Author Topic: On this Day (WWI aviation news)  (Read 25972 times)

Offline PJ Fisher

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Re: On this Day (WWI aviation news)
« Reply #375 on: February 10, 2023, 03:41:49 AM »
10,000 German Rubber Hunters...
...and other fun facts about the German Aircraft Industry
(from the El Paso Herald, 9 February 1918):

« Last Edit: May 28, 2023, 01:03:38 PM by PJ Fisher »

Offline PJ Fisher

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Re: On this Day (WWI aviation news)
« Reply #376 on: February 10, 2023, 11:42:58 PM »
Espionage Employed in Aerial Ambush
Few facts are shared in this story, but it offers insight to an early attempt at organized fighting tactics, when the the war was still just six months old. 
from the Vilas County news, 10 February 1915):

 
   

Offline PJ Fisher

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Re: On this Day (WWI aviation news)
« Reply #377 on: February 12, 2023, 04:38:48 AM »
'New' French Fighter
Here's a close-up of France's 1916 answer to the Fokker - the Farman MF.11, which had been flying since 1913.
(from the Evening Public Ledger, 11 February 1916):



Check out forum member Borsos' in-progress 1/48th scale scratch-build of a similar Farman depicted as it was just a few weeks after this photo was published: https://forum.ww1aircraftmodels.com/index.php?topic=6980.30

Offline PJ Fisher

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Re: On this Day (WWI aviation news)
« Reply #378 on: February 13, 2023, 01:59:19 AM »
Hydroplane Scatters Army
Today's snippet doesn't tell much, but I'm guessing the 'panic'-inspiring plane referenced was a Nieuport 6H from the French seaplane squadron stationed near Port Said.  On 16 Februrary 1915, J. G. Maxwell, Lieut.-General, Commanding the Force in Egypt (disparaging the quality of British airplanes) noted in a dispatch:

"The French Hydroplane Squadron and the detachment Royal Flying Corps have rendered very valuable services. The former, equipped with hydroplanes with floats, ran great risks in undertaking land reconnaissance, whilst the latter were much handicapped by inferior types of machines. Notwithstanding these drawbacks, they furnished me regularly with all information regarding the movements of the enemy."

Has anyone built a model of one of these?  It's definitely on my to-do list. For more info on the Turkish attack on the Suez Canal, which began the week prior to this article being published, read here: https://www.naval-history.net/WW1Battle1502SuezCanal.htm.  For background French Seaplane operations in the Mediterranean, here's another good read: https://aegeanairwar.com/articles/the-french-seaplane-squadron-at-the-dardanelles

(from the Nome Daily Nugget, 12 February 1915):

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(image via aegeanairwar.com)
« Last Edit: February 17, 2023, 01:11:37 AM by PJ Fisher »

Offline PJ Fisher

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Re: On this Day (WWI aviation news)
« Reply #379 on: February 14, 2023, 02:11:12 AM »

British Brave 'Banks of Snow' Snow to Bombard Belgium
(from the New-York Tribune, 13 February 1915):

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Offline PJ Fisher

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Re: On this Day (WWI aviation news)
« Reply #380 on: February 15, 2023, 03:14:32 AM »
World Famous Aviator, Grahame-White, Gravely Injured
(from the Barre Daily Times, 14 February 1915):


Offline PJ Fisher

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Re: On this Day (WWI aviation news)
« Reply #381 on: February 15, 2023, 03:17:26 AM »
World Famous Aviator, Grahame-White, Personally Denies He's Gravely Injured
As noted last October (https://forum.ww1aircraftmodels.com/index.php?topic=12930.msg249052#msg249052), this poor chap really just cannot catch a break with the British tabloids...
(from the Daily Gazette, 14 February 1915):

« Last Edit: May 27, 2023, 01:20:30 PM by PJ Fisher »

Offline PJ Fisher

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Re: On this Day (WWI aviation news)
« Reply #382 on: February 16, 2023, 01:16:36 AM »
Turks in Training
Here's a relatively detailed article on a subject less covered by the press.  For further reading, here's a synopsis of Ottoman aerial developments during the Great War: http://turkeyswar.com/aviation/development-of-turkish-aviation/

(from the El Paso Herald, 25 February 1916):

 
« Last Edit: February 19, 2023, 01:26:27 AM by PJ Fisher »

Offline PJ Fisher

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Re: On this Day (WWI aviation news)
« Reply #383 on: February 17, 2023, 01:04:42 AM »
Austrian Airman Assassination Attempt
Today's news, from two sources, describes a failed 'hit' on French Prime Minister Aristide Briand as part of a series of raids.  According to the second article, Archbishop Ferrari had been tipped off in advance about the Austrian incursion, which he communicated to local authorities.  Evidently someone went to Confession that week!  Though Briand avoided this so-called 'barbaric excursion', the bombing raid left fifty people wounded and twelve dead.
(respectively from the The Sun and L'Italia, 16 February 1916):


 
« Last Edit: February 21, 2023, 02:45:33 PM by PJ Fisher »

Offline PJ Fisher

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Re: On this Day (WWI aviation news)
« Reply #384 on: February 18, 2023, 12:36:17 AM »
Frustrated Fight: Nieuport vs. Rumpler
(from the Evening Star, 17 February 1916):

 
« Last Edit: February 19, 2023, 01:45:57 AM by PJ Fisher »

Offline PJ Fisher

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Re: On this Day (WWI aviation news)
« Reply #385 on: February 19, 2023, 01:10:16 AM »
Castle's Last Dance
Vernon Castle, who headlined here alongside his bartending pet monkey in a New Year's Eve article (https://forum.ww1aircraftmodels.com/index.php?topic=12930.msg251050#msg251050), was again nationwide news on this day in 1918.  This time for his burial.  Castle had been killed three days earlier in a stateside training accident (his monkey survived).  More details on their final flight (℅ wikipedia):

"On 15 February 1918, over Benbrook Field, a training field near Fort Worth, Texas, Vernon took emergency action shortly after takeoff to avoid a collision with another aircraft. His plane stalled, and he was unable to recover control before the plane hit the ground.  He died soon after the crash, aged 30.  Vernon was the only casualty.  There is a street in Benbrook, Texas, named in his honor, with a monument dedicated to him.  According to the monument at the crash site, "Neither the other pilot, his student cadet, nor Vernon's pet monkey, Jeffrey, were seriously injured."  Vernon was buried in Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx, New York.  The grieving memorial figure kneeling on the grave was created by Irene's friend, the American sculptor Sally James Farnham.

(respectively from the Seattle Star, the Birmingham Age-Herald, and the Oklahoma City Times; 15, 17-18 February 1918):



« Last Edit: June 02, 2023, 12:54:28 AM by PJ Fisher »

Offline PJ Fisher

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Re: On this Day (WWI aviation news)
« Reply #386 on: February 20, 2023, 11:40:11 AM »
'A' is for Armor
Here's a photo essay featuring a Royal Aircraft Factory B.E.2a reputedly loaded with armor plating.  If this is the case, it most likely would not have helped the plane's sluggish 72mph top speed.  That might explain this observer's frustrated look.
(from the Grand Forks Daily Herald, 19 February 1915):

« Last Edit: February 21, 2023, 02:48:50 PM by PJ Fisher »

Offline PJ Fisher

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Re: On this Day (WWI aviation news)
« Reply #387 on: February 21, 2023, 02:44:17 PM »
Air Power Over the Aegean
Today's headline records the start of the allies' ill-fated Dardanelles campaign and the British Royal Navy's failure to 'force the narrows', which began 19 February 1915, with the bombardment of Ottoman forts at Cape Helles and Kum Kale. In the hundred years since, scholars have debated this military action's unintended impacts on world history, but today our focus on a very small part of the first day's enthusiasm.  This article only vaguely references 'aeroplanes and seaplanes' but, thanks to the surviving logbook of the newly christened HMS Ark Royal (which arrived on scene two days earlier), we know the identities of the planes that saw action on this day. Nestled in the hold of the two-month-old purpose-built seaplane carrier were one Short Folder, three Sopwith Type 807's, a couple of Sopwith Tabloids, and my personal all-time favorite: two Wight A.1 Improved Navyplanes.  With the war just six months old this gaggle were envisioned and employed primarily for observation and artillery spotting, but ultimately also light bombing. 
(from the Bryant Daily Eagle, 20 February 1915):


 

Several of of Ark Royal's seaplanes were in the air that day.  Troubles began immediately and continued for the duration of the campaign.  The March 19 entry from the Ark Royal's logbook (original here: https://s3.amazonaws.com/oldweather/ADM53-34098/0046_0.jpg), along with the following recollection, gives evidence of the Royal Navy's struggle to bring new technology and tactics to war:

"On 19th February Flt Lts N S Douglas and E H Dunning take Ark Royal’s third “Type 807” folder floatplane No.922 on a first Sopwith mission against Turkish land forces defending the Dardanelles.  Their orders are to reply ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to the question ‘Are two guns of No.1 battery nearer to barracks than cliff?’, then spot onto No.1 Fort for HMS Inflexible at 4,00ft if possible but 3,00ft further off if necessary.  The mission is not a success as the wireless telegraphy set short-circuits probably due to spray getting into the set during the take-off.  Photograph... shows the machine and crew being hoisted back aboard Ark Royal. " (text and image via kingstonaviationorg)

Only twelve Sopwith Type 807 'Folders' where built. Though little remembered today they saw action across the British Empire.  Below is my 1/72 Joystick vacuform build of Sopwith #920 that was featured in the March 2004 issue of WWI Aero Magazine (my 15 minutes of scale-modeling fame).  This particular plane was constructed ten days before #922; it served in East Africa with the RNAS and in Mesopotamia with the RFC.

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« Last Edit: June 02, 2023, 12:53:08 AM by PJ Fisher »

Offline PJ Fisher

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Re: On this Day (WWI aviation news)
« Reply #388 on: February 22, 2023, 06:14:37 AM »
Captured German Pilot Interrogated
(from the Evening Star, 21 February 1916):


Offline PJ Fisher

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Re: On this Day (WWI aviation news)
« Reply #389 on: February 23, 2023, 03:02:41 AM »
Lone Brit Attacks Twelve Rolands
I wonder if this story my be an exaggeration.  Assuming it has some basis of truth, any clue as to who this pilot might be?  Interesting little second article on the German use of the stall tactic to escape combat.
(from the Dakota County Herald, 22 February 1917):


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The article doesn't say which 'Rolands' were involved, but check out forum member Umlaufmotor's 1/32 WNW Roland C.II (a type that was flying when this article was published), which features some convincing wear and weathering: https://forum.ww1aircraftmodels.com/index.php?topic=13147.0