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Marked for Death

Page 35

by James Hamilton-Paterson


  113 Lee, No Parachute, p.197

  114 Nordhoff & Hall, Falcons of France, p.215

  115 Stark, Wings of War, pp.108–9

  116 Wortley, Letters from a Flying Officer, p.118

  117 Johns, W. E., Popular Flying, May 1932

  118 Lee, No Parachute, p.208

  Chapter 7

  119 Compston, R. J. O., in Naval Eight, p.83

  120 Wortley, Letters from a Flying Officer, p.153

  121 See www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18309913

  122 Franks, Norman, Sharks among Minnows, p.41

  123 Bishop, Winged Warfare, p.116

  124 Kilduff, Billy Bishop VC, p.71

  125 Reynolds, They Fought for the Sky, p.81

  126 Mackenzie, C. R., in Naval Eight, p.197

  127 quoted in Kilduff, op. cit., p.133

  128 Hanson, First Blitz, p.58

  129 Morris, A., Bloody April, p.15

  130 Franks, Sharks among Minnows, p.113

  131 Kilduff, Black Fokker Leader, p.8

  132 Quoted in McAllister, Hayden, ed., Flying Stories

  133 Kilduff, Black Fokker Leader, p.21

  134 Halliday, Hugh, Valour Reconsidered: Inquiries into the Victoria Cross, p.145

  135 Bishop, Winged Warfare, pp.221–2

  136 Alex Revell, www.billybishop.net/bishopP.html

  137 Kilduff, Billy Bishop VC

  Chapter 8

  138 Lee, Open Cockpit, p.59

  139 Neumann, The German Air Force in the Great War, p.125

  140 Alder, J. Elrick, ‘Some Notes on the Medical Aspect of Aviation’, in Hamel, Gustav & Turner, Charles C., Flying, p.336

  141 Quoted in Seibert, E. G., ‘The Effects of High Altitudes upon the Efficiency of Aviators’, The Military Surgeon, vol. 42, p.145

  142 Birley, J. L., ‘War Flying at High Altitudes’, The Lancet, 5th June 1920.

  143 ibid.

  144 The Chronicles of 55 Squadron, pp.29–30

  145 British Medical Journal, 27th April 1918, p.487

  146 Neumann, The German Air Force in the Great War, pp.141–2

  147 ibid. pp.163–4

  148 The March 1917 issue of Flying advertised Sidcot suits for eight guineas from Robinson & Cleaver Ltd in Regent Street with the slogan ‘Keeps you warm at 20,000 feet up’.

  149 Wyllie, H., Imperial War Museum, 84/5/1, entry of 30th March 1916

  150 Anderson et al., The Medical and Surgical Aspects of Aviation, pp.199–200

  151 Wortley, Letters from a Flying Officer, p.189

  152 Gibson, T. M., ‘The genesis of medical selection tests for aircrew in the United Kingdom’, RAF Historical Society Journal, No. 43, p.11

  153 Silbey, David, The British Working Class and Enthusiasm for War, 1914–1916, p.44

  154 Beckett, I, ‘The Territorial Force’, in Beckett, Ian & Simpson, Keith, eds, A Nation in Arms, as quoted in DeGroot, Gerard J., Blighty (Longman, 1996), p.43

  155 Rippon & Manuel, ‘Report on the Essential Characteristics of Successful and Unsuccessful Aviators’, The Lancet, 28th September 1918

  156 Gilchrist, Norman S., ‘An Analysis of Causes of Breakdown in Flying’, British Medical Journal, 12th October 1918, pp.401–3

  157 Stamm, L. E., ‘Medical Aspects of Aviation’, The Aeronautical Journal, Vol. XXIII, Jan. 1919

  158 McWalter, J. C., letter to British Medical Journal, 7th November 1917

  159 Coe, H. C., ‘The Flying Temperament’, editorial in The Military Surgeon, Vol. XLIII (1918).

  160 Stamm, ‘Medical Aspects’

  161 Rippon & Manuel, ‘Report on the Essential Characteristics’

  162 Birley, J. L., ‘The Principles of Medical Science as Applied to Military Aviation’, The Lancet, 29th May 1920

  163 Lewis, Sagittarius Rising, p.149

  164 See Previc, F. H. & Ercoline, W. R., Spatial Disorientation in Aviation

  165 Lee, Open Cockpit, p.130.

  166 Draper, Major C., in Naval Eight, p.56

  167 Bishop, W., Winged Peace, p.38

  168 Anderson et al., The Medical and Surgical Aspects of Aviation, p.110

  169 See Green, N. D. C., ‘The Fight Against G’, RAF Historical Society Journal, no. 43, pp.67–8

  170 Lee, Open Cockpit, p.142.

  171 Stamm, ‘Medical Aspects’

  172 See ‘Injuries and Diseases of Aviation’, British Medical Journal, 11th March 1916, p.389

  Chapter 9

  173 Lee, No Parachute, pp.293–4

  174 ibid, p.312

  175 Penrose, British Aviation, p.271

  176 ibid., p.57

  177 ibid., p.308

  178 Hamel, Gustav & Turner, Charles C., Flying, p.310

  179 Barker, Ralph, The Royal Flying Corps in World War I (Robinson, 2002), p.313

  180 ‘Vedrine’ (posting 24), www.theaerodrome.com/forum/other-wwi-aviation/54948-parachutes-3.html

  181 Hartney, Harold Evans, Up and At ’Em, quoted in the above forum, posting no. 19

  182 Anderson et al., The Medical and Surgical Aspects of Aviation, p.176

  183 Reynolds, They Fought for the Sky, p.171

  184 Haupt-Heydemarck, Georg Wilhelm, War Flying in Macedonia, p.131

  185 Lee, No Parachute, p.95

  186 Johns, W. E., ‘The Last Show’, The Camels are Coming

  187 Dyson, Freeman, Disturbing the Universe, p.27

  188 Quoted in Wortley, Letters from a Flying Officer, p.35

  189 London Review of Books, 8th November 2012

  Chapter 10

  190 Mackay, Richard, The Royal Naval Submarine Service 1901–18

  191 Quoted in The Times’ History of the War, Vol. vii, ch. cviii, p.1

  192 Hanson, First Blitz, p.22

  193 Blatchford, Robert, General von Sneak, p.53

  194 The Times’ History of the War, Vol. vii, p.19

  195 Wortley, Letters from a Flying Officer, p.115

  196 Hanson, First Blitz, p.122

  197 Quoted in Hanson, First Blitz, pp.134–5

  198 Quoted in Hanson, First Blitz, p.59

  199 Burge, Major C. Gordon, ed., The Annals of 100 Squadron, p.20

  200 Quoted in Gibbs, N. H., History of the Second World War, Vol. 1, pp.553–4

  201 Hine, Air Chief Marshal Sir Patrick, RAF Historical Society Journal, No. 57 (2014), p.151

  Chapter 11

  202 Lawrence, T. E., Seven Pillars of Wisdom, p.101

  203 Johns, W. E., Popular Flying, October 1935, quoted in Ellis & Williams, p.29

  204 Johns, W. E., Popular Flying, October 1938, quoted in ibid, p.32

  205 Haupt-Heydemarck, War Flying in Macedonia, pp.53–4

  206 See Kulikov, Russian Aces of World War I, p.46

  207 Haupt-Heydemarck, War Flying in Macedonia, p.57

  208 Quoted in ibid., p.170

  209 La Gazetta del Popolo, 12th December 1914 (reprinted in Giulio Douhet, Le Profizie di Cassandra, p.244)

  210 Neumann, The German Air Force in the Great War, pp.260–1

  211 ibid., p.261

  212 ibid., p.263

  213 This author is particularly indebted to Ellis & Williams’s biography of W. E. Johns for the details of this episode.

  214 Cecil Lewis, Sagittarius Rising, p.113

  List of Illustration

  1. Royal Aircraft Factory Engine B.E.2c 100HP © SSPL / Getty Images

  2. Replica B.E.2c © Stephen Slater

  3. Maurice Farman MF.11 ‘Shorthorn’ © Topfoto

  4. Fokker E-III © Hulton Archive / Getty Images

  5. Anton ‘Anthony’ Fokker (1890–1939), Dutch aviation pioneer and aircraft manufacturer © Imperial War Museum / Robert Hunt Library / Mary Evans Picture Library

  6. Adolphe Pégoud, LC-DIG-ggbain-14327, Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division

  7. Death of Adolphe Pégoud, www.earlyaeroplanes.com

  8. Sopwith 1 ½ Strutter taking off from gun turret platform © Robert Hunt Library / Windmill books / UIG via Getty imagesr />
  9. Max Immelmann (1890–1916) and Oswald Boelcke (1891–1916), together regarded as the founders of the German technique of air combat © The Granger Collection / TopFoto

  10. French airman Captain George Guynemer (1894–1917) © TopFoto

  11. Recruitment poster © The National Army Museum / Mary Evans Picture Library

  12. Women’s Participation in War © TopFoto

  13. A downed German aircraft near Verdun. France, 1916 © Photo12 / UIG / Getty Images

  14. A dead British pilot lies on the ground next © General Photographic Agency / Getty Images

  15. A falling German airman © Mary Evans Picture Library

  16. A RNAS Sopwith Pup, N5186 © The Royal Aeronautical Society (National Aerospace Library) / Mary Evans Picture Library

  17. Riesenflugzeug Siemens-Schuckert VIII 1918, Wikipedia

  18. Rittmeister Manfred Albrecht Freiherr von Richtofen. Courtesy Ken Hemmerling Oblt.d.R Sheffer Collection; www.earlyaeroplanes.com

  19. French built Nieuport 11, also known as ‘Bébé’ © Hulton Archive/Getty Images

  20. No. 1 Squadron, RAF at Clairmarais aerodrome near Ypres © Photo by 2nd Lt. D McLellan/IWM via Getty Images)

  21. Captain Billy Bishop, V.C., Wikipedia Library and Archives Canada, PA-001654

  22. Royal Aircraft Factory FE2d gunner.jpg; Wikipedia

  23. Ernst Udet (1896–1941) © Roger Viollet / Getty Images

  24. SPAD XIII © National Museum of the US Air Force

  25. Sopwith Triplane © Karl Drage

  26. Fokker Dr.I © Karl Drage

  27. Rotary engine © SSPL / Getty Images

  28. Sopwith Camel © National Museum of the US Air Force

  29. Eberhart SE-5E © National Museum of the US Air Force

  30. Fokker D.VII © National Museum of the US Air Force

  31. A German aerial shot of a bombing raid © Mary Evans / Sueddeutsche Zeitung Photo

  32. DH4 bomber; www.earlyaeroplanes.com

  33. An Italian airplane chases an Austrian Albatros plane in the Alps, 1 Jan 1918 © The Art Archive / International Film Service / NGS Image Collection

  34. A man of the ground staff helps a German pilot putting on the parachute, 1918. © Mary Evans / Sueddeutsche Zeitung Photo

  Index

  British aircraft types are indexed under aircraft, British (types of). Foreign aircraft are indexed under relevant country

  aces 182–203

  acting as ‘lone wolves’ 199–200

  disputes over true scores 198–200

  early frowning on system of by RFC 187–8

  French 183

  German see German aces

  highest-scoring 183

  newspaper publicity 185

  number of victories needed and standards to become 184–5

  origins 183

  political component of system 201

  and press 2, 183, 184

  see also individual names

  Admiralty 17

  aerodynamics 42, 49, 60

  Aéronautique Militaire 130, 189

  Aeroplane, The (magazine) 23

  Africa 283–5

  agents

  dropping and picking up in enemy territory 111–12

  ailerons 47

  Air Battalion of Royal Engineers 17

  Air Board 38, 209, 236, 240, 270

  air raids see bombing raids

  aircraft

  accidents 40, 214

  arming of 67, 69–94

  bombing by 113–14, 118–19

  delays in production 29, 30–1

  deployed for Home Defence 266

  and desert warfare 297, 299

  dope poisoning during construction 33–4

  early resistance to use of in the war 9–10, 19, 59

  engines see engines, aircraft

  fabric covering frames 32–3

  first powered flight by Cody (1908) 17, 44

  ‘greatest’ debate 63–7

  heights reached by 59–60

  impact of war on ground on building of 59–60

  instruments on board 224–5, 226

  introduction of metal structures 50

  landing of 61

  number produced in 1915 29

  numbers lost in the war 133

  and observation 59, 70, 71–2,74, 76, 79, 99, 100–4, 127

  and safety belts 244–5

  and spinning 50–5, 87, 145

  and stalling 55

  susceptible to chance gusts of wind 41

  used for training pilots 127–9, 144–5

  weapons used on board 74–5, 77

  and wireless communication 97–9

  wood used for construction 32, 49

  see also individual countries

  aircraft, British (types of)

  Avro 51, 87, 248

  Avro 504/504J 78, 139, 144–5, 146

  B.E. 20–2

  B.E.1 18–19, 57

  B.E.2c 19, 20–1, 24, 27–8, 28, 64, 78–9, 100–1, 106, 182

  B.E.9 (‘Pulpit’) 21–2

  B.E.12 115

  Bristol F.2A (Brisfits) 31, 239, 240, 266

  Caudron G.3 182

  de Havilland Mosquito 50, 285

  D.H.2 29, 54, 60–1, 87, 189, 288

  D.H.4 118, 119, 276

  D.H.5 65

  D.H.6 138–9

  D.H.9 239

  Douglas DC-3 64

  Farman F.27 259, 284

  F.E.1 18

  F.E.2 86

  F.E.2a 30, 76

  F.E.2b 29, 30

  F.E.2d 78

  F.E.8 29

  F.E.10 21

  Gloster Gladiators 50

  Handley Page V/1500 bomber 69

  Hawker Hurricane 50

  Lancaster bomber 248

  Martinsyde F.4 (‘Buzzard’) 67

  R.E.7 86

  R.E.8 (‘Harry Tate’) 61–3

  S.6B floatplane 25

  S.E.5 23, 144

  S.E.5a 64, 67, 239

  seaplanes 262–5

  Sopwith Camel 57, 58, 63, 64–6, 106, 118, 144, 196, 217, 320

  Sopwith Folder 284

  Sopwith Pup 64, 89, 189–90, 194, 207, 226, 239, 246, 271

  Sopwith Snipe 66, 239

  Sopwith Trench Fighter (T.F.1) 106

  Sopwith Trench Fighter (T.F.2) Salamander 106

  Sopwith Triplane 35, 64, 196, 229

  Vickers ‘Gunbus’ 86

  airfields

  establishment of on Western front 177–8

  airmen

  aces see aces

  and animals/pets 166–7

  average hours’ flying experience before postings 136

  best flying temperament 216–17

  and burden of death 119–21

  celebratory ‘binges’ 160–3

  and class 217–18

  clothing worn 157–8, 212

  cold experienced by 212–13

  comradeship amongst opposing 74, 169–71, 191, 290–2, 299–300

  concept of alienated loner 151–2

  connection between riding and best 216–17

  conviction of a radical difference between civilian world and 171–3

  death toll during war 1–2, 181

  differences between lives of infantry and 153–5

  drinking and flying 163–5

  evaluation of character of 219–21

  exhaustion of 119

  flying into German territory and forced landings on enemy land 178–9, 180

  as ‘Fokker fodder’ 26, 142

  g-forces experienced by 229–30

  and goggles 243–4

  home leave 173–5

  home-grown entertainment 165

  ill-effects of flying at high altitudes 205–10

  injuries and health hazards 231, 231–2

  lack of feedback over aircraft design 22–3

  lack of parachutes 81, 234–9

  language used by 156–7

  life expectancy for new 137

  medical e
xaminations and health of prospective 214–16, 227–8

  and officers’ mess 158–9

  physiological and psychological tests for 219

  and pilot’s vertigo 223–4

  portrayal of in media and popular culture 2–7

  post-war neglect of 303

  public school ethos 156–7

  resistance to idea of carrying oxygen 210–11

  romance attached to 250

  and safety helmets 243, 244

  sense of honour 191

  showing off 140–1

  songs sung 160–2

  squadron life 155–67

  stress suffered 222–3

  training of see training

  view of parachutes 241–2

  airships, German see also German airships

  airshows 141

  pre-war 126–7

  Alder, J. Elrich 209

  Alexander, King of Greece 288

  Allenby, General Edmund 282, 302

  altitude

  bleeding at 211–12

  ill-effects of 205–10

  altitude experiments 206–7

  American aircraft 43

  American pilots

  medical examination undertaken by prospective 228

  and parachutes 240

  Amey, 2nd Lieutenant A.E. 3–4

  Amiens, Battle of (1918) 9

  Anderson, Dr Graeme 164, 228

  Anglo-Persian Oil Company 282

  anti-aircraft batteries/defences 70, 259, 272, 273

  Arab campaign 282–3

  Archer-Shee, Lieutenant-Colonel 36

  armour plating 105–6

  Army, British

  Balloon School 17, 44

  early view of aircraft used in war 9, 11, 30, 51

  rivalry with Navy and competition over Treasury funds 23, 26, 35

  Askwith, George 15

  Asquith, Herbert 37, 275

  Austria-Hungary 294, 295

  Bader, Douglas 141

  Baghdad 298, 299, 300, 301

  Bakewell, Dame Joan 250

  Baldwin, Stanley 278–9

  Balfour, A.J. 26

  Balkans 281–93

  Ball, Albert 49, 166, 194, 201, 202, 243

  ball bearings 57

  balloon busting 110–11

  Balloon Factory (Farnborough) 17, 44

  balloon strafing 109–10

  balloonists, early 205–6

  balloons 44, 92–3

  use of parachutes for jumps from 234–5

  used for observation 8, 17, 44, 71, 92, 96, 109–10

  Baracca, Francesco 295

  Bárány chair 227, 228, 230

  Bárány, Robert 227

  Beachey, Lincoln J. 126

  Bentley Priory 37

  Bernard, General 130

  Bert, Paul 207

  Berthold, Rudolf 197

 

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