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Benjamin Delahauf Foulois - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Benjamin Delahauf Foulois

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Benjamin Delahauf Foulois
December 9, 1879(1879-12-09)April 25, 1967 (aged 87)

Benjamin D. Foulois
Place of birth Washington, Connecticut
Place of death Andrews Air Force Base
Allegiance United States of America
Service/branch United States Army
Years of service 1898-1935
Rank Major General
Commands held Chief of the Air Corps
Chief of the Air Service, AEF
1st Aero Squadron
Battles/wars Spanish American War
Philippine American War
Pancho Villa Expedition
World War I
Awards Distinguished Service Medal
French Légion d'honneur
(Commander)
Order of the Crown of Italy
(Grand Officer)
Congressional Air Force Medal of Recognition
Lt. Foulois and Orville Wright in 1909.
Lt. Foulois and Orville Wright in 1909.

Benjamin Delahauf Foulois (December 9, 1879 - April 25, 1967), was a United States Army Officer and was trained to fly by the Wright Brothers. He became the first military aviator, as an airship pilot, and achieved other military aviation "firsts."

Contents

[edit] Early Military Service

Benjamin "Benny" Delahauf Foulois was born on December 9, 1879, in Washington, Connecticut, to the son of a French veteran of the Franco-Prussian War (1870-1871), and a Boston-born nurse. At age 18 he used his older brother’s birth certificate to enlist in the Army to support the Spanish-American War, but arrived in Puerto Rico just weeks before the armistice was signed. As an engineer, he fought off the rampant tropical diseases, and after five months, was shipped home and mustered out.[1] On June 17, 1899, he enlisted again, as a private in the Regular Army and was assigned to the 19th Infantry, where he achieved the grade of first sergeant. After service in the Philippines at Luzon, Panay and Cebu, he was commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant on July 9, 1901.[2] Foulois was transferred to the 17th Infantry, and served in Manila, Cottabato, and Mindanao. During two separate assignments in the Spring of 1902 and from 1903-1905, he participated in engagements against the Lake Lanao Moros, successfully hunting down and defeating combatant tribal leaders.[3]

Foulois attended the Infantry-Cavalry School at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, from September 1905 to August 1906, and was deployed to perform military mapping in Cuba before returning to complete Signal School in July 1908 as a 1st Lieutenant. His final thesis was "The Tactical and Strategical Value of Dirigible Balloons and Aerodynamical Flying Machines," demonstrating incredible prescience in such statements as this:

"In all future warfare, we can expect to see engagements in the air between hostile aerial fleets. The struggle for supremacy in the air will undoubtedly take place while the opposing armies are maneuvering for position..."[4]

He forecast the replacement of the horse by the airplane in reconnaissance, and wireless air-to-ground communications that included the transmission of photographs. As a result, the staff of the chief signal officer selected Foulois for the aeronautical board designated to conduct the 1908 airship and airplane acceptance trials.[5] After having selected the Thomas Scott Baldwin airship as the winner of the trial, Foulois was selected as the first military crewman, and took his first flight on August 18 as engineer-pilot while Baldwin controlled the rudder at the aft end.

[edit] Aviation Career 1908-1916

Lieutenant Benjamin Foulois
Lieutenant Benjamin Foulois

His first aviation assignment was to the Aeronautical Division, U.S. Signal Corps, where he operated the first dirigible balloon obtained and operated by the U.S. Government. The crash of the Wright Flyer procured at the same time by the Army on its final test flight, September 17, 1908, claimed the first US military airplane fatality, 1st Lt. Thomas E. Selfridge, and also injured Orville Wright.[6] After one year, Foulois had concluded through his experience, understanding of military dirigibles in Europe, and talks with Tom Baldwin, that there was no military future for lighter-than-air aircraft. In expressing this opinion to the Army General staff, Foulois recommended no more purchases of dirigibles, the first of many future disagreements with the military establishment.[7]

The Wright brothers spent the ten months following the fatal crash making many engineering improvements to the airplane. By July 1909, Orville was ready to complete the acceptance test for the Signal Corps. On July 30, 1909 Foulois’ first flight in an Aeroplane was the evaluation test flight from Fort Myer to Alexandria, Virginia. Pilot Orville Wright and observer Foulois broke previous speed, altitude and cross-country duration records, flying at 42.5 mph, 400 feet, and for 10 miles. The Army purchased this Wright Model A, Serial No. 1, their Military Flyer, which became Signal Corps Aeroplane No. 1.[8] The final condition of the contract was to train two pilots.

Foulois hoped to take direct instruction from the Wright brothers, but instead was sent to France in September 1909 as a delegate to the International Congress of Aeronautics. While away, Lieutenant Frederck E. Humphreys made the first military solo in an airplane, on October 26, 1909. Lieutenant Frank P. Lahm followed, but on November 5, both pilots were involved in the crash of the Army's only airplane. Both pilots were reassigned to their non-flying units, and the aircraft was shipped to San Antonio, Texas.

On his return Foulois obtained less than one hour of instruction from Wilbur Wright, but did not solo. After the November 5, and a stand-down while parts were ordered, it was decided to seek a warmer training climate. Foulois was directed to report to Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, Texas and from there he was directed by the Army chief signal officer, Brig. Gen. James Allen, to “teach yourself to fly.”[9] He did so, and on March 2, 1910, made four flights which include his first solo takeoff, first solo landing, and first crash. In the next two years, Foulois made modifications and demonstrated the use of the Wright B aircraft for aerial mapping, photography, reconnaissance and the use of the radio while airborne. He substituted wheels in place of skids, and installed the first seat belt.[10] On March 3, 1911, Foulois and Philip O. Parmalee made the first official military reconnaissance flight, looking for Army troops between Laredo and Eagle Pass, Texas, with a ground exercise in progress.

In December 1913, Foulois was offered an assignment to act as trouble shooter for the problem-plagued Army aviation school in San Diego, California. Foulois was able to reduce the early fatality rate for pilots from 25% to nearly zero. On November 19, 1915, Foulois led the first squadron cross-country flight of six Curtiss JN3’s from Post Field, Fort Sill, Oklahoma, to Ft Sam Houston, San Antonio, Texas, which became the new home of the 1st Aero Squadron. In 1916 Pancho Villa crossed into New Mexico and killed 17 Americans. In response, Brig. Gen. John J. Pershing was directed to pursue Villa into Mexico, and Foulois was ordered to take eight airplanes to provide reconnaissance and communication. Within eight weeks, six of the aircraft had been destroyed, and the airplane had been proven insufficient for the high altitude, severe weather and dry atmosphere.[11]

In April 1917, America entered World War I, and Foulois was rapidly promoted to temporary Brigadier General. At the Office of the Chief Signal Officer, in Washington, he finished the plans to build an air force to support the three million-man army. Foulois took the $640 million plan and draft legislation to the House Military Affairs Committee and won approval over the Army General Staff’s own recommendations. Foulois would find his way to Congress many times over the next 17 years in attempts to overcome the resistance of the Army and Navy senior leadership to any change in the status quo.

[edit] World War I

The fledgling Air Service of the American Expeditionary Force (AEF) was in turmoil when Foulois was assigned as Air Service Chief in November 1917. Resentment of Foulois’s staff, with inexperienced and recently-commissioned non-flying officers, led to strong criticism from Brig. Gen William “Billy” Mitchell, who commanded the Air Service Zone of Advance. In May 1918, Pershing appointed Brig. Gen. Mason M. Patrick to replace Foulois, who then became Patrick’s assistant. Mitchell and Foulois would clash bitterly over the years. Both were ambitious, strong-willed, independent thinkers, but Mitchell came from a wealthy family and was the son of a Wisconsin Senator. Foulois came from a working class family, and impressed his peers with his willingness to roll up his sleeves and work with the mechanics. Both would play an important role in the development of the independent Air Force, but Mitchell worked by swaying public opinion, while Foulois preferred to make direct testimony to congress and often controversial verbal attacks against the military establishment.

In his autobiography, Foulois states:

"It is my intention to set the record straight more than once in regard to Billy Mitchell in these pages. A zealous and jealous man by nature, it was inevitable that the two of us would clash someday. We did, and he attacked me viciously many times in print. For the first time I am going to tell my side of the story in the interest of historical accuracy."[12]

In March 1917 Foulois worked with Colonel George Squier, the Aviation Section Chief and the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics to detail plans for appropriations of $54 million to support 16 aero squadrons, 16 balloon companies, and nine aviation schools.[13] The French government requested the U.S. provide 4,500 trained pilots by the Spring of 1918, which would require 4,900 training aircraft and 12,000 combat planes. The appropriation signed on July 24, 1917 was for $640 Million, the largest for a single purpose in the history of congress.[14] On the same date, Foulois was promoted from major to the temporary rank of Brigadier General, to enable him to oversee this magnitude of responsibility.

From March to September 1917, General Foulois was charged with the responsibility for the production, maintenance, organization and operations of all American aeronautical material and personnel in the United States. In October 1917, he was transferred to France, and had the same responsibilities in France, the British Isles and Italy.[15]

In November 1917 he was named chief of air service, American Expeditionary Forces, and assumed additional duties as a member of the Joint Army and Navy Aircraft Committee in France; representative of the commander in chief, American Expeditionary Forces on the Inter-Allied Expert Committee on Aviation of the Supreme War Council, and commandant of the Army Aeronautical Schools.[16] The arrival of Foulois, with a staff of 112 officers and 300 enlisted men, created an inevitable showdown between Foulois and Mitchell. In his Memoirs, Mitchell writes:

"Just when things had begun to work smoothly, a shipment of aviation officers arrived under Brigadier General Benjamin Foulois, over one hundred in number, almost none of whom had ever seen an airplane….As rapidly as possible, the competent men, who had learned their duties in the face of the enemy, were displaced and their positions taken by these carpetbaggers."[17]

Foulois writes

"...this extract is proof of Mitchell’s disregard for facts” and “While Mitchell had every right to have an opinion about me and my staff, his attitude toward us made our jobs doubly difficult. The seeds of insubordination had already been sown when I relieved him, and his memoirs prove how distorted an opinion he had of himself as an expert on air matters."[18]

In May 1918, Foulois recommended to General Pershing that Mitchell should be replaced. Foulis was appointed chief of air service, First Army, with Mitchell as chief of 1st Corps.[19] The ensuing change of command and Mitchell’s unceasing bitterness to Foulois continued. Foulois wrestled with self doubt that perhaps Mitchell, while openly insubordinate, disloyal to his superiors, and constantly deviating from the military chain of command in giving orders, did have an ability to supervise air battles and create a high fighting spirit, exemplified with the battle of Chateau-Thierry.[20]

In August 1918, when a major loss of coordination between offensive units and replacement units occurred at Toul, Foulois recommended to Pershing that Mitchell resume his previous command as chief of air service, and Foulois was designated assistant chief of the air service, zone of the advance.[21]

[edit] Rise to Chief of the Air Corps

After the Armistice, November 11, 1918, Foulois served with the chief of the air service on the Supreme War Council, drafting the air clauses of the Treaty of Versailles. Upon his return to the U.S. in July 1919, Foulois was assigned to the Office of the Director of Air Service at Washington, D.C., in charge of the Air Service Liquidation Division, responsible for the settlement of war claims against the United States. Just as quickly as he had been promoted from Major to Brigadier General, he was reduced in rank to permanent Captain in the Infantry and temporary rank of Major in the Air Service.[22]

In October 1919, Foulois appeared before the Senate Military Affairs Subcommittee, and testified with stinging accusations toward the Army General Staff and Franklin D. Roosevelt, the assistant Secretary of the Navy.[23] Having stirred up Washington, Foulois heard that a military attaché was needed in Germany with aviation expertise. Since the United States had not yet ratified the Treaty of Versailles, the allies would not share any intelligence with Foulois, and technically the U.S. was still at war with Germany. Foulois found that the Adlon Hotel bar in Berlin was frequented by many aviation cognoscenti, and with food and Allied whisky, Foulois was able to obtain a large amount of aviation intelligence from German pilots which included Hermann Goering. Foulois gained the confidence of these sources, and was eventually invited to join the two top aviation organizations in Germany: the German Aeronautical Scientific Society and the Aero Club of Germany.[24]

Foulois gathered the equivalent of a railroad boxcar full of valuable documents, drawings, technical bulletins, magazines, books, blueprints and reports. By accessing over 180 individuals he had a valuable collection of German aviation knowledge. However, he wrote: "I only hoped that it was being put to good use in America. To my eternal regret, it wasn’t. The lack of an air intelligence collection system, inexperience on the part of the military intelligence officers in regard to aeronautics, and a lack of appreciation for the potential value of the fruits of German genius caused much of the material I sent to end up unopened in a warehouse and later sent to the trash heap."[25]

After many years, Foulois achieved his desire to command a flying unit, and was assigned command of Mitchel Field, Long Island, New York in 1925. The same year, Billy Mitchell's court-martial conviction resulted in his resignation in February 1926.

Brig. Gen. Benjamin D. Foulois (left), Maj. Gen. James E. Fechet and Brig. Gen. H. Conger Pratt.
Brig. Gen. Benjamin D. Foulois (left), Maj. Gen. James E. Fechet and Brig. Gen. H. Conger Pratt.

Foulois was appointed assistant chief of the Air Corps in December 1927, and chief of the Materiel Division at Wright Field, Dayton, Ohio, in June 1929. He was then reassigned to the Office of the Chief of Air Corps, Washington, D.C., in July 1930. In May 1931 he commanded the Air Corps exercises, leading an armada of 672 airplanes, coast to coast defense flights, combat competition and large scale attacks. The leadership of this exercise earned Foulois the Mackey Trophy for the most meritorious flight of 1931.[26] On December 19, 1931 he was designated Chief of the Air Corps, and promoted to major general. Before this date, Foulois had appeared before Congress on 75 occasions. The next four years would see him in constant communication with Congress on the future of the Air Corps, during a time when economic hardships were forcing severe budget cuts.

A compromise reached between the Chief of Naval Operations and General Douglas MacArthur in December 1931 gave the Army land-based air arm the mission of defending the coasts while the Navy had free range to defend the fleet. At the same time, the apparent invincibility of long range Martin B-10 bombers against the slower Boeing P-12 pursuit planes led Foulois and the Air Corps leadership to begin the development of long-range bombers in 1933. Without this foresight, the development of the B-17’s and B-24’s, so essential to winning World War II, would not have taken place.[27]

General Foulois was Chief of the Air Corps during the "Air Mail Fiasco" of 1934. At the time, commercial air carriers derived stable income from carrying the U.S. mail. Allegations of a conspiracy to defraud the government in these contracts resulted in assignment of all air-mail delivery to the Air Corps, beginning on February 19, 1934, and lasting through May 17, 1934. The 1.5 million miles flown by the Air Corps pilots, with insufficient training, equipment, funding, and experience, resulted in numerous fatal crashes.[28] Foulois became the middleman in a political battle between the commercial aviation owners, Congress, and the military. Foulois viewed the "fiasco" just as historically significant as the first flight or the first air combat mission because of its lasting effect in identifying the needs of the peacetime Air Corps and the Baker Board's recommendation for a GHQ Air Force, implemented in March 1935.[29]

[edit] Post-Retirement

The 1934 Rogers Subcommittee investigation into improper contracting and procurement awards had called for his resignation, and he carried his fight to the public through the media. Foulois made the decision to retire so that the focus could return to the vital task of building the Air Force in the face of a resurgence in German airpower.[30]

General Foulois retired from active duty December 31, 1935, after 37 years of service. In spite of his remarkable career, he left with no farewell from the General Staff, no parade, and no aircraft fly-by typical of a retirement of a Major General.

He accurately warned of the buildup of German air power, the need to build a strong air force and to take defensive measures to protect the East Coast. He ran New Jersey’s civil defense program prior to World War II.

In 1941, he ran for the House of Representatives from New Jersey's second district, losing to four-term Democrat incumbent Elmer H. Wene. He turned down an invitation to return to active duty in 1942, but continued to write and speak for 17 years from his home in Ventnor, New Jersey.

Following his wife’s death in 1959 he was asked by the Air Force Chief of Staff, General Thomas D. White, to live at Andrews Air Force Base and become the senior spokesman to promote Air Force issues. He traveled approximately 500,000 miles by air, emphasizing national security to the men and women of the U.S. Air Force at home and overseas. In 1963, Foulois appeared on the television quiz show I've Got a Secret, where his secret was that he had once been the entire U.S. Air Force. He also recounted his inspiration for the airplane seat belt, saying that he'd had it installed after a crash had almost thrown him from "the damn plane." Foulois' casual use of what was then a television vulgarity provoked a nervous look from host Garry Moore.

General Foulois died on April 25, 1967, following a heart attack at age 87, and was buried in his hometown of Washington, Connecticut.

As the longest living of the first military pilots, Foulois saw the steps into space of the Apollo Program – a direct legacy of his many career “first” milestones, and remains one of the most significant key figures in the development of U.S. air power.

[edit] Pronunciation of Foulois

Asked how to say his name, he told The Literary Digest "Rhymes with to cloy: foo-loy'." (Charles Earle Funk, What's the Name, Please?, Funk & Wagnalls, 1936.)

[edit] Further reading

  • Borden, Norman E., Jr. (1968). Air Mail Emergency. 1934: An Account of Seventy-Eight Tense Days in the Winter of 1934 When the Army Flew the United States Mail. Freeport, ME, Bond Wheelwright.
  • Cagle, Eldon, Jr. (1985). Quadrangle: The History of Fort Sam Houston. Austin, TX, Eakin Press.
  • Cornelisse, Diana Good. (1992). The Foulois House: It's Place in the History of the Miami Valley and American Aviation. Dayton, OH, History Office, Aeronautical Systems Division, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
  • Foulois, Benjamin D, Glines, C.V. (1968) From the Wright Brothers to the Astronauts: The Memoirs of Benjamin D. Foulois. New York, McGraw-Hill. ISBN 040512211X.
  • Frisbee, John L. (Ed.) (1987). Makers of the United States Air Force. Washington, Office of Air Force History.
  • Jacobs, James W. (1984). National Aviation Hall of Fame (U.S.). Enshrinee Album: The First Twenty-One Years. Dayton, OH, National Aviation Hall of Fame.
  • Shiner, John F. (1975). The Army Air Arm in Transition: General Benjamin D. Foulois and the Air Corps. 1931-1935. Ann Arbor, Ml, University Microfilms.
  • Shiner, John F. (1984). Foulois and the U.S. Army Air Corps, 1931-1935. Washington, D.C.: Office of Air Force History.

[edit] Legacy

[edit] References

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Foulois, Benjamin D; Glines, C.V. (1968). From the Wright Brothers to the Astronauts: The Memoirs of Benjamin D. Foulois. New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 040512211X. p.12
  2. ^ Foulois, p.25
  3. ^ Foulois, p.37
  4. ^ Foulois, p.44
  5. ^ Foulois, p.50
  6. ^ Foulois, p.56
  7. ^ Foulois, p.59
  8. ^ Foulois, p.65
  9. ^ Foulois, p.70
  10. ^ Foulois, p.74
  11. ^ Foulois, p.129
  12. ^ Foulois, p.46
  13. ^ Foulois, p.141
  14. ^ Foulois, p.146
  15. ^ Foulois, p.157
  16. ^ Foulois, p.160
  17. ^ Mitchell, William (1960). Memoirs of World War I: From Start to Finish of Our Greatest War. New York: Random House. 
  18. ^ Foulois, p.161
  19. ^ Foulois, p.171
  20. ^ Foulois, p.175
  21. ^ Foulois, p.176
  22. ^ Foulois, p.185
  23. ^ Foulois, p.188
  24. ^ Foulois, p.191
  25. ^ Foulois, p.194
  26. ^ Foulois, p.214
  27. ^ Foulois, p.229
  28. ^ Foulois, p.260
  29. ^ Foulois, p.261
  30. ^ Foulois, p.265


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