The Lafayette Escadrille was a legendary fighter squadron of the French Air Service in World War I. It was founded in 1916 as the Escadrille Américaine, around a core group of brave young American pilots who had volunteered to fight for France. Their well-publicized exploits helped tip American public opinion towards joining the Great War, and have been the subject of many subsequent books and films. These are the original memoirs of the squadron commander, and run from its founding, through the great battles of Verdun and the Somme, until its formal incorporation into the fledgling U.S. Air Service at the start of 1918. The author describes all aspects of the war, from the horrors of life in the trenches to the joy of being a “Knight of the Air,” and does so with a lyrical quality rare in contemporary accounts.
Lieutenant Colonel Georges Thenault (pronounced "Ten-o") was the commander of the Lafayette Escadrille - the famed branch of the French air force in World War I composed of American volunteer pilots. The Lafayette Escadrille was created before the United States gave up its neutrality, and joined France and Britain in the war against Germany. Once the United States formally entered the war, the Lafayette Escadrille was absorbed into the U.S. Army.
This was not a bad read. The book was decent enough, but I expected a little more. I gave the author a little bit of slack considering he was a soldier and not a professional writer. Still the grammatical errors, and there are more than a few of them, interrupt the flow of the read. Details of the combat accounts of the escadrille are pretty uninformative. The individual aircraft are described as just enemy machines. One doesn't know if we are engaged with Fokkers, Albatri or Pfalz aircraft, single or two-seaters. The book is a bit flowery at times. Especially when the author attempts to pay tribute to the fallen. All that said, the book is still a decent read, it's just for more detail one needs to look elsewhere.
An interesting book, telling the story of Americans who went to fight for France even before the United States got into WW1. The author praises those men and shows appreciation for them, telling of their valor. Another view of the war.
Fundamentally, this is a book praising the American who loved France and loved liberty and the brave and honorable men who risked or gave their lives for their love of such. And it tells you that over and over and over.
There is information to be gleaned from this, but first you have to get past the Frenchman gushing.
One of the points that I found very interesting is the name changes that the Escadrille went through - going from the American Escadrille to the Volunteer Escadrille to the Lafayette Escadrille to 103 Aero Squadron, United States Army Air Corps
Great read for those interested in the Lafayette Escadrille
As commander, he had a unique perspective. I think he is trying to be very honest yet never saying anything derogatory about any of his pilots. Written in 1919 only a year after the war, you get a good factual presentation of time places and his memory of very recent events. He didn't have to do ANY research. He lived these experiences only A year or two previously. A very good read.
For years i thought my Grandfather, William Thomas Ponder had been a member of this elite group of American pilots fighting for the French prior to America's involvement in WWI... Realized he did fly for the French in other squadrons and then on to the 103rd Aero Squadron U.S. with the rest of the LE boys... Good read by the man who formed the famous group...Great slice of history..movie FlyBoys captures some of this story...and micmics my grandfather's story...marrying a french bride...thus my quarter percentage french blood :-)
Thenault tells a careful and accurate review of the American fliers who joined the French air force in WWI. It gives us a definitive look at the brave individuals and their evolving equipment. While these men are long gone, this book helps us remember them and what they did.