The Exploits of Chapman, Prince, Rockwell, Guynemer, Marchal, Immelman, Boelke, Richthofen and OthersJanuary 23, 1916 - March 8, 1918 Germany for more than a year relied principally on Zeppelins in making aerial attacks on England, but on January 28 and January. 24, 1916, hostile aircraft of another kind made notable raids on the east coast. Early in the morning of the 23d, an airplane dropt nine bombs on a Kentish town, killing one man, wounding two men, a woman and three children, and damaging some private property. Twelve hours later two airplanes made an attack on the game locality, but without effecting damage or causing casualties. British naval and military machines gave chase, but the raiders escaped. These were. the first raids that had been made on England since October 13, 1915, when Zeppelins bombed the London district, killing and wounding more than 150 persons. The bright moonlight and the absence of wind made ideal conditions for the dash. The airplanes probably came from a German base in Belgium. On February 6 two women and one child were injured when two airplanes again raided the Kentish coast. Three missiles fell on the outskirts of Ramsgate and four near a school at Broadstairs. The material damage was confined to the shattering of gins. The attack was made in broad daylight. That afternoon two sea planes bad been seen approaching the Kentish coast, and a few minutes later flew over Ramsgate and Broadstairs. Of the four bombs dropt on Broadstairs all but one fell. near property of Lord Northliff. At Ramsgate six or eight bombs were dropt in rapid succession, all of which fell in fields between Ramsgate and Broadstairs. Sergeant Pilot Guynemer, twenty-one years old, of tile French Flying. Corps, brought down, 0n February 7, his fifth German adversary, and was mentioned for his exploit in an official communication. Previously he had been dec- orated with the cross of the Legion of Honor, the War Cross and the Military Medal. Guynemer was a lad in college when the war began and enlisted at once. At the end of seven days of training he made his trial flight for a pilot's license and afterward made a record for bunting German airplanes. In one instance he brought down, single-handed, a large German biplane. Guynemer made flights. alone, as did Garros and Pegoud, but used a great biplane on which be could make ninety miles an hour instead of a monoplane. He put four machines out of business in nine days. One of these exploits occurred in December when he fought a spec- tacular duel directly over the French lines, his comrades-in- arms cheering him enthusiastically from below. He was en- gaged at that time with one of the famous Fokker airplanes. Altho there were two men aboard the Fokker, he maneuvered skillfully until he brought his gun in range. At fifteen yards he delivered a mortal blow from "The Old Charles," the name given to the biplane which Guynemer manip- ulated. He was armed with a weapon which he handled with remarkable facility and precision, at the same time that he maneuvered his airplane. Between his fourth and fifth successful duels he had a narrow escape in a fight with a Fokker. At the moment of firing, at a distance of thirty yards, his gun became jammed, the lubricating oil had frozen. In attempting a quick turn, he was carried on by the momentum until he struck the German machine with his upper plane and began to descend abruptly. After falling rapidly for 500 yards the biplane righted itself. Guynemer then returned to headquarters, but had missed his fifth machine. He accounted for it a few days later when his antagonist went to earth in flames after a short combat. Guynemer tho French was of Scottish extraction. Contemporary with the battle of Verdun, in 1916, occurred an unusual amount of activity in aviation work. On February 26 nine French bombing aeroplanes traveled behind the Ger- man lines and dropt 114 bombs on the Metz-Sablons station, and on the same day another French air-s~adro~ inflicted similar damage on German establishments at Chambley, north- west of Pont-A-Mousson. On the last day of February a French military transport train was held up by a German aeroplane between Besancon and Jussey, and it was claimed that the crew of the aeroplane had successfully attacked with their machine-guns a convoy train. A day or so later French air-squadrons wrecked the stations at Chambley and Bensdorf and injured the German works at Avricourt, north- east of Luneville. On March 7, sixteen French aeroplanes were again above the Metz-Sablons station, dealing out de- struction on trains below. Attacked by a German aerial squadron the French aviators returned with the loss of one aeroplane, the engine of which had failed. On the 14th a squadron of eleven French aeroplanes bombed the station at Brieuiles. A group of seventeen were again over the Metx-Sablons and also over the Conflans station on the 17th, while another squadron dropt five bombs on the station at Arneville and ten on the aerodrome of Dieuze. The aviation- ground of Habsheim and the freight station at Mulhausen were the objectives of twenty-eight French machines on the 18th. The Germans said they brought down four of the raiders. On March 30 the stations of Metz-Sablons and Pagny- sur-Moselle were attacked, and on April 1 and 2 the station of Etain, the German bivouacs in the neighbor- hood of Nantillois, and the village of Azennes and Brienlies- stir-Meuse. As "a reprisal for the bombardment of Dunkirk by a Zeppelin," on the 2d, thirty-one Allied machines dropt eighty-three bombs of heavy caliber on the enemy canton- ments of Keyem, Essen, Terrest, and Houthulst. On the night of the 23d-24th forty-eight bombs of heavy caliber were released over the station of Vifwege, east of the Forest of Houthulst, in the environs of Ypres, and places on the German lines of communication in the Verdun region received attention, twenty-one shells and eight incendiary bombs being dropt on the station of Longuyon, five shells on that of Stenay, twelve on the camps to the east of Dun and thirty-two shells on German establishments in the Mont- faucon region, and on the station of Nantillois. Similar operations continued in succeeding weeks. Guynemer had become the most notable destroyer of Ger man airmen of the Allies operating near Verdun. Starting on his daily hunt piloting a new and smaller aeroplane than usual, but a much swifter machine, he noticed two German air- craft sailing above him and placed himself behind one of them. When he judged the range suitable, he riddled the German with bullets and the German machine turned over and crashed to the ground. After this victory Guynemer swooped down on the second German aeroplane, but, mis- judging his speed, through unfamiliarity with his machine, he forged ahead of the German after firing some seven or eight shots, which went wide. The German, who then had the advantage, opened fire on the Frenchman and riddled his engine casing with bullets. Splinters struck Onynemer in the face, cutting somewhat deeply into his cheek and nose, while two bullets went through his left arm. Guynemer let himself drop like a stone for about 1,000 feet, so as to give his opponent the impression that he had brought him down, and the German, thinking the battle won, proceeded on his way. Meanwhile Guynemer recovered himself, and steering his machine with one hand, succeeded in landing within the French lines. On March 18 Navarre scored his seventh German aero- plane. The same day an aerial engagement between British and German airmen took place near Ypres and La Bassee, and a German machine was brought down near Radinghem. On March 30 there was another encounter, when the British lost three machines. In the Champagne, on the 30th, the French airman, Doutrien, brought down a "Fokker," and the German, Lieutenant Immelmann, east of Bapauume, got the better of a British biplane, capturing its two occupants. On the 26th of April there were nineteen combats on the British front. A German two-seater aeroplane was attacked three times by a single-seater British machine at a great height. The enemy pilot was shot through the heart and the observer through the body. The German machine crashed to the earth, with the engine full on, from a height of 14,000 feet. One of the British reconnaissances was at- tacked by eight hostile aeroplanes, one of which was brought down. Two British machines were damaged, but all re- turned to their base. Events like these, notable at the time, seemed small afterward in the light of airship work on the Western Front in 1918. On March 20 fifty Allied airplanes attacked the German submarine base at Zeebrugge, Belgium and works at Houltade. For two days air-battles constituted the greatest activity seen on the Western Front. In one raid against German towns in upper Alsace, two sky-fleets clashed in one of the most spectacular battles of the war. Four French airplanes and three German were brought down. The raid, in which a squadron of twenty-three French craft invaded upper Alsace and grappled with almost an equal number of German Taubes, furnished a thrilling spectacle. Two of the three German machines brought to earth were masses of flames as they crumpled up. The four French planes that were brought down were wrecked. Possibly twenty persons were killed, including seven civilians, and many more than that number were injured. The raid was directed for the greater part against Mulhausen, where seven were killed and thirteen hurt, and against Habsheim, just east, where one soldier was slain. A total of seventytwo shells were dropt. Several of the fighters were killed when their machines Previous | Next |
![]() The Pilots of a Breguet machine preparing for a long flight at bombing station.
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