Lafayette Escadrille

Nieuport 17
Nieuport 17 of Lafayette Escadrille

The Lafayette Escadrille was formed in April 20, 1916 – a year before the US joined the war and two years before the first American-raised squadrons of the United States Air Service saw combat. Their equipment, their gear, their commander, their ground crew and organizational structure were all French. So was more or less everything else about the unit down to the uniforms. But at the heart was a band of intrepid Americans...

It is worth noting that while an estimated 4,000 Americans, including writer William Faulkner, have claimed to be Lafayette Escadrille aviators, only 38 Americans and 4 Frenchmen ever flew for it during all its existence.

The Lafayette Escadrille was officially created on April 20, 1916 and then flew its first mission from Luxeuil-les-Bains on May 13.

Kiffin Yates Rockwell got the escadrille's first victory on May 18, doing it by bringing his Nieuport 11 to within 75 feet before firing at a two seater LVG observation plane. He proceeded to shoot it down making him the first Amer-ican pilot to ever shoot down an enemy aircraft. It was the first time he had seen an enemy aircraft in the air and the first time he had fired his guns in anger. He claimed his kill with just four bullets fired which managed to hit the observer, the pilot and the engine – fine shots indeed.

Norman Prince shot down four, but crash landed after tangling with power lines in the dark on the way back to base after getting his fourth one. Three days later he died of his injuries. Bert Hall got two, and Bill Thaw destroyed four. And Raoul Lufbery shot down 17 between July 31, 1916 and December 4, 1917 becoming an ace on October 12 on the same mission that killed Norman Prince.

At the head of the Lafayette Escadrille and later at the head of the 94th Aero Squadron was a French-born American named Raoul Lufbery. Short, stocky and not so handsome, Raoul Lufbery was the top ace of the Lafayette Escadrille. Lufbery had 16 victories to his credit with the Lafayette Escadrille and one more with the USAS as part of the 1st Pursuit Group. And thus once he joined the USAS, he was the "Ace of Aces" – an informal title held by whoever had the most kills overall other USAS pilots.

The escadrille moved from base to base and was quickly joined to the French Groupe de Chasse 12. With GC 12, it was used to plug holes all over the Western Front. The pilots did rather well and continued to gain fame and build goodwill bridges between the US and France.

The statistics were impressive. By some counts, the pilots flew 3,000 sorties. In exchange for nine pilots killed, the 42 fliers of the Lafayette Escadrille had 40 confirmed victories and one hundred probable victories. The American pilots had ac-counted for 35 of those and Lufbery 17 of that 35. The French officers accounted for the other five.

The Lafayette Escadrille would pass from French service to the United States Air Service at the end of 1917. The name would change from the elegant “Lafayette Escadrille” to the more prosaic 103rd Aero Squadron. And, indeed, the personnel of the 103rd were quite different from those of the 103rd because the Escadrille's personnel were used to build the new USAS squadrons forming up. New pilots were brought to fill in the empty slots. After some ambiguity about where, when and what they would operate, the transformed 103rd swung into action in early 1918.

Please see the video of the 2010 Lafayette Escadrille commemoration.

Lafayette Escadrille pilots

These are some of the Lafayette Escadrille's pilots: Kiffin Yates Rockwell, Norman Prince, Clyde Balsley, Ken Marr, James McConnell, Fredrick Prince, Robert Soubiran, Douglas MacMonagle, Courtney Campbell, Edwin Parsons, Ray Bridgman, William Dugan, James Doolittle, Walter Lowell, Harold Willis, James Norman Hall, Henry Jones, David Peterson and Antoine Arnoux de Maison-Rouge, Dudley Hill, Didier Masson, Bill Thaw, Captain Georges Thenault, Raoul Lufbery, Chouteau Johnson, Stephen Bigelow and Robert Rockwell. Eugene Bullard was a Lafayette Flying Corps pilot and NOT a Lafayette Escadrille pilot. He has a great story, so learn more by clicking on the link.

103rd Aero Squadron pilots

Charles J. Biddle, Phelps Collins, George Turnure, C. Maury Jones, Charles Wilcox, Paul Baer, Cord Meyer, Edgar Tobin, Hobart A. H. Baker, Seth Low, H. Drummond Cannon, Ernest A. Giroux, Paul W. Eaton, Frank O'Driscoll Hunter, Charles I. Merrick, Stuart E. Edgar, Warren T. Hobbs, John F. Randall, Hugo Kenyon, Clarence H. Faith, Gorman DeFreest Larner, William T. Rolph, Doyen P. Wardwell, Eugene B. Jones, Percy R. Pyne, Van Winkle Todd, George W. Furlow, Theodore H. Hubbard, Dudley H. Manchester, Livingston G. Irving, Charles H. Monroe, Warren E. Eaton, Lawrence E. Cauffman, John Frost, John O. Kirtland, Keene M. Palmer, William T. Ponder, Joseph Waddell, Wellford Macfadden, Jr., William C. Appleton, Jr. Loran B. Cockrell, Martin F. McQuilkin, Herbert B. Bartholf, John M. Koontz

Much of the above are excerpts from my book "American Eagles" or my new book "Lafayette Escadrille: America's Most Famous Squadron." Please support this website and our efforts to recognize our first combat aviators by buying them.

American Eagles and Lafayette Escadrille

Books (.pdf Downloads) by Narayan Sengupta and Fred Scheer/Narayan Sengupta:
$ 9.95 American Eagles - The Illustrated History of American Aviation in World War I
$ 9.95 Lafayette Escadrille: America's Most Famous Squadron
$ 9.95 POW Stories of World War II
$ 9.95 Disaster at Dieppe: World War II's Little D-Day
$19.95 The Used Tank Guide of World War I and World War II

Computer Game Downloads by Narayan Sengupta:

$13.95 Hearts of Iron II scenarios (does not include game)
$13.95 Railroad Tycoon 3 scenarios/maps (does not include game)

Other:
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American Eagles - The Illustrated History of American Aviation in World War I
Preview (29 pages, 4.1 mb PDF).

"American Eagles - The Illustrated History of American Aviation in World War I" (370 pages, 8.5"x11", black and white, $9.95, .pdf download):

American Eagles features 220 photos, new maps and beautiful artwork by Michael O'Neal. Here's the story of American World War I combat aviation, the aviators, their planes, aerodromes, stories and their post-war lives. Read about America's first fighters, bombers and observation planes, the Lafayette Escadrille, USN Aviation, USMC Aviation, the United States Air Service, etc.

"I wanted to tell you what a great job you have done with your book! I have been totally enthralled reading through it!"
Gary Duhaine

"A great book... a book that really needs to be on your bookshelf."
Matt Jolley, WarbirdRadio.com
"The photos in your books have a clarity I have not seen among the hundreds of WWI aviation books that I've collected/amassed. Those photos make you feel like you are standing there with the subjects. Outstanding! Your passion for the subject is evident!"
Mark, Lt Col, USAF (Retired)


Lafayette Escadrille: America's Most Famous Squadron
Preview (Table of Contents, Table of Illustrations, Chapter 1, 1.0 mb PDF)

"Lafayette Escadrille: America's Most Famous Squadron" (204 pages, digest size, black and white, $9.95, .pdf download):

The Lafayette Escadrille honors the insanely brave Americans who volunteered to fly for France and later the United States 103rd Aero Squadron during World War I. Read about Raoul Lufbery, Bill Thaw, Kiffin Rockwell, Norman Prince, Charles Biddle and the early days of American World War I military aviation before it was known as the United States Air Force. These men flew Nieuports and Spads against Fokkers and Albatroses. This book has extensive new research and is thoroughly well-documented. 204 pages, 62 photos and maps.

"Narayan Sengupta's "The Lafayette Escadrille: America's Most Famous Squadron" is a wonderfully written history of one of the most unique air combat units that ever existed. Not only is his book factual and chock full of historical photos (80+), the text is nicely augmented with maps, appendices, and a very complete bibliography. Great job, all around!"
Steve Ruffin, Managing Editor emeritus, "Over the Front."

"You write so well! I thoroughly enjoyed it and learned a lot."
Cynthia Pullin

"A concise, well written history of one of the most significant fighter squadrons in American history. Long before the US entered World War One, these volunteers showed that not all Americans were "too proud to fight." They helped defend the skies of France and laid the groundwork for what would eventually become the United States Air Force. Mr. Sengupta has done an excellent job of telling the story of some of the most colorful individuals in American history. Very readable and superbly illustrated, the book is thoroughly researched and well documented."
Steve Tom, PhD, Lt Col USAF (Ret)


POW Stories - real stories by real former American POWs in Germany

"POW Stories" (189 pages, 6"x9", black and white, $9.95, .pdf download):

POW Stories: remarkable stories told by men once POWs in Germany. Some were in the US Army, others in the United States Army Air Force. Read exhilarating, astonishing and poignant real-life stories by Fred Scheer, James Golden, Les Schrenk and many others. All were POWs in Germany during WWII. Jim was a Mustang pilot who was the last Allied pilot shot down on D-Day. Fred escaped twice and was recaptured. He made it out for good on his third escape. And Les survived the brutal German Death March. 189 pages, 35 photos and maps.

"POW Stories is a masterfully assembled collection of first-hand tales of survival, comradery and reunion, an emotional journey of brave men recounting their highs and lows and finding humor in the darkest places. The stories should never be forgotten. Well worth the read."
Patricia W. Huff

"I thoroughly enjoyed it and shed a fair amount of tears because it was so REAL. Their tales are shared so simply but the impact on the reader is huge. Excellent work."
Judy Bentley


Disaster at Dieppe - World War II's Little D-Day
"Disaster at Dieppe" (167 pages, 6" x 9", 66 photos and maps, $9.95, .pdf download):

The raid on Dieppe, code named Operation Jubilee, was World War II's first invasion/large scale raid. Jubilee featured the first use of US Rangers, Churchill tanks, tanks in an amphibious assault, P-51s and Typhoons and more. Approximately 6,000 troops crossed the English Channel: they included 5,000 Canadians, 1,000 British, 50 American Rangers and 24 French light infantry. Poor planning and Murphy's Law led to an 85% casualty rate for the Canadians who landed! It was a rate brutally worse than the horrific 10% suffered by the US Marines at Tarawa in late 1943 or the 15% sustained by Americans on D-Day, June 6, 1944, at Omaha Beach. But their sacrifice was not in vain and may have saved 10 times as many lives on D-Day. This is an easy read that's also thoroughly documented. Its tables and six-page index makes it a great reference book. 167 pages, 6" x 9", 66 photos and maps.


The Used Tank Guide of World War I and World War II - book cover
"The Used Tank Guide of World War I and World War II" (230 pages, 8.5"x11", full color, 700+ photos, .pdf download, $19.95):

The Used Tank Guide has a 36-page overview of World War I and World War II tanks (and self-propelled artillery and tank-destroyers, etc.). Then is the eye-candy photo album section with 700+ fantastic full-color photos and 115+ profiles of tanks, self-propelled guns and tank destroyers in the most color-packed book on World War I and World War II armored vehicles ever...

Profiles include: British Mark IV, Whippet, Anglo-American Mark VIII, Schneider, St. Chamond, Renault FT, GPF 155, Somua S-35, Char B-1bis, AMR-33, R-35, AMC-35, Hochkiss H-35, Sexton, LT-35, Matilda II, Churchill, Valentine, Crusader, Cromwell, Comet, Panzer I, Panzer II, Panzer III, Panzer IV, Wespe, Marder, Hetzer, Nashorn, Brummbar, Panther, Panther II, Tiger, King Tiger, Jagdpanzer, Elefant, Jagdpanther, Jagdtiger, Skelton, Ford 3 Ton, M1931 Christie, M3 Stuart, M3 Lee/Grant, M4 Sherman (75, 76, Easy 8 and Firefly variants), M-6 heavy, M-18 Hellcat, M7 Priest, M8 Greyhound, M10 Wolverine, M24 Chaffee, M26 Pershing, T28, M40, LVT(A), T-34, T-34/85, KV-1, SU-76, SU-85, SU-100, IS-2, IS-3, Semovente da 75/18 M42, Type 95 Ha-Go, Type 97 Chi-Ha, and so many more stunning tanks and rare tanks from across the world.

This exquisite collection showcases tanks in full-color as never seen before. Countries represented: Canada, Czechoslovakia, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Sweden, USSR, United Kingdom and USA.


Hearts of Iron II - Bad Boys Scenario
Bad Boys is a terrific scenario where the US President makes the United States very aggressive, attacking Nazi Germany and other dictatorships, but the US sells its soul in the process... Download for $13.95. Original game not included, but can be bought elsewhere online. Hearts of Iron II scenario - Bad Boys! - more information on my 5 Star General website...


Railroad Tycoon 3 Maps

Here are several terrific extra maps (scenarios) for Railroad Tycoon 3. Download for $13.95. Original Railroad Tycoon game NOT included, but can be bought elsewhere online. More details: Railroad Tycoon 3 Maps!


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Related Links: Quentin Roosevelt | Frank Luke | Eddie Rickenbacker | Raoul Lufbery | Eugene Bullard | David Ingalls - 1st Navy Ace | "American Eagles" - 345 page illustrated history of US Combat Aviation in World War I

Learn more: 1st Observation Group, 1st Pursuit Group, 1st Bombardment Group, 2nd Pursuit Group, 3rd Pursuit Group, 4th Pursuit Group, 5th Pursuit Group and 3rd Air Park. See the really cool USAS Bases Google Map we've made just for you.

File under:

1st Observation Group - 1st aero squadron, 12th aero squadron, 50th aero squadron
1st Pursuit Group - 27th aero squadron, 94th aero squadron, 95th aero squadron, 147th aero squadron, 185th aero squadron
1st Bombardment Group - 96th aero squadron, 11th aero squadron, 20th aero squadron, 166th aero squadron
2nd Pursuit Group - 13th aero squadron, 22nd aero squadron, 49th aero squadron, 139th aero squadron
3rd Pursuit Group - 28th aero squadron, 93rd aero squadron, 103rd aero squadron, 213th aero squadron
4th Pursuit Group - 17th aero squadron, 25th aero squadron, 148th aero squadron, 141st aero squadron
5th Pursuit Group - 41st Aero Squadron, 138th Aero Squadron, 638th Aero Squadron
3rd Air Park - 255th Aero Squadron