delighted with the way things were
going, and the day was far from over.
"Frank and I had our ships refueled and rearmed and at
about five-thirty we took off again, determined somehow to salvage what was left of our pride ... not only were our personal
reputations at stake, but our national honor as well. All would
be saved if only we could work it so that tightwad would have
to buy us a bottle of bubbly!
"We beat the skies at high altitude and low; we roamed
northward as far as Peronne, and southward as far as Soissons;
we scoured the length of the Front as far as our range would
allow, but nowhere did we find any Germans. We stayed out
until our engines were gasping for fuel, and both of us made
back to the field with so little left in the tanks there wasn't
enough left to taxi up to the hangars.
"We stood glumly around waiting for Fonck's return; I had
never felt so degonfle in my life. Just as the sun began to sink
over the tops of the poplar trees at the far end of the field, we
heard the familiar Risso roar, and we looked up in the sky and
saw three dark specks approaching fast ... Fonck and his wingmen, Brugere and Thouzelier. Once again, Fonck peeled away
and came in first. Would he drag the field again, his throttle
blatantly announcing still another victory? We might have
guessed the answer to that one. Fonck dropped his Spad down
just over the treetops and skimmed across the field; from the
146
Wfl
The Wager
wtt
147
148
'11
The Wager
'11
149
150
Ooifl
Wfl
151
Black Icarus
152
Wfl
Black Icarus
W7t
153
154
""ft
Black Icarus
""ft
155
156
Black Icarus
157
"Aw, hell, sergeant, they're too far away." Bullard calls out.
This is echoed up and down the line, and the sergeant calms,
Hops down beside Bullard, and waits.
When the first German formation is 200 yards distant, the
French machine guns begin crackling and the Lebel rifles start
blamming away with that awful roar they make.
"They were coming on by fours," Bullard remembers. "Always fours. You'd mow 'em down like grass, only the grass grew
up as fast as you'd cut it. We'd cut 'em down again, and four
more would be in their places. You'd look again, and a couple
of 'em would be way forward. I'd slew the gun around and get
'em, then back again where four more would be-if you hadn't
seen the dead where you piled 'em, you'd of got plumb
discouraged.
"When I stopped the gun to let 'er cool, the other gun would
pick up the fire. You could see the Boches out there wigglin'
like worms in a bait box. I got sicker and sicker-they had wives
and kids, hadn't they?"
The fighting raged throughout the afternoon. At sundown,
Bullard's section-what was left of it-was ordered to pull back
to prepared positions 500 yards to the rear. Bullard smashed
the breech of the Hotchkiss, then rose from the hole where he
had lain all afternoon and began dogtrotting away from the
scene of carnage. He dodged from shell hole to shell hole, and
finally stumbled into a partially filled mine crater. He unslung
the carbine from his shoulder and lay there, gasping for breath.
A German, huge, pale, hung with grenades, loomed up at ~e
top of the crater and jumped in feet first. Bullard shot ~
twice in the chest. He remembered the look of hurt surpnse
that froze on the German's face as he toppled forward and fell
dead at the bottom of the hole. Bullard scrambled up the side
of the crater and stumbled on.
He and a handful of survivors reached a shattered farmhouse and threw themselves on the floor. Uncaring, Bullard
pulled a mattress over his body and immediately fell into th_e
sleep of the unutterably weary. He was awakened by the ternfying crash of a high-explosive shell that burst on the roof of
the shelter. When he crawled from the debris, he counted four
men dead, eleven badly wounded. His mouth burned like fire
158
Black Icarus
159
In the hospital Bullard was visited by Will Irwin, correspondent for the Saturday Evening Post. Impressed, Irwin set
down his feelings about the man in Bed 10, Row 2, Ward 4.
"He was, to begin with, a great young black Hercules, a
monument of trained muscle. A year and a half of war had
made a strange creature of Private [sic] Gene. He wasn't at all
the Negro we knew at home. War and heroism had given him
that air of authority common to all soldiers of the line. He
looked you in the eye and answered you straight with replies
that carried their own conviction of truth. The democracy of
the French Army had brushed off onto him; he had grown
accustomed to looking on white men as equals. His race, they
say, has a talent for spoken languages. Already there was a
trace of French accent in his rich Southern Negro speech; and
when he grew excited he would fall into French phrases.
"He had fought at Arras; he had been in the charges for
Notre-Dame-de-Lorette; he had been wounded in the blasted
terrain of Champagne. But all memories of those glorious and
horrible old actions seemed to have been dimmed by the terrific fighting at Verdun, and especially by that day when his
company held off a charge until man could hold no more, until
he knew the red r~ge and the hot sickness of butchery. He
described that day in detail ... then paused at the end as
though trying to sum it all up. 'You wouldn't 'a' believed it,'
he said at length, 'if you'd seen it in a cinema showl' "
Discharged from the hospital, Bullard hobbled from one cafe
to another, wearing a cane and the Croix de Guerre. He struck
up an acquaintance with a Mississippian named Jeff Dickson,
and with an American painter named Gilbert White. They
were sitting at a table at a sidewalk cafe in Paris, sipping at
vermouth cassis, when Dickson asked Bullard what he planned
to do now that his thigh wound had made him unfit for the
infantry. "Well, I tell you, Mr. Dickson-! plans on becomin' a
military aviator," Bullard drawled. Dickson snorted, said Negroes would never fly airplanes.
"Mr. Dickson," said Bullard, his anger rising, "you'll eat
them words one day."
Dickson flared up, bet Bullard $2,000 he would never make a
160
pilot. While Dickson was using the pissoir, Gilbert White told
Bullard he would cover the bet for him, to go ahead and try.
Bullard thanked White, then stormed from the table.
South of Paris sprawled Camp d'Avord, the largest flight
instruction center on the continent of Europe. Here, aspirants
were introduced to the mysteries of the upper air. Men lived
crudely in unpainted barracks, sleeping on cots, eating simple
army fare, drinking deep only of the heady wine that was the
knowledge that they were learning to fly, to free themselves of
earth's confining shackles.
"There is a fine crew in this school," wrote one American
birdman, "men from all colleges and men who don't know the
name of a college. We have a couple of ex-all-American football stars, a colored boxer, an Australian-American, a Vanderbilt Cup racing driver, men sticky with money in the same
barracks with others who worked their way over on ships. This
democracy is a fine thing in the army and makes better men of
all hands.
"For instance, the corporal in our room is an American, as
black as the ace of spades, but a mighty white fellow at that.
The next two bunks to his are occupied by Princeton men of
old Southern families; they talk more like a darky than he does
and are the best of friends to him. This black brother has been
in the Foreign Legion, wounded four times, covered with
medals for bravery in the trenches, and now uses his experience
and knowledge of French for the benefit of our room. Result:
the inspecting lieutenant said we have the best-looking room
in the barrack. ..."
One of the American students, lean, angular George Dock,
Jr., of St. Louis, shouts to Bullard asking: "Gene, what made
you get into all this, anyhow?"
"I don't rightly know, George-but I can tell you it was more
curiosity than common sense."
Once graduated from Avord and from the school of aerial
gunnery at Cazaux, Bullard uniformed himself spectacularly.
James Norman Hall, in from the Front for a short leave from
the Lafayette Escadrille, encountered Bullard in Paris:
"His jolly black face shone with a grin of greeting and justifiable vanity. He wore a pair of tan aviator's boots which
gleamed with a mirrorlike luster, and above them his breeches
Black Icarus
161
smote the eye with a dash of vivid scarlet. His black tunic
excellently cut and set off by a fine figure, was decorated with
a pil~t's badge, a ~roix de Guerre, the fourragere of the Foreign
Leg10n, and a parr of enormous wings, which left no possible
doubt, even at a distance of fifty feet, as to which arm of the
Service he adorned. The eleves-pilotes gasped, the eyes of the
neophytes stood out from their heads, and I repressed a strong
desire to stand at attention."
Bullard, thus attired, reported for duty with Spad Squadron
93 on August 17, 1917. Besides his vanity, he brought with him
to the Front one other thing: a small black monkey purchased
from a Parisienne, a streetwalker, the day before he left the
city. Major Minard, commanding officer of Groupe de Combat
15, accepted the new replacement and his pet monkey with
aplomb. "Bullard," he said, "you are warmly welcome to this
Group. And ... so is your son!"
After the routine familiarization flights over the sector of the
Groupe's responsibility-it was over Verdun-Bullard's name
went down for operational patrol on the morning of September
8. "When I saw my name on that bulletin board for the 8 to
10 A.M. outing," he recalled, "I knew I was heading for heaven,
hell or glory. I talked with God for awhile ... then I was ready
for anything." Or so he believed.
There was so much to keep an eye on! The man in front,
whose plane bobbed up and down; the planes to the left and to
the right, which slid back and forth in formation; and, way in
front, Major Minard's Spad, from whence hand signals might
be expected to issue any second; the sky overhead, to the rear,
to the sides, where German fighters might suddenly materialize; the altimeter, fuel gauge, oil-pressure gauge ... everything
had to be seen at once. Bullard wished for an extra pair of eyes.
Then there were Major Minard's instructions, shouted to him
over the roar of the revving engines: Remember! Follow
instructions. If there is a fight, go home immediately. No time
for us to look after you. Don't want Jimmy orphaned so soon.
. . . But Jimmy was buttoned inside his fur-collared flying suit;
he could feel him clutching at his chest, riding out his first
patrol.
Suddenly, Bullard found himself alone in the sky; the planes
all around him had vanished as if by magic. Panicky, Bullard
162
Wf!
jerked his head in little arcs as he looked all around the horizon. The formation had gone mad, planes were slipping this
way and that, zooming up in the distance, then Hashing by
overhead. Above the roar of his own engine, he heard the tactac-tac of machine guns. A fight! The Germans were upon
them! "Oh, sweet Jesus!" Bullard yelled, his words swallowed
up in the slipstream. He hauled back on the stick, closed his
eyes and clamped down on the trigger grip on the stick with a
paralytic clutch. The Vickers gun rattled off a long burst into
the empty sky above. The sudden sound jarred Bullard back to
his senses. He opened his eyes and leveled out. The attack,
apparently, had ceased. There was no more sound of firing. He
looked over the side of the cockpit and saw, a thousand feet
below, the formation of Spads droning along in a perfect vee.
He cautiously edged downward and took up his place in the
formation. The pilot in front of him turned his head around,
waved his arm and smiled broadly. "What was that son of a
bitch laughing at?" Bullard asked himself. "Hell, we could've
been hurt." Then the anger drained away, replaced by the sick
knowledge that he had disregarded orders, hadn't cut for home
when the shooting started. Discipline in the French army was
severe-the Foreign Legion owed its success to it-and Bullard
finished the patrol in misery, believing himself past redemption. He would be kicked out of the squadron even before he
had a chance.
They let Bullard suffer awhile in the emptiness of the living
hut, where he had gone with Jimmy the moment his plane had
rolled to a stop on the field. Then the pilots burst in laughing
and shouting like schoolboys. "Oh, Bullard," said one, "You
were formidable!" They pounded him on the back, explaining
that the battle was a sham; there had been no Germans; it was
a testing procedure every new man went through who joined
the Groupe. Minard upbraided him for not following ordersbut said he showed fighting spirit, and that counted for a great
deal.
In October 1917, Headquarters of the U. S. Air Service at
Chaumont convened a special medical board for the purpose
of examining those Americans in the Lafayette Flying Corps
who wanted to transfer to their own army with commissions
ranging from lieutenancy to major. To Bullard, the opportunity
Black I carus
"'"!!
163
to pilot an airplane while wearing an American officer's uniform was a dazzling prospect, indeed. He filled out his application and in due course was examined by an American
medical team. They waived his Hat feet and his wounded
thigh, told him that he was physically qualified for a commission. Bullard waited. Nothing happened. And still nothing
happened.
Bullard never received confirmation for a German plane
downed in combat, but early in November he came close. His
squadron tangled with a group of triplanes, and Bullard found
himself whirling around the sky with a mordant Fokker fastened to his tail. Lead drummed into his tail surfaces, and
when it seemed as though he might not come out of this one
alive, the German overshot and appeared in front of Bullard's
cowling. He opened fire and saw his tracers streaking into the
enemy fuselage. The triplane slipped off, spun, pulled out and
w0bbled across the German lines and disappeared. Then Bullard's engine cut out. He banked around and glided just across
his own barbed wire before banging against the earth and wiping out his undercarriage just inside the French reserve line.
While waiting for transportation back to the field, he counted
the bullet holes in his Spad. "There were thirty-seven of them,"
he said, "and I was sure glad they were in the plane's tail and
not mine."
Twenty-four-hour leaves were frequently given, never
refused. Paris was seldom more than two hours away from any
part of the Front, and the delights that city offered to aviators
need no elaboration. It was while returning from one of the
leaves that Eugene Bullard's career took a sharp downward
turn. He was standing in a steady drizzle by the side of a road
leading back to his sector. It was ten o'clock at night and pitch
black. Eventually a truck skidded to a stop, and Bullard hurried forward to climb over the tailgate. Somebody reached
down and roughly shoved him back. Bullard tried to board the
truck a second time, was greeted with expletives and the information that the truck was full ... there was no room, in any
event, for the likes of him. Bullard's great weakness was a propensity to lash out first, ask questions later: He reached inside
the truck, grabbed a handful of uniform front and hauled the
protesting figure outside. Then, he landed a whistling right
164
......
Hrcn
cross that sent the offender reeling backward into the ditch.
Everybody piled out of the truck. A flashlight was turned on
and the beam sought out the inert figure. Lying there sprawled
in the mud was more than the bleeding and unconscious lieutenant of French infantry-there, too, lay Corporal Bullard's
dreams of a commission and the ghost of his life as a pilot.
On November 11, 1917, Bullard was dismissed from the
Service Aeronautique and transferred to a service battalion of
the 170th Infantry Regiment. And there, doing odd jobs, he
sat out the rest of the war.
Adrift in postwar Paris, Bullard turned to his fists for a living. But four years and four wounds had drained his skill. He
became a bap drummer with the jazz band at Joe Zelli's ZigZag Bar, and became acquainted with the famous and the infamous of the Roaring Twenties ... the Prince of Wales, Ernest
Hemingway, Mayor Jimmy Walker, Legs Diamond, Mistinguette, Charlie Chaplin, Fatty Arbuckle, Rudolph Valentino.
Later he opened his own bar, Le Grand Due, in Montmartre,
and enjoyed the same clientele. Bullard married and fathered
two handsome daughters. The bar prospered, so he opened a
gym as well. The busy years rolled happily by ....
June 1940: The phony war has abruptly ended with the rolling of the panzers across the face of France. Paris empties,
traffic is halted along the wide boulevards . . . the city lies
silent in the warm summer air. Le Grand Due and the gym are
closed, the daughters safe in a Catholic school far to the south.
Bullard, wearing a 1917 Foreign Legion kepi and his miniature medals strung on his double-breasted suit coat strides
along the highway leading to Epinal: there, he hears, the 170th
Infantry Regiment is making a stand. On his back jogs a rucksack filled with his necessaries: cheese, bread, sardines, a canteen filled with water and the 2-volume History of the Lafayette Flying Corps, by Nordhoff and Hall. At Scissons he learns
the 170th is no longer an effective fighting force. He backtracks
through Paris, then hits the road choked with refugees that
leads to Orleans. Stukas scream overhead and bombs make a
hash of the road. He slogs on ....
Standing in the main square of Orleans, Bullard looks among
the faces of the civilians and poilus, seeking somebody in
Black Icarus
......
165
166
.-1ft
Black Icarus
.-1ft
167
169
Index
Aberdeen, 155
Aircraft, see individual entries
Air Service Headquarters, 108
Aix-la-Chapelle (Aachen), 46
Albatros, 23, 36, 40, 42, 43, 88, 89,
94, 95, 103, 110, 112, 113, 114,
125, 146
Amiens, 143
Arbuckle, Fatty, 164
Argonne, 49,50, 74
Armee d l'Air, 167
Arras, 159
Atlanta, Ca., 154, 155
Audemars, Edmond, 27
Aviatik, 19, 20, 21, 23, 36, 41, 66, 69,
71, 74,105
Bader, Maj. Roger, 165, 166
Baldamus, Lt. Hartmuth, 90
Baldwin, Chris, 155
Battle (pilot), 144
Baylies, Mrs. Charles S., 147, 148
Baylies, FrankL., 139, 140, 142-148
Beaumont, 124
Belfort, 80
Bell P-39, 42
Berlin, 46
Berne, 83
Bizerte, 32, 77, 78, 97
Bleriot, 25, 29, 30, 31, 54, 55, 56, 58,
78, 79,80,86, 119,149
B.M.W. engine, 96
Bozon-Verduraz, Lt., 115, 116
Brazil, 29
Breuil, 97
Brixen, Col. von, 45
Brocard, Capt. Felix, 101, 102, 103,
106, 109
Brocourt, 107
Bronze Star, 149
Brown, Aaron Lester, 155
Browning rifle, 23
Brugere (wingman), 145
Brunswick, 46
Buc, 35, 53, 149
Buenos Aires, 11.9
Bullard ("Big Chief Ox"), 152, 153
Bullard, Eugene Jacques, 152-167
boyhood of, 152-155
wounded in action, 158
as pilot, 160-164
postwar career of, 164-167
Bullard, Hector, 156
Casale, Jean, 94
Cauldron, 58, 66, 87, 95
Cazaux,61, 160
Champagne, 86, 159
Chaplin, Charlie, 164
Chartres, 56, 57
Chaulnes, 104
Chaumont, 162
Chicago Daily News, 140
Clement, Maurice, 26
Coli, Capt. Raymond, 134, 136
Cologne, 46
Columbus, Ca., 152, 153
Compiegne, 108, 113
170
Comillet, 91
Corsica, 32, 33
Cote d'Azur, 24, 48
Couey, 121, 122
Craonelle, 140
Craonne, 94
Croix de Guerre, 71, 115, 127, 149,
159, 161
Davison, F. Trubee, 148
d'Avord, Camp, 79, 80, 160
Delagrange, Leon, 24
Demoiselle, 25, 26, 28
D'Esperey, Gen. Franchet, 69
D.F.W., 115
Diamond, Legs, 164
Dickson, Jeff, 159, 160
Dinard, 30
Dizy-le-Gros, 97
Dock, George, Jr., 160
Douaumoht, Fort, 70, 166
D'Ourscamp, forest of, 105
Dover, 26
Dubonnet (pilot), 147
Dunkirk, 39, 41, 42, 123, 130
Duranty, Walter, 140, 142, 145
Edward, Prince of Wales, 164
Eleve-mechanicien, 100
Eleve-pilote, 53-57, 161
Epernay, 96
Epinal, 164
Escadrille Americaine, see Lafayette
Escadrille
Etampes, 78
Eterpigny, 110
European Circuit Competition, 29
Evian, 84
Evreux, 56
Falkenhayn, Gen. Erich von, 64, 65
Farman aircraft, 25, 66, 80, 81, 86
F.B.I., 149
Federation Aeronautique International, 57
Fescamps, 111
Fismes, 69, 94
Flanders, 41
Foch, Gen. Ferdinand, 17
Fokker aircraft, 49, 51, 65, 66, 70, 74,
86, 87, 97, 128, 129, 130, 146,
147, 163
Fokker, Anthony, 44, 45, 61
Fonck, Rene, 140-146, 148
Fontaine ( pilot), 144
Index
Irwin, Will, 159
Issoudun training school, 138
lssy-les-Moulineaux, 24, 25
Jamestown, Va., 155
Kenitra, 134
Lafayette Escadrille (Escadrille Americaine), 129, 138, 140, 150, 152,
160, 165
Lafayette Flying Corps, 152
Langemarck, 43
Laon, 121
Lausanne, 82, 85
Lebel rifle, 122, 157
Le Bourget, 80, 81, 127, 133, 136
Legagneux, Georges, 31
L~gion d'Honneur, 34, 69, 100, 106,
126, 132, 149
Leman, Lake, 84
Le Plessis-Belleville, 62, 101
Le Rhone rotary engine, 23, 58
Levasseur (aircraft designer) , 134
Lewis machine gun, 61, 70, 86, 103,
104, 105, 123, 125
Liverpool, 155
Lorraine-Dietrich engine, 134, 136
Lufbery, Raoul, 131, 138, 147
L.V.G.,66, 104, 105, 106,110,128
Macari ( pilot) , 147
Madon, Georges Felix, 77- 98
childhood of, 77, 78
early flying experiences, 78, 79
internment, 81, 82, 83
as war pilot, 80, 81, 85-97
death of, 98
Magdeburg Military Prison, 45, 46
Mistinguette, 164
Malzeville, 35
Marchal, Lt. Anselmc 45-47 52
Marne, Battle of the, l5
'
Marseilles, 31
Mauser machine gun, 44, 93, 140
Maybach engine, 68
Maxim machine gun, 15, 17, 65, 74,
94,95, 107, 128, 129
~ lcLell on , 0. L., 151
Medaille Militaire, 69, 81, 85, 87, 103,
123, 149
Menchkoff, Lt. Karl, 116
Meuse River, 66, 106
Minard, Major, 161, 162
Moisant, John, 26, 27, 28, 29
Monocoque (Type N) , 23
Wit
171
6B,
ancy,35
avarre, Jean Marie Dominique, 6776,88,106
and Zeppelin, 68-69
wins Croix de Guerre, 71
fighting style of, 71, 72
wounded, 74
test pilot, 75
death of, 76
ew Bedford, Mass., 139
ew York Times, 140
Nice, 24
Nieuport aircraft: 58, 60 70 72 73
74, 86, 105, 107,
,124:
125, 127
Nieuport squadrons, 67, 70, 72, 86,
94, 96, 105, 124, 127, 129
Nivelle, Gen. Robert, 132
ogent-l'Abesse, 97
omeny, 125, 126
Norfolk, Va., 155
Notrc-Dame-de-Lorette, 159
Nungesser, Charles Eugene Jules
Marie, 118-136, 142, 149
in Argentina, 119--120
wins Medaille Militaire, 122
bomber pilot, 123
fighter pilot, 124-133
Officer of Legion d'Honneur, 132
trans-Atlantic Right, 133-136
lOs, i09,
Orleans, 164
Oiseau Blanc (White Bird ), 133, 134,
135, 136
Orly flying school, 134
Ostend, 41, 42, 123
Oudecapelle, 39
Parabellum machine gun, 91, 104, 109,
128
Parasol, 35, 40, 41, 102, 103, 124
Paris, 26, 35, 36, 68, 74, 78, 81, 114,
131, 132, 136, 154, 155, 159, 160,
164
Parsons, Ted, 138-140, 142-147, 149
Passchendaele, 43
172
18,
Reims, 69
Richthofen, Lothar von, 89
Richthofen flying circus, 94
Robert, Lieut., 69
Rockwell, Kiffin, 140
Rockwell, Paul Ayres, 140, 142, 145
Roget, Henri, 134
Rosieres-en-Santerre, 110
Roulers, 43
Rounds, Leland LaSalle, 166
Royal Air Force, 42
Royal Naval Air Service, 147
Rumpler, 23, 110
St. Cyr military school, 100
Sainte-Genevieve-en-Champagne, 89
Sainte-Menehould, 87
Saintes, 79
St. Gall, 82
Saint-Ouen, 110
Saint Pol-sur-Mer, 43, 123, 130, 131
St. Raphael, 32
Saint-Sauver, Captain de, 72
Salonika, 139
Sardinia, 33
Saulnier, Raymond, 31, 36, 37. See
also Morane-Saulnier aircraft
Scanlon, Bob, 165
Sevin, Captain de, 50, 51
Service A eronautique, 15, 36, 56, 66,
67, 93, 100, 130, 138, 139, 141,
148, 164
Simon, Rene, 27, 29, 48
Societe des Arts et Metiers, 38
Soissons, 80, 103, 145, 164
Somme River, 129, 140
Sommepy, 87
Sopwith, 147
Clayton Knight
J.
B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
Good Books Since 17.92
Philadelphia and New York