Lafayette Escadrille remembered on 100th Anniversary
It might come as a shock to some to learn that America’s oldest ally is France. This is due in no small part to the unfaltering efforts a bold young Frenchman known simply today as Lafayette.
In the early years of our Revolution, Gilbert du Motier de La Fayette defied explicit orders from Louis XVI and crossed the Atlantic to fight against the hated King of England. His bravery in the Battle of Brandywine earned him a musket ball wound and a division command in George Washington’s army, making the daring nobleman a hero in both Philadelphia and Paris. Lafayette would go home to help forge an alliance between the Confederation of Colonies and France; returning to America on the Hermione after bringing France and Spain into the deciding battles for American independence.
One hundred and thirty-seven years after Lafayette’s epic decision to cast his lot with the cause for Liberty, Americans from all walks of life crossed the Atlantic to join France’s fight in the Great War. In time Lieutenant Colonel Charles E. Stanton would famously proclaim, “Lafayette, We Are Here!”
On Wednesday, April 20th, dignitaries from around the world will gather in Paris to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the formation of the all volunteer air squadron know as the Lafayette Escadrille.
Mike Williams of the United States World War One Centennial Commission said in a press release, “The ceremony will be attended by leading figures of American and French diplomacy and air forces, a symbol of the political and military bonds wrought by the men of the Escadrille. As a part of the ceremony, there will be a flyby consisting of several WWI-era aircraft through to modern day F-22 Raptors and a US B-52 bomber.”
The Lafayette Escadrille was the inspiration of three Americans who hoped to aide the exhausted Allied forces. The French approved of the idea and a squadron – designated N.124 because it flew nimble Nieuport biplanes – was put under the command of French Air Service Captain George Thenault.
While some of the American airmen had previously flown in the French Air Service, many were fledgling fliers who would learn the perils of piloting fragile aircraft against German guns. Their exploits encouraged other American airmen to join in the fight. By the time the United States officially entered the war in 1917, the Yankee volunteers were credited with downing 199 enemy planes.
Thirty-eight American aviators are recognized as members of the Escadrille. Eleven of these pilots paid the ultimate price for their service to France.
Captain Thenault would say of these men:
“They were the precursors of the mighty awakening of the west — of that gigantic effort of America — unparalleled in history — the greatest of all crusades, where every qualified man was enrolled under the Stars and Stripes, for no selfish aim, for no world-conquest, but for the great ideals upon which civilization depends and for which the entire resources of the nation were unsparingly contributed to assure victory.”
UPDATE: Here are a few pictures from today’s event. We will add more as they become available.
Anthony C. Hayes is an actor, author, raconteur, rapscallion and bon vivant. A former reporter at The Washington Herald and an occasional contributor to the Voice of Baltimore, Tony’s poetry, humor and prose have also been featured in Smile, Hon, You’re in Baltimore; Magic Octopus Magazine; Destination Maryland, and Tales of Blood and Roses.