Combat Aircraft of the United States Air Force
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Michael Green
Michael Green was educated at Oxford University and writes about business and economics for The Economist. He is the co-author, with Matthew Bishop, of Philanthrocapitalism: How The Rich Can Save The World (A & C Black, 2008).
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Combat Aircraft of the United States Air Force - Michael Green
Chapter One
The Beginning (1903–1918)
The American Wright brothers, Orville and Wilbur, made their first sustained powered flight of a biplane (a two-winged aircraft) on 17 December 1903 at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. As businessmen, they saw opportunity in their accomplishment and continued refining the design of their plane until such time as it could become a marketable product.
By early 1905 the Wrights were sufficiently confident in their design to approach the United States government to see if there was any interest for military use. Much to their dismay, none was expressed and they gave up after three attempts.
The US army has a change of heart
Things began to look up for the Wrights when President Theodore Roosevelt received a newspaper clipping on their activities in the spring of 1907. The president directed the Secretary of War to look into testing the Wrights’ plane. To oversee this new technology, in 1907 the War Department established the ‘Aeronautical Division of the US Army Signal Corps’.
In 1908 the Wrights brought one of their biplanes to Fort Meyers, Virginia for testing. The trials went well enough, despite a serious accident that injured Orville Wright and killed a US army officer along for the ride. Despite this unfortunate event, the Signal Corps was still convinced that their aircraft had great potential.
In August 1909 the Wrights were awarded a $25,000 contract to build the US army’s first aircraft. The biplane was delivered later that year and designated ‘Signal Corps No. 1’. It was more commonly referred to as the ‘Wright Military Flyer’ and was the world’s first dedicated military aircraft. However, the Signal Corps saw it as an observation plane, not as a combat aircraft.
US army aviation did not progress much after the acquisition of the Wright Military Flyer. It took until early 1911 before the American Congress began to authorize the funding needed to purchase additional aircraft for the Signal Corps. By the end of 1913, the Signal Corps had nineteen unarmed biplanes.
War breaks out
The US did not become a participant in the First World War until April 1917. Shortly before the outbreak of the conflict in July 1914, the Aeronautical Division of the Signal Corps was renamed the ‘Aviation Section, US Army Signal Corps’.
Desperately short of the trappings of a modern army, whether rifles or artillery pieces, the US army had little other than bodies to contribute to the war effort in 1917. The Aviation Section had by this time amassed approximately 250 aircraft, all unarmed biplanes.
Upon its official entry into the First World War, American Congress authorized $640 million to fund the development and building of American aircraft suitable for combat. However, despite its best efforts, American industry was not up to the task. The Aviation Section would be forced to employ aircraft supplied by its allies or have modified licence-built copies of foreign-designed planes constructed in the US.
By the summer of 1917, the Aviation Section name was unofficially replaced by the title ‘Air Service’. On 20 May 1918 it became the ‘Division of Military Aeronautics’. This new name lasted for only three days before another was adopted on 24 May: the ‘Air Service, US Army’. The Signal Corps was removed from its oversight; the Air Service was now a separate entity within the US army but not on equal terms with the infantry, cavalry or artillery.
American-flown fighters
The biplane fighters employed by the Aviation Section during the First World War were of French and British manufacture. Primarily intended for the role of air superiority, they would also be employed in a secondary role as fighter-bombers.
The first of these foreign fighters to see service with the American Expeditionary Forces (AEF) was the French Nieuport N.28C-1, better known as the Nieuport 28. Despite it being considered obsolete when the AEF arrived in France, there were no other fighters available. The AEF therefore purchased 297 units as an interim aircraft until something better could be acquired.
The eventual replacement for the Nieuport 28 with the AEF would be the French SPAD XIII C.1. It would go on to equip the majority of American fighter squadrons organized in time to see service in France with the AEF in 1918.
The only other biplane fighter employed by the AEF, albeit in smaller numbers, was the British Sopwith F-1 Camel. In British and American service the fighter accounted for downing 1,294 enemy planes during the First World War, more than any other allied fighter.
An American-built bomber
The only American-built aircraft to see combat with the AEF during the First World War was a British light bomber designated the DH-4. The plane was designed by Geoffrey de Havilland, the chief designer of the British Aircraft Manufacturing Company Limited (Airco).
The Air Service initially ordered 9,500 units of the DH-4 in 1917 from a group of American manufacturers. Of that number, 1,225 made it overseas before the end of the First World War. However, only 499 of those actually saw front-line operational service in France. The first combat employment of the DH-4 took place in August 1918, several months before the armistice was signed.
A French-designed and built single-engine bomber employed by the Air Service in France during the last few months of the First World War was the Breguet 14. It first entered service with the French Air Service in 1917 and was also adopted by the Belgian Air Service during the conflict. Approximately 5,000 units were built.
Summary
The First World War pilots of the Air Service are credited with having downed 755 enemy planes and 71 enemy observation balloons. In turn, the Air Service lost 357 aircraft in combat and 43 observation balloons. Air Service pilots and crews also took part in 215 bombing raids. The human toll during the war was 235 members of the Air Service killed in action and another 654 lost to non-combat causes.
A picture taken on 17 December 1903 shows the American Wright brothers’ first successful flight of an aircraft, referred to at the time as a ‘heavier-than-air flying machine’, at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. The aircraft was referred to as the ‘Wright Flyer’. It had a wingspan of 40ft 4in, was 21ft 1in in length and weighed 605lb. The estimated top speed of the aircraft was 30mph. (USAF Museum)
Soaring over the parade field of Fort Myer, Virginia is the Wright Model A. Despite some mishaps during its trial period (August to September 1908), the Wright Model A managed to impress the US army sufficiently for it to buy one from the Wright Brothers in August 1909. The contract obligated the Wright Brothers to train two US army pilots. (USAF Museum)
In US army service the Wright Model A was relabelled as the Signal Corps Airplane No. 1. The museum aircraft shown here is an exact reproduction of the original. It has a wingspan of 36ft 6in, a length of 28ft 11in and a height of 7ft 10.5in. The aircraft weighed 740lb and had a top speed of 42mph. (USAF Museum)
Unlike the original 1903 Wright Flyer which was a one-man aircraft, Signal Corps Airplane No. 1 was a two-man plane, as can be seen in this museum reproduction. This was a key US army requirement. Other requirements included a range of 125 miles and the ability to be taken apart and transported by horse-drawn wagons. (USAF Museum)
Seen here is a museum reproduction of the Curtiss 1911 Model D Type IV. The original was purchased by the US army and accepted for service on 27 April 1911. It was then redesignated as Signal Corps Airplane No. 2. It has a wingspan of 38ft 3in, a length of 29ft 3in and a height of 7ft 10in. The aircraft weighed 700lb and had a top speed of 50mph. (USAF Museum)
Shown is a museum reproduction of the Curtiss Signal Corps Airplane No. 2. Like the Wright Signal Corps Airplane No. 1, it was a pusher-type aircraft. The engine was located behind the pilot. Unlike the Wright aircraft in which the passenger sat next to the pilot, with the Curtiss the passenger sat behind the pilot, in tandem. (USAF Museum)
US army lieutenant Myron S. Crissy and civilian pilot Mr Philip O. Parmalee, employed by the Wright Exhibition Team, are shown here demonstrating how they dropped the first live bomb from an aircraft from 1,500ft on 15 January 1911. The bomb weighed 36lb and had been designed by Lieutenant Crissy. (USAF Museum)
US army captain Charles D. Chandler (left) and US army lieutenant Roy Kirtland demonstrate to a photographer how they fired the first machine gun in the air-to-ground role on 7 June 1912 from a Wright aircraft. The machine gun pictured is a prototype of a weapon popularly referred to as the ‘Lewis Gun’, widely employed during the First World War. (USAF Museum)
When the Air Service of the American Expeditionary Force (AEF) arrived in France in 1917, the only fighter plane available to the pilots was the French-designed and built Nieuport N.28C-1, normally shortened to just the ‘Nieu-port 28’. Pictured is a museum reproduction of that fighter, which incorporates parts from an incomplete original aircraft. (USAF Museum)
The reproduction cockpit of a Nieuport 28 is seen in this museum display. Note the lack of any instruments, only a control stick, and two foot-operated rudder pedals. Despite being considered obsolete when compared to the newest enemy fighters in 1917–18, a number of American pilots managed to become aces while flying the Nieuport 28. (USAF Museum)
This museum reproduction of a Nieuport 28 shows off the often gaudy camouflage paint schemes and markings applied to the fighter planes of the Air Service during the First World War. The Nieuport 28 had a wingspan of 26ft 3in, a length of 20ft 4in and a height of 8ft. It weighed 1,625lb and had a top speed of 128mph. (USAF Museum)
The French-designed and built replacement for the Nieuport 28 was the Spad XIII C.1, which saw its first combat action with the Air Service in April 1918. The aircraft pictured is an authentic First World War-built example of the aircraft that was restored before being placed on museum display. It is painted in the markings of Captain Eddie Rickenbacker’s aircraft while