On this day in 1916, American pilots take to the skies at the Battle of Verdun. They’d volunteered to fight, even though the United States had not yet entered World War I.NOTE: Due to character count limitations, I cannot post this in its entirety. To read the entire context, you will have to click on the link to the original facebook post at the bottom. It's an interesting read to say the least.At least for the time being, these men flew under French command.More than 200 American pilots would serve in the French Air Service, known as the Service Aéronautique, during World War I. Unofficially, these men were known as the Lafayette Flying Corps. The most elite of the group—the “Valiant 38”—were assigned to their own squadron, the Lafayette Escadrille. The pilots in this squadron have been called “the founding fathers of American combat aviation.”They were an interesting bunch, but perhaps that’s to be expected from a crew so willing to take on new adventures in the sky? Perhaps befitting their sense of adventure, the squadron even had two lion cubs as mascots—one named Whiskey and one named Soda.“The Escadrille reminds me a lot of fighter squadrons I’ve been in,” Former Air Force chief of staff General Merrill McPeak says. “The cast of characters is quite colorful—the good and the bad, the skilled and the unskilled, the lucky and the unlucky. It was a very, very risky business. So it attracted some weird and colorful people, which is true even today.”One was aviator William Thaw II, an aviator who was in France marketing his new automatic stabilizer when war broke out. A second was Norman Prince, a prominent lawyer who’d learned to fly, and the last was Edmund Gros, a physician then working with the American Ambulance Corps.Each made his own contribution in convincing the French to turn the idea of American help into reality, but it wasn’t easy. The French were worried that foreign volunteers could turn out to be German spies. On the other side, some prominent Americans in Paris worried that such a move might violate American neutrality.The squadron was officially authorized by the French Air Department in March 1916, and the pilots entered their first combat on May 13. Today, pilots have state-of-the-art technology, so it can be hard to imagine what pilots in 1916 were getting themselves into. Air combat was then still new. Airmen sometimes took to the skies carrying rifles and pistols. Weapons affixed to the plane had to be developed. Pilots such as Robert Soubiran (pictured) would reach up from cockpits to fire their wing-mounted guns.”https://www.facebook.com/TaraRoss.1787/posts/546785666807563
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