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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:10,111 --> 00:00:12,180 We made a sort of compact 2 00:00:12,213 --> 00:00:15,283 that if war came, we should go into aviation. 3 00:00:15,316 --> 00:00:16,016 That was the life. 4 00:00:19,187 --> 00:00:21,055 It is certainly great up there, 5 00:00:21,089 --> 00:00:23,091 and you own the world when you get up alone 6 00:00:23,124 --> 00:00:26,594 and can do whatever you want. 7 00:00:26,627 --> 00:00:29,397 Have you ever had your wildest dreams come true? 8 00:00:33,734 --> 00:00:39,607 In the summer of 1916, two college juniors from Yale 9 00:00:39,640 --> 00:00:42,243 started an air militia in preparation 10 00:00:42,276 --> 00:00:45,279 for America and entering World War I. 11 00:00:45,313 --> 00:00:46,847 They were there first. 12 00:00:46,880 --> 00:00:51,085 They were there in the beginning and everything that follows 13 00:00:51,119 --> 00:00:53,187 flows from their early efforts. 14 00:00:58,326 --> 00:01:01,095 As sons of some of the wealthiest and most prominent 15 00:01:01,129 --> 00:01:03,731 families in the country, their exploits 16 00:01:03,764 --> 00:01:07,535 were noticed by the press who dubbed them The Millionaires 17 00:01:07,568 --> 00:01:09,770 Unit. 18 00:01:09,803 --> 00:01:13,674 This was a group well-educated, 19 00:01:13,707 --> 00:01:19,680 affluent young men who voluntarily took up 20 00:01:19,713 --> 00:01:21,149 the challenge. 21 00:01:21,182 --> 00:01:22,450 They didn't have to. 22 00:01:22,483 --> 00:01:24,352 The men of the Yale Flying Club 23 00:01:24,385 --> 00:01:28,322 had a sense of duty, honor, country. 24 00:01:28,356 --> 00:01:34,528 They felt they were privileged and had an obligation to lead. 25 00:01:34,562 --> 00:01:35,829 They determined to learn 26 00:01:35,863 --> 00:01:41,135 to fly when aviation was still in its infancy, 27 00:01:41,169 --> 00:01:44,138 and they aimed to convince the Navy of their fortitude 28 00:01:44,172 --> 00:01:45,873 and resolve. 29 00:01:45,906 --> 00:01:48,609 Through their initiative, these daring young aviators 30 00:01:48,642 --> 00:01:52,613 became the first to fly for the United States in World War I. 31 00:01:52,646 --> 00:01:56,250 Some of them making the ultimate sacrifice. 32 00:02:15,636 --> 00:02:17,338 The gates of honor 33 00:02:17,371 --> 00:02:22,310 opened to us, those lucky ones of us who are over here. 34 00:02:22,343 --> 00:02:26,647 We need not fear that we're not prepared to die for no matter 35 00:02:26,680 --> 00:02:29,750 what we have been in the last glorious moments, 36 00:02:29,783 --> 00:02:32,920 we can die not as the ordinary man, 37 00:02:32,953 --> 00:02:35,523 but fighting for the ideals we hold so sacred. 38 00:03:06,754 --> 00:03:08,856 We were still pretty young 39 00:03:08,889 --> 00:03:11,559 as I was 18, my brother, 16. 40 00:03:11,592 --> 00:03:13,727 We went to Alaska and had some very good mountain 41 00:03:13,761 --> 00:03:16,830 sheep and caribou hunting. 42 00:03:16,864 --> 00:03:18,999 When we went into the interior by pack train, 43 00:03:19,032 --> 00:03:21,469 the world was at peace. 44 00:03:21,502 --> 00:03:24,238 We met on the trail one day a prospector, 45 00:03:24,272 --> 00:03:25,573 and he told us the world was at war. 46 00:03:28,642 --> 00:03:30,744 He was a little mixed up about who was fighting who, 47 00:03:30,778 --> 00:03:32,846 but he knew there was a war on. 48 00:03:32,880 --> 00:03:34,548 When we heard about that, we decided 49 00:03:34,582 --> 00:03:38,452 to cut short our trip short and go home, which we did. 50 00:03:38,486 --> 00:03:39,787 It was quite a shocking experience 51 00:03:39,820 --> 00:03:42,823 to have it come at you that way. 52 00:03:42,856 --> 00:03:45,726 There was just peace and then war, as far as we knew. 53 00:03:45,759 --> 00:03:46,694 Frederick Trubee Davison. 54 00:03:52,966 --> 00:03:56,604 Most of America was as unawares as Trubee Davison 55 00:03:56,637 --> 00:03:58,472 of the tensions that threw Europe 56 00:03:58,506 --> 00:04:02,876 into the most cataclysmic event yet known to mankind. 57 00:04:02,910 --> 00:04:05,379 Trickling across the Atlantic came 58 00:04:05,413 --> 00:04:09,783 news of the horrors of the first war of the Industrial Age, 59 00:04:09,817 --> 00:04:12,320 fought with new technologies. 60 00:04:12,353 --> 00:04:18,559 The machine gun, the tank, the airplane. 61 00:04:26,834 --> 00:04:31,439 World War I would mark the end of the Age of Empire 62 00:04:31,472 --> 00:04:35,709 and the destruction of decades of peaceful productivity 63 00:04:35,743 --> 00:04:39,380 and cultural exchange. 64 00:04:39,413 --> 00:04:41,482 The United States would eventually 65 00:04:41,515 --> 00:04:45,986 be drawn in to the great war across the ocean, spearheaded 66 00:04:46,019 --> 00:04:49,457 by the new field of naval aviation. 67 00:04:49,490 --> 00:04:52,960 The courage and enterprise shown by these pioneer pilots 68 00:04:52,993 --> 00:04:55,696 forever changed the character of the Navy 69 00:04:55,729 --> 00:04:57,898 and the ways in which wars would be fought 70 00:04:57,931 --> 00:05:01,369 and peace would be won. 71 00:05:01,402 --> 00:05:03,804 A small group of college students 72 00:05:03,837 --> 00:05:06,073 affected a large part of that change. 73 00:05:11,512 --> 00:05:16,116 They were known as the First Yale Unit. 74 00:05:16,149 --> 00:05:18,919 They formed the founding squadron of the Naval Air 75 00:05:18,952 --> 00:05:21,755 Reserve, and in the years that followed 76 00:05:21,789 --> 00:05:25,025 they helped lead military aviation through two world 77 00:05:25,058 --> 00:05:30,398 wars, the Cold War, and played major roles in America's 78 00:05:30,431 --> 00:05:32,766 ascendancy as the dominant power on the world 79 00:05:32,800 --> 00:05:34,334 stage in the 20th century. 80 00:05:45,646 --> 00:05:51,151 The sinking of the British liner Lusitania by a German u-boat, 81 00:05:51,184 --> 00:05:55,756 taking the lives of 128 Americans, 82 00:05:55,789 --> 00:05:58,459 was a shocking reminder to the United States 83 00:05:58,492 --> 00:06:01,662 of the war on the other side of the Atlantic. 84 00:06:01,695 --> 00:06:04,432 For young Frederick Trubee Davison, 85 00:06:04,465 --> 00:06:07,768 it was a harbinger of what would consume his life 86 00:06:07,801 --> 00:06:10,771 for the next four years-- 87 00:06:10,804 --> 00:06:12,873 stopping the German u-boat. 88 00:06:17,110 --> 00:06:20,848 In the summer of 1915, after his freshman year 89 00:06:20,881 --> 00:06:23,016 at Yale University, he accompanied 90 00:06:23,050 --> 00:06:28,589 his father, Henry P. Davison, on an eye opening trip to Europe. 91 00:06:28,622 --> 00:06:30,924 H.P. Davidson was the senior partner 92 00:06:30,958 --> 00:06:33,661 of JP Morgan and Company. 93 00:06:33,694 --> 00:06:35,963 As the most powerful bank in America, 94 00:06:35,996 --> 00:06:38,866 Morgan and Company was in the unique position 95 00:06:38,899 --> 00:06:41,068 to lead the sales of securities that 96 00:06:41,101 --> 00:06:43,704 helped finance the British and French war effort. 97 00:06:46,507 --> 00:06:49,810 This business trip entails some high stakes bargaining 98 00:06:49,843 --> 00:06:53,146 as America was officially neutral when the war started, 99 00:06:53,180 --> 00:06:58,786 and President Woodrow Wilson was up for re-election. 100 00:06:58,819 --> 00:07:01,689 That was, indeed, in 1916. 101 00:07:01,722 --> 00:07:05,593 He ran on a platform of, with the slogan, 102 00:07:05,626 --> 00:07:07,461 he kept us out of war. 103 00:07:07,495 --> 00:07:11,665 And he intended to continue to keep the US out of war. 104 00:07:11,699 --> 00:07:13,567 So Trubee joined his father 105 00:07:13,601 --> 00:07:16,870 on one of those trips, in part to see how his father was 106 00:07:16,904 --> 00:07:20,007 working and to learn the ropes. 107 00:07:20,040 --> 00:07:21,942 The young man accompanied his father 108 00:07:21,975 --> 00:07:24,077 on a whirlwind of meetings and dinners 109 00:07:24,111 --> 00:07:28,048 with the British prime minister and other senior officials. 110 00:07:28,081 --> 00:07:30,217 He couldn't help but start thinking 111 00:07:30,250 --> 00:07:32,252 that there was no way that Americans 112 00:07:32,285 --> 00:07:34,121 would be able to ride it out. 113 00:07:34,154 --> 00:07:39,059 That they would get involved and be drawn into the war. 114 00:07:39,092 --> 00:07:40,661 Trubee saw an opportunity 115 00:07:40,694 --> 00:07:42,930 where a young man could help with the war effort 116 00:07:42,963 --> 00:07:46,233 and gain some experience. 117 00:07:46,266 --> 00:07:48,969 He spent the rest of the summer driving ambulances 118 00:07:49,002 --> 00:07:51,839 from the Paris train stations to the American hospital 119 00:07:51,872 --> 00:07:56,076 and got a good hard look at the effects of war. 120 00:08:00,013 --> 00:08:01,615 When Trubee Davidson 121 00:08:01,649 --> 00:08:04,952 was returning after that summer of ambulance driving, 122 00:08:04,985 --> 00:08:09,289 he was on a ship with Robert Bacon, one of the organizers 123 00:08:09,322 --> 00:08:13,727 and financiers of the squadron of the aviators called 124 00:08:13,761 --> 00:08:16,664 the Escadrille Lafayette. 125 00:08:16,697 --> 00:08:21,969 And he discussed that effort to create an all-American Air 126 00:08:22,002 --> 00:08:24,638 Force with the French. 127 00:08:24,672 --> 00:08:28,876 And that implanted the idea in Trubee's mind 128 00:08:28,909 --> 00:08:32,613 that maybe what he'd like to do is create his own little Air 129 00:08:32,646 --> 00:08:36,884 Force in the event that the US should get into the war. 130 00:08:36,917 --> 00:08:38,586 FREDERICK TRUBEE - In 1915, I 131 00:08:38,619 --> 00:08:40,287 at least saw enough of the fellows over there 132 00:08:40,320 --> 00:08:43,156 to know that if we ever got into the war, where I personally 133 00:08:43,190 --> 00:08:46,326 wanted to be was in the air service. 134 00:08:46,359 --> 00:08:48,629 That put the bug in my Bonnet. 135 00:08:48,662 --> 00:08:50,197 When I was back to college in the fall, 136 00:08:50,230 --> 00:08:53,767 I picked up Bob Lovett and poured it in his ear. 137 00:08:53,801 --> 00:08:55,836 We made a sort of compact that if war came, 138 00:08:55,869 --> 00:08:58,038 we should go into aviation. 139 00:08:58,071 --> 00:08:59,707 That was the life. 140 00:08:59,740 --> 00:09:02,309 Perhaps the epitome of the Yale gentleman 141 00:09:02,342 --> 00:09:05,879 was Trubee's classmate, Robert Lovett. 142 00:09:05,913 --> 00:09:09,016 Composed and aloof, Lovett was voted 143 00:09:09,049 --> 00:09:13,320 as the most brilliant, hardest working, and most thorough 144 00:09:13,353 --> 00:09:16,056 gentleman at Yale. 145 00:09:16,089 --> 00:09:18,626 But while Trubee had been driving ambulances 146 00:09:18,659 --> 00:09:21,361 near the front, Bob had spent the summer 147 00:09:21,394 --> 00:09:24,898 driving sports cars and motorcycles in the Swiss Alps. 148 00:09:24,932 --> 00:09:26,366 When I look back 149 00:09:26,399 --> 00:09:30,871 and I read about my grandfather and his Yale years, 150 00:09:30,904 --> 00:09:34,207 it paints a picture of a very different man than I knew. 151 00:09:34,241 --> 00:09:39,012 To read that he was the head of the prom, 152 00:09:39,046 --> 00:09:43,651 that he was involved in the acting program at Yale, 153 00:09:43,684 --> 00:09:47,387 these were surprising to me because these would indicate 154 00:09:47,420 --> 00:09:51,291 to me that my grandfather was an extrovert and charming, 155 00:09:51,324 --> 00:09:54,862 lively fellow who went out for a good time, 156 00:09:54,895 --> 00:09:57,898 and this was not the grandfather I knew. 157 00:09:57,931 --> 00:09:59,700 After their eventful summers, 158 00:09:59,733 --> 00:10:03,704 both Trubee and Bob returned to Yale for their sophomore year, 159 00:10:03,737 --> 00:10:09,409 and each set about to prove they had sand, grit, and spirit that 160 00:10:09,442 --> 00:10:10,878 made them popular on campus. 161 00:10:10,911 --> 00:10:12,212 I think there's 162 00:10:12,245 --> 00:10:14,114 a certain amount of truth to the statement 163 00:10:14,147 --> 00:10:20,854 that Yale was heavily social before the First World War. 164 00:10:20,888 --> 00:10:23,390 Everybody at Yale wanted to be in a club, 165 00:10:23,423 --> 00:10:25,726 wanted to be in a team, wanted to be 166 00:10:25,759 --> 00:10:28,762 in one kind of organization or another. 167 00:10:28,796 --> 00:10:32,265 And Trubee Davidson was one of the kind of people that 168 00:10:32,299 --> 00:10:34,201 thrived at a place like Yale. 169 00:10:40,741 --> 00:10:42,810 While still reflecting on his experience 170 00:10:42,843 --> 00:10:44,845 with the victims of trench warfare, 171 00:10:44,878 --> 00:10:47,915 Trubee found it difficult to focus on school, 172 00:10:47,948 --> 00:10:52,219 and his thoughts turned repeatedly to aviation. 173 00:10:52,252 --> 00:10:54,454 At the beginning of the war, airplanes 174 00:10:54,487 --> 00:10:57,424 were still seen as the dominion of aristocrats 175 00:10:57,457 --> 00:11:00,093 and wealthy sportsmen looking for adventure. 176 00:11:03,296 --> 00:11:05,766 As aerial combat evolved, there was 177 00:11:05,799 --> 00:11:11,171 romance in the idea of warrior knights of the air. 178 00:11:11,204 --> 00:11:13,473 Jousting one on one. 179 00:11:13,506 --> 00:11:16,376 A romance completely lacking in the trenches 180 00:11:16,409 --> 00:11:17,745 of mechanized warfare. 181 00:11:21,481 --> 00:11:23,450 But Trubee and his generation of friends 182 00:11:23,483 --> 00:11:27,187 were also motivated by a sense of duty. 183 00:11:27,220 --> 00:11:32,225 The idea that of those to whom much is given, much 184 00:11:32,259 --> 00:11:35,362 is expected. 185 00:11:35,395 --> 00:11:40,801 If the United States was going to war, they want to take part 186 00:11:40,834 --> 00:11:43,436 and they wanted to fly. 187 00:11:43,470 --> 00:11:45,172 They were highfalutin. 188 00:11:45,205 --> 00:11:47,507 They aimed beyond their human capacity 189 00:11:47,540 --> 00:11:53,146 to fulfill as any good rule should. 190 00:11:53,180 --> 00:11:57,217 And they were based a lot on ethics and religion. 191 00:11:57,250 --> 00:11:59,987 What a man did and did not do. 192 00:12:00,020 --> 00:12:04,191 And it formed a kind of a behavioral code, 193 00:12:04,224 --> 00:12:07,895 far more than it does now. 194 00:12:07,928 --> 00:12:11,832 Yale had a obligatorily chapel attendance 195 00:12:11,865 --> 00:12:14,835 every day of the week except Saturday. 196 00:12:14,868 --> 00:12:17,838 This is a time when what has become almost 197 00:12:17,871 --> 00:12:21,942 the Yale anthem became popular. 198 00:12:21,975 --> 00:12:24,344 It's called "Bright College Years." 199 00:12:24,377 --> 00:12:28,849 And the final lines in that are, so 200 00:12:28,882 --> 00:12:33,821 let us strive that ever we may let 201 00:12:33,854 --> 00:12:37,825 these words our watch cry be. 202 00:12:37,858 --> 00:12:42,896 Where 'er upon life sea we sail, for God, 203 00:12:42,930 --> 00:12:46,133 for country, and for Yale. 204 00:12:46,166 --> 00:12:56,076 For God, for country, and for Yale. 205 00:13:06,253 --> 00:13:09,957 When the First World War broke out in Europe 206 00:13:09,990 --> 00:13:18,265 in 1914, there was a tremendous amount of patriotic militarism 207 00:13:18,298 --> 00:13:22,335 that swept over this campus and over much of the United States. 208 00:13:22,369 --> 00:13:25,105 Trubee and Bob Lovett were also swept up. 209 00:13:25,138 --> 00:13:28,976 But noble and lofty as their aerial ambitions were, 210 00:13:29,009 --> 00:13:32,479 they still needed to get permission from their parents 211 00:13:32,512 --> 00:13:33,313 to learn to fly. 212 00:13:36,383 --> 00:13:38,618 Mr. And Mrs. Davison were both opposed 213 00:13:38,651 --> 00:13:42,589 to their son's grand scheme until a family friend 214 00:13:42,622 --> 00:13:46,226 with the Aero Club of America convinced them that flying 215 00:13:46,259 --> 00:13:49,562 was safe if properly done. 216 00:13:49,596 --> 00:13:53,466 Mrs. Davison took a ride herself and became a convert. 217 00:13:56,503 --> 00:13:59,572 The Aero Club of America was developing 218 00:13:59,606 --> 00:14:02,575 a plan with Rear Admiral Robert E. Perry 219 00:14:02,609 --> 00:14:06,179 for a string of aerial coastal defense stations 220 00:14:06,213 --> 00:14:09,149 to defend the Atlantic seaboard against possible attack 221 00:14:09,182 --> 00:14:11,118 from German warships. 222 00:14:11,151 --> 00:14:14,354 Trubee and Lovett were sent to meet with the admiral, 223 00:14:14,387 --> 00:14:17,590 and plans were hatched for the group of Yale students, 224 00:14:17,624 --> 00:14:21,261 students who had never flown before, to be the prototype 225 00:14:21,294 --> 00:14:23,430 civilian squadron. 226 00:14:23,463 --> 00:14:28,368 Aerial Coast Patrol Unit Number One, or as they became 227 00:14:28,401 --> 00:14:32,039 known, The First Yale Unit. 228 00:14:32,072 --> 00:14:35,575 Trubee now leapt into gear, spending a sleepless night 229 00:14:35,608 --> 00:14:39,512 composing a telegram which he sent to 11 of his friends 230 00:14:39,546 --> 00:14:42,549 asking them to join him at Peacock Point, his family's 231 00:14:42,582 --> 00:14:45,986 estate on the North Shore of Long Island for the summer 232 00:14:46,019 --> 00:14:47,921 to learn to fly. 233 00:14:47,955 --> 00:14:49,689 Have for several days 234 00:14:49,722 --> 00:14:52,125 been making very careful investigation of merits 235 00:14:52,159 --> 00:14:56,029 of organizing First Unit of Aero Coast Defense. 236 00:14:56,063 --> 00:14:58,665 Regard matter of such importance that have no hesitation urging 237 00:14:58,698 --> 00:15:01,068 you coming to see me at once. 238 00:15:01,101 --> 00:15:04,071 Training will be at my place and will take all summer. 239 00:15:04,104 --> 00:15:06,673 F. Trubee Davison. 240 00:15:06,706 --> 00:15:09,642 John Vorys, a member of the football and debate 241 00:15:09,676 --> 00:15:12,645 teams, recalled receiving a telegram 242 00:15:12,679 --> 00:15:15,248 and a phone call from Trubee as he 243 00:15:15,282 --> 00:15:17,951 was recovering from pneumonia and a tonsillectomy 244 00:15:17,985 --> 00:15:20,053 in Columbus, Ohio. 245 00:15:20,087 --> 00:15:21,621 Trubee telephoned to my home 246 00:15:21,654 --> 00:15:24,724 and explained the idea of which I remember only that we were 247 00:15:24,757 --> 00:15:28,261 not to fly very high, and that because we flew over water, 248 00:15:28,295 --> 00:15:30,597 we wouldn't get hurt if we did fall occasionally. 249 00:15:30,630 --> 00:15:32,499 It was an awful job 250 00:15:32,532 --> 00:15:34,701 to make the thing clear. 251 00:15:34,734 --> 00:15:37,204 Di Gates came and said he didn't come to join the outfit, 252 00:15:37,237 --> 00:15:39,072 but to be convinced. 253 00:15:39,106 --> 00:15:43,043 Artemus Di Gates, all his friends called him Di, 254 00:15:43,076 --> 00:15:46,013 was a big man. 255 00:15:46,046 --> 00:15:50,083 He was darker skin, black hair, so much so 256 00:15:50,117 --> 00:15:52,752 that some people nicknamed him the Indian. 257 00:15:52,785 --> 00:15:55,455 Maybe a little bit derogatorily. 258 00:15:55,488 --> 00:16:02,095 Di gates was a shy man and a modest man. 259 00:16:02,129 --> 00:16:04,064 Even though he was very quiet, there 260 00:16:04,097 --> 00:16:06,466 was a forceful personality to him 261 00:16:06,499 --> 00:16:09,402 that you knew that he was in the room 262 00:16:09,436 --> 00:16:12,039 even if he was not speaking. 263 00:16:12,072 --> 00:16:16,343 He became a celebrity by becoming part of the football 264 00:16:16,376 --> 00:16:24,451 team, and later went on to be its captain in 1917. 265 00:16:24,484 --> 00:16:26,286 Along with Bob Lovett, Trubee 266 00:16:26,319 --> 00:16:30,690 corralled his younger brother, Harry, football players John 267 00:16:30,723 --> 00:16:37,397 Vorys and Di Gates, crew heeler Alphie Ames, hockey player Erl 268 00:16:37,430 --> 00:16:41,801 Gould, track and fielder John Farwell, 269 00:16:41,834 --> 00:16:48,075 and recent Yale grads Al Sturtevant and Charles Wiman. 270 00:16:48,108 --> 00:16:51,044 Welles Brown and Al Ditman, junior associates 271 00:16:51,078 --> 00:16:53,380 at Morgan and Company, completed the roster 272 00:16:53,413 --> 00:16:55,382 of the 12 aspiring aviators. 273 00:16:58,651 --> 00:17:00,653 Fortunately, there was a flying school 274 00:17:00,687 --> 00:17:04,457 nearby at Port Washington with an experienced and diligent 275 00:17:04,491 --> 00:17:08,528 instructor named Dave McCulloch, and a small, single engine 276 00:17:08,561 --> 00:17:13,666 Curtiss Flying Boat named the Mary Ann. 277 00:17:13,700 --> 00:17:16,303 This was a group of young men learning 278 00:17:16,336 --> 00:17:21,808 to fly just 13 years after the Wright brothers had flown. 279 00:17:21,841 --> 00:17:26,513 They knew they were off on to something great and something 280 00:17:26,546 --> 00:17:31,384 dangerous too, but they believed that nothing worth achieving 281 00:17:31,418 --> 00:17:34,221 is without risk. 282 00:17:34,254 --> 00:17:35,755 The group of young adventurers 283 00:17:35,788 --> 00:17:39,526 expected recognition from the Navy imminently. 284 00:17:39,559 --> 00:17:44,297 In the meantime, they would organize as a private militia. 285 00:17:44,331 --> 00:17:48,835 In every war prior to World War I, 286 00:17:48,868 --> 00:17:52,172 much of the US Army and Navy have 287 00:17:52,205 --> 00:17:56,443 been composed of privately funded and raised militia 288 00:17:56,476 --> 00:17:58,111 forces. 289 00:17:58,145 --> 00:18:00,580 Teddy Roosevelt's Rough Riders were a private militia 290 00:18:00,613 --> 00:18:05,185 that was enlisted into the regular army as a unit. 291 00:18:05,218 --> 00:18:09,556 And the notion that wealthy people 292 00:18:09,589 --> 00:18:13,160 would use their resources to provide funds 293 00:18:13,193 --> 00:18:17,197 to raise a militia was very much in keeping 294 00:18:17,230 --> 00:18:20,533 with national traditions up to that point. 295 00:18:20,567 --> 00:18:24,337 H.P. Davison initially spearheaded their fund raising 296 00:18:24,371 --> 00:18:26,406 and JP Morgan and Company provided 297 00:18:26,439 --> 00:18:32,712 the first donation, $100,000. 298 00:18:32,745 --> 00:18:36,216 The dozen college kids spend an invigorating summer living 299 00:18:36,249 --> 00:18:38,851 at the large Davison estate. 300 00:18:38,885 --> 00:18:40,753 They rolled up their sleeves and dug 301 00:18:40,787 --> 00:18:43,256 into the mechanics of the airplane, 302 00:18:43,290 --> 00:18:46,493 learning how to break down and rebuild the Mary Ann. 303 00:18:49,429 --> 00:18:51,831 Flying progress was slow. 304 00:18:51,864 --> 00:18:54,867 There was only one plane, few spare parts, 305 00:18:54,901 --> 00:18:57,537 and the wind was often too strong for the delicate Mary 306 00:18:57,570 --> 00:18:59,272 Ann. 307 00:18:59,306 --> 00:19:01,674 But they countered the drawbacks with youthful enthusiasm. 308 00:19:01,708 --> 00:19:03,710 We went into this thing 309 00:19:03,743 --> 00:19:06,379 with a sort of missionary spirit. 310 00:19:06,413 --> 00:19:09,882 We had one machine, we had this old floating hangar that 311 00:19:09,916 --> 00:19:14,187 wouldn't float, and no runway. 312 00:19:14,221 --> 00:19:16,623 We had some kind of jumpers. 313 00:19:16,656 --> 00:19:18,891 Bob Lovett bought them. 314 00:19:18,925 --> 00:19:22,629 They were terrible looking and they were light lavender. 315 00:19:22,662 --> 00:19:24,331 We bought a lot of airplane books 316 00:19:24,364 --> 00:19:25,432 and got into the swing of it. 317 00:19:27,267 --> 00:19:28,535 The big thing 318 00:19:28,568 --> 00:19:30,203 that they were having to deal with was 319 00:19:30,237 --> 00:19:31,571 an under-powered airplane. 320 00:19:31,604 --> 00:19:35,542 That planes were heavy, they were made of wood. 321 00:19:35,575 --> 00:19:37,377 The engines were not powerful. 322 00:19:37,410 --> 00:19:41,448 And it's difficult to fly an airplane that is 323 00:19:41,481 --> 00:19:45,585 under-powered and overweight. 324 00:19:54,894 --> 00:19:57,664 July 31, 1916. 325 00:19:57,697 --> 00:20:00,400 Dear mother, I've just taken my first lesson. 326 00:20:12,279 --> 00:20:14,981 I was in the air 33 minutes and made every mistake aviators 327 00:20:15,014 --> 00:20:16,883 have made in 10 years, theoretically 328 00:20:16,916 --> 00:20:19,752 breaking my neck 1,072 times. 329 00:20:19,786 --> 00:20:22,455 I handed the rudder fairly well, but keeping her level 330 00:20:22,489 --> 00:20:24,991 with the ailerons were absolutely beyond me. 331 00:20:25,024 --> 00:20:26,993 And if I'd gone where I aimed with the elevator, 332 00:20:27,026 --> 00:20:28,628 I'd have looped the loop. 333 00:20:28,661 --> 00:20:29,929 When you're learning, you haven't 334 00:20:29,962 --> 00:20:31,831 time to think of danger or anything 335 00:20:31,864 --> 00:20:33,800 but what a boob you are. 336 00:20:33,833 --> 00:20:36,569 It's fascinating, though, and you hate to stop. 337 00:20:36,603 --> 00:20:37,937 Love to pop, John. 338 00:20:40,407 --> 00:20:42,309 I think that the big issue 339 00:20:42,342 --> 00:20:45,044 is a pilot was just making sure that you 340 00:20:45,077 --> 00:20:47,580 didn't stall the plane. 341 00:20:47,614 --> 00:20:50,350 A plane will tell you when it's about to stall. 342 00:20:50,383 --> 00:20:52,018 It shudders. 343 00:20:52,051 --> 00:20:55,888 And you have to react very, very quickly in order 344 00:20:55,922 --> 00:21:00,427 to get your air speed back up and, and be able to stay, 345 00:21:00,460 --> 00:21:01,861 stay aloft. 346 00:21:01,894 --> 00:21:02,995 Otherwise, you just fall out of the sky like a rock. 347 00:21:07,066 --> 00:21:09,068 The young men also found time 348 00:21:09,101 --> 00:21:12,772 to record some of the local North Shore girls. 349 00:21:12,805 --> 00:21:14,674 As part of the preparedness movement, 350 00:21:14,707 --> 00:21:16,943 the Red Cross was training young women as nurses. 351 00:21:20,347 --> 00:21:23,850 Trubee's sister, Alice, was a student, 352 00:21:23,883 --> 00:21:27,754 as was Robert Lovett's neighbor, the regal beauty, Adele Brown. 353 00:21:30,557 --> 00:21:34,694 Di Gates was seen walking on the beach with Alice, 354 00:21:34,727 --> 00:21:37,096 and Lovett was known to have long talks 355 00:21:37,129 --> 00:21:38,965 in the evening with Adele. 356 00:21:41,668 --> 00:21:44,437 While the unit was still taking shape, 357 00:21:44,471 --> 00:21:46,773 the enterprising captain decided to approach 358 00:21:46,806 --> 00:21:48,708 the Navy for support. 359 00:21:48,741 --> 00:21:52,512 Trubee took a trip to Washington. 360 00:21:52,545 --> 00:21:55,515 But being the son of one of the most powerful men 361 00:21:55,548 --> 00:22:00,353 in the world, went in to see the Secretary of the Navy, Josephus 362 00:22:00,387 --> 00:22:01,788 Daniels. 363 00:22:01,821 --> 00:22:04,891 And the boys went in to see him in his august office 364 00:22:04,924 --> 00:22:09,996 and they'd said, we'd like to create a Navy air reserve out 365 00:22:10,029 --> 00:22:14,534 of our small group of fledgling pilots. 366 00:22:14,567 --> 00:22:17,504 They hadn't all even soloed at this point. 367 00:22:17,537 --> 00:22:21,841 And Josephus Daniels said, well, you boys are great. 368 00:22:21,874 --> 00:22:24,744 I love your patriotism and your idealism, 369 00:22:24,777 --> 00:22:27,414 but we don't need you. 370 00:22:27,447 --> 00:22:29,816 As Trubee later recalled of his meeting, 371 00:22:29,849 --> 00:22:33,653 the government was asleep at the switch. 372 00:22:33,686 --> 00:22:36,823 But if he was bothered, he was also undaunted. 373 00:22:36,856 --> 00:22:39,592 If the Navy couldn't yet see their value, 374 00:22:39,626 --> 00:22:41,794 the unit would simply have to work harder and prove 375 00:22:41,828 --> 00:22:43,129 their worth. 376 00:22:43,162 --> 00:22:45,097 Trubee recalled their first summer's progress 377 00:22:45,131 --> 00:22:48,468 learning to fly. 378 00:22:48,501 --> 00:22:50,803 Bob Lovett learned very quickly. 379 00:22:50,837 --> 00:22:56,042 Di Gates was very earnest, but slower to get the hang of it. 380 00:22:56,075 --> 00:22:59,479 Finally, Bob and I soloed, along in August. 381 00:22:59,512 --> 00:23:03,883 I think we had about 600 minutes or 10 hours in the air. 382 00:23:03,916 --> 00:23:05,652 We began to feel worried because it 383 00:23:05,685 --> 00:23:07,854 looked as though the others were not going to solo before we 384 00:23:07,887 --> 00:23:09,789 went back to college. 385 00:23:09,822 --> 00:23:11,791 Dave McCullough told us to keep our shirts on. 386 00:23:11,824 --> 00:23:13,593 He'd seen this sort of thing happen before 387 00:23:13,626 --> 00:23:16,095 and he knew what he was doing. 388 00:23:16,128 --> 00:23:18,130 Di finally did his solo before he 389 00:23:18,164 --> 00:23:21,601 had to report at New Haven for football practice. 390 00:23:21,634 --> 00:23:24,136 So that made only three of us to qualify as flyers during summer 391 00:23:24,170 --> 00:23:25,638 at Port Washington. 392 00:23:30,042 --> 00:23:32,745 The eager aviators got the Navy's attention 393 00:23:32,779 --> 00:23:36,783 in early September when the Aerial Coast Patrol Unit Number 394 00:23:36,816 --> 00:23:40,587 One was invited to join in training exercises 395 00:23:40,620 --> 00:23:44,090 with the local Naval Reserve volunteers. 396 00:23:44,123 --> 00:23:46,225 Flying the Mary Ann, unit members 397 00:23:46,258 --> 00:23:50,096 searched for dummy mines in New York's Lower Bay off Sandy Hook 398 00:23:50,129 --> 00:23:54,133 and spotted them easily. 399 00:23:54,166 --> 00:23:57,136 The stunt was ballyhooed by the Aero Club of America 400 00:23:57,169 --> 00:24:00,206 and in the aviation press. 401 00:24:00,239 --> 00:24:02,942 The Navy was also impressed, and Trubee 402 00:24:02,975 --> 00:24:06,913 decided to increase the unit's roster with an additional 18 403 00:24:06,946 --> 00:24:11,818 members, including the youngest member, Dave Ingalls, 404 00:24:11,851 --> 00:24:14,521 an aggressive hockey player just turned 18 405 00:24:14,554 --> 00:24:17,990 and would soon gain a reputation in the air as the Baby 406 00:24:18,024 --> 00:24:20,059 Daredevil. 407 00:24:20,092 --> 00:24:22,829 Then suddenly, all of Trubee's activity 408 00:24:22,862 --> 00:24:25,832 seemed quite prescient. 409 00:24:25,865 --> 00:24:28,034 In the winter of 1917, 410 00:24:28,067 --> 00:24:30,202 the German government and the German Navy 411 00:24:30,236 --> 00:24:37,276 implemented a program that was to change things dramatically. 412 00:24:37,309 --> 00:24:41,548 The war in Europe had reached a bloody stalemate 413 00:24:41,581 --> 00:24:44,016 by the fall of 1916. 414 00:24:44,050 --> 00:24:47,820 Neither side could really move the other out 415 00:24:47,854 --> 00:24:49,722 of its trench system. 416 00:24:49,756 --> 00:24:53,526 The only weapon that seemed available to Germany 417 00:24:53,560 --> 00:24:57,997 to defeat the allies was by basically sinking 418 00:24:58,030 --> 00:25:00,733 any ship going to Britain. 419 00:25:00,767 --> 00:25:02,935 On February 1st, Germany 420 00:25:02,969 --> 00:25:06,505 resumed unrestricted warfare with their submarines. 421 00:25:14,847 --> 00:25:18,785 And in February and then in March of 1917, 422 00:25:18,818 --> 00:25:22,521 a large number of American ships began to go down. 423 00:25:31,864 --> 00:25:33,866 The previous August, President Wilson 424 00:25:33,900 --> 00:25:37,670 signed a Naval Appropriations Bill providing for a Naval 425 00:25:37,704 --> 00:25:41,040 Reserve Flying Corps. 426 00:25:41,073 --> 00:25:43,843 The Navy and Congress finally came to grips with the fact 427 00:25:43,876 --> 00:25:45,978 that they needed pilots, and pilots 428 00:25:46,012 --> 00:25:49,081 who already knew how to fly. 429 00:25:49,115 --> 00:25:51,918 In World War I, there was a call to arms. 430 00:25:51,951 --> 00:25:56,756 There were no cadres of regular Navy aviators. 431 00:25:56,789 --> 00:26:00,760 And so the Navy was smart enough to find the people 432 00:26:00,793 --> 00:26:04,230 with the talents, and the capabilities, 433 00:26:04,263 --> 00:26:07,133 and the experience wherever they were. 434 00:26:07,166 --> 00:26:10,970 Whether they were Annapolis graduates or, or not. 435 00:26:11,003 --> 00:26:13,305 Late that winter, Trubee Davison 436 00:26:13,339 --> 00:26:18,144 was again maneuvering to get the Yale Unit placed with the Navy. 437 00:26:18,177 --> 00:26:21,380 He meant one of the Navy's original flyers, now 438 00:26:21,413 --> 00:26:24,984 the head of Naval aviation, Lieutenant John Towers. 439 00:26:25,017 --> 00:26:30,189 Towers was so impressed with the college junior's enthusiasm, 440 00:26:30,222 --> 00:26:32,659 he arranged through the Assistant Secretary 441 00:26:32,692 --> 00:26:35,394 of the Navy, Franklin Roosevelt, for the unit 442 00:26:35,427 --> 00:26:39,699 to enlist in New London, Connecticut. 443 00:26:39,732 --> 00:26:43,770 Trubee rushed a telegram to Bob Lovett at Yale, we're off! 444 00:26:43,803 --> 00:26:45,938 Lovett cleared the unit members to leave school 445 00:26:45,972 --> 00:26:48,841 while Trubee arranged to move to an air station 446 00:26:48,875 --> 00:26:52,211 in Palm Beach, Florida. 447 00:26:52,244 --> 00:26:57,717 On March 24, 1917 in New London, the First Yale Unit 448 00:26:57,750 --> 00:27:01,420 enlisted as a body into the Naval Reserve Flying Corps. 449 00:27:01,453 --> 00:27:04,724 All 29 members. 450 00:27:04,757 --> 00:27:07,326 After all his hard work, Trubee Davison's mission 451 00:27:07,359 --> 00:27:09,729 to enlist the First Yale Unit in the Navy 452 00:27:09,762 --> 00:27:14,366 had finally succeeded, and not a moment too soon. 453 00:27:14,400 --> 00:27:17,303 Four days after enlistment the First Yale Unit 454 00:27:17,336 --> 00:27:20,406 left the New England winter for Palm Beach. 455 00:27:20,439 --> 00:27:29,816 14 days later, on April 6th, the United States was at war. 456 00:27:29,849 --> 00:27:33,920 Entering the World War was a defining moment 457 00:27:33,953 --> 00:27:36,823 for the Yale underclassman and the United States, 458 00:27:36,856 --> 00:27:41,127 both coming of age in a modern and unprecedented world. 459 00:27:41,160 --> 00:27:44,330 Two million American troops and millions 460 00:27:44,363 --> 00:27:46,866 of tons of war materiel would eventually 461 00:27:46,899 --> 00:27:51,403 cross the Atlantic Ocean in the next year and a half. 462 00:27:51,437 --> 00:27:55,842 But when America entered the war to help turn the tide, 463 00:27:55,875 --> 00:28:01,013 the United States Navy had only 54 obsolete planes and some 40 464 00:28:01,047 --> 00:28:04,817 qualified pilots, and the Navy was suddenly 465 00:28:04,851 --> 00:28:08,955 very interested in the First Yale Unit. 466 00:28:08,988 --> 00:28:10,957 By the time the spring came around, they 467 00:28:10,990 --> 00:28:12,959 were ensigns in the Navy. 468 00:28:12,992 --> 00:28:15,161 And they packed up the Mary Ann and they 469 00:28:15,194 --> 00:28:17,263 packed up all the rest of their gear 470 00:28:17,296 --> 00:28:21,734 and took a special train down to Palm Beach. 471 00:28:21,768 --> 00:28:24,003 They were put up in the Breakers for a while 472 00:28:24,036 --> 00:28:25,404 and lived a pretty high life. 473 00:28:30,276 --> 00:28:32,779 March 30, 1917. 474 00:28:32,812 --> 00:28:35,815 Dear Mrs. Davison, we arrived here safely this morning 475 00:28:35,848 --> 00:28:37,817 and found the weather perfect. 476 00:28:37,850 --> 00:28:39,852 Ideal flying conditions. 477 00:28:39,886 --> 00:28:43,122 Trubee has taken entire charge and is doing wonderfully. 478 00:28:43,155 --> 00:28:46,025 Everybody has absolute confidence in his leadership. 479 00:28:46,058 --> 00:28:48,227 Sincerely, Di Gates. 480 00:28:48,260 --> 00:28:50,129 And of course, the weather 481 00:28:50,162 --> 00:28:51,430 was beautiful. 482 00:28:51,463 --> 00:28:53,933 They were flying an open cockpit aircraft. 483 00:28:53,966 --> 00:28:57,469 They flew hard and they played hard, and it was just a hoot. 484 00:28:57,503 --> 00:29:00,106 They couldn't have had a better time. 485 00:29:00,139 --> 00:29:03,309 And there they did some more advanced training, 486 00:29:03,342 --> 00:29:06,212 and they started to understand a little bit about what it would 487 00:29:06,245 --> 00:29:08,547 be like to be in the Navy. 488 00:29:08,580 --> 00:29:11,383 Even though they were now Navy men, 489 00:29:11,417 --> 00:29:14,286 Yale still held out the prospect of acceptance 490 00:29:14,320 --> 00:29:18,057 to one of Yale's senior secret societies. 491 00:29:20,993 --> 00:29:26,498 Skull and Bones, Wolf's Head, or Scroll and Key. 492 00:29:26,532 --> 00:29:31,003 Clubs that met in windowless tombs 493 00:29:31,037 --> 00:29:33,472 and engaged in secretive initiation 494 00:29:33,505 --> 00:29:38,210 rites that kept its members bound together for life. 495 00:29:38,244 --> 00:29:40,246 At the time of the First World War, 496 00:29:40,279 --> 00:29:43,382 the secret societies were extremely important, 497 00:29:43,415 --> 00:29:45,451 marking success at Yale. 498 00:29:45,484 --> 00:29:47,386 If you were tapped to Bones, 499 00:29:47,419 --> 00:29:49,922 I mean, you were just ascended to heaven. 500 00:29:49,956 --> 00:29:52,024 It was very serious stuff back then. 501 00:29:52,058 --> 00:29:53,559 The method of getting 502 00:29:53,592 --> 00:29:55,527 into these senior societies of Yale 503 00:29:55,561 --> 00:29:58,230 was to have someone slap you on the shoulder 504 00:29:58,264 --> 00:30:00,032 and ask you if you accept. 505 00:30:00,066 --> 00:30:02,969 Tap day, as the ritual was called, 506 00:30:03,002 --> 00:30:05,471 occurred in the spring and was the big moment 507 00:30:05,504 --> 00:30:09,942 for which underclassman had been waiting for three years. 508 00:30:09,976 --> 00:30:15,314 On April 19, all of the eligible juniors of the First Yale Unit 509 00:30:15,347 --> 00:30:18,484 were tapped, except one. 510 00:30:18,517 --> 00:30:22,488 Kenneth MacLeish was an earnest and passionate boy 511 00:30:22,521 --> 00:30:24,623 from a wealthy Chicago family. 512 00:30:24,656 --> 00:30:27,459 His best friend and fellow Midwesterner, Di Gates, 513 00:30:27,493 --> 00:30:31,430 brought him into the unit and he took to flying right away. 514 00:30:31,463 --> 00:30:33,565 Kenny's older brother, Archibald MacLeish, 515 00:30:33,599 --> 00:30:37,036 had been the golden boy at Yale two years earlier. 516 00:30:37,069 --> 00:30:39,138 Footballer, captain of the water polo team, 517 00:30:39,171 --> 00:30:43,309 voted most brilliant, the class poet, and a member 518 00:30:43,342 --> 00:30:45,511 of Skull and Bones. 519 00:30:45,544 --> 00:30:49,515 Kenny strove mightily to follow in Archie's footsteps, 520 00:30:49,548 --> 00:30:52,384 but he was of a different metal. 521 00:30:52,418 --> 00:30:55,621 One who had anticipated his tap, 522 00:30:55,654 --> 00:31:00,092 longed for a tap, and perhaps felt 523 00:31:00,126 --> 00:31:05,998 deserved a tap was Kenneth MacLeish, and it didn't come. 524 00:31:06,032 --> 00:31:09,068 But he wasn't tapped, and he was crushed. 525 00:31:09,101 --> 00:31:11,170 Said he went off and cried about it. 526 00:31:11,203 --> 00:31:13,305 As MacLeish confided in a letter-- 527 00:31:13,339 --> 00:31:15,942 You'll never know how terribly disappointed 528 00:31:15,975 --> 00:31:18,477 I was in not making a senior society. 529 00:31:18,510 --> 00:31:22,014 I know why I didn't, and it almost kills me. 530 00:31:22,048 --> 00:31:24,917 I want to get to France and forget the whole thing 531 00:31:24,951 --> 00:31:27,019 and start over again. 532 00:31:27,053 --> 00:31:30,189 At that point, something happened in him. 533 00:31:30,222 --> 00:31:35,361 Something that almost amounted to a rebirth 534 00:31:35,394 --> 00:31:39,265 of a new and more serious Kenney MacLeish. 535 00:31:39,298 --> 00:31:41,633 Basically, the kind of light hearted person 536 00:31:41,667 --> 00:31:45,437 that he had been seemed to have taken flight 537 00:31:45,471 --> 00:31:50,109 and there was somebody there who came in and basically 538 00:31:50,142 --> 00:31:52,478 was intent on making something of his life. 539 00:31:55,514 --> 00:31:58,350 By the end of May, most of the unit members 540 00:31:58,384 --> 00:32:01,053 had soloed and began to find their place 541 00:32:01,087 --> 00:32:03,089 in the hierarchy of the group. 542 00:32:03,122 --> 00:32:05,157 Young Dave Ingalls was muscling his way 543 00:32:05,191 --> 00:32:06,658 to the front of the pack. 544 00:32:06,692 --> 00:32:09,161 Dear dad, as soon as I got out alone, 545 00:32:09,195 --> 00:32:10,429 I went up high. 546 00:32:10,462 --> 00:32:13,299 About 3,500 feet, as I never went before. 547 00:32:13,332 --> 00:32:15,534 Always been practicing landings. 548 00:32:15,567 --> 00:32:17,269 It is certainly great up there, and your 549 00:32:17,303 --> 00:32:19,005 own the world when you get up alone 550 00:32:19,038 --> 00:32:20,506 and can do whatever you want. 551 00:32:20,539 --> 00:32:22,608 I never enjoyed anything as much as going up there, 552 00:32:22,641 --> 00:32:25,544 and guess I'll have to do it again soon. 553 00:32:25,577 --> 00:32:29,381 Lots of love, Dave. 554 00:32:29,415 --> 00:32:31,617 To a man, their first solo flight 555 00:32:31,650 --> 00:32:35,387 was an extraordinary event in their lives. 556 00:32:35,421 --> 00:32:39,425 Kenney MacLeish wrote a letter to his parents. 557 00:32:39,458 --> 00:32:41,660 I made my first landing alone, 558 00:32:41,693 --> 00:32:44,630 a thing I will never forget in all my life. 559 00:32:44,663 --> 00:32:46,398 I didn't realize how very dependent 560 00:32:46,432 --> 00:32:49,201 I had been on the instructor until I was about to level off 561 00:32:49,235 --> 00:32:50,769 above the water. 562 00:32:50,802 --> 00:32:53,672 Then something seemed to say, here's 563 00:32:53,705 --> 00:32:56,342 where you show yourself you can fly, 564 00:32:56,375 --> 00:32:58,644 or here's where you bust something. 565 00:32:58,677 --> 00:33:01,747 I chose the former and made the most perfect landing ever made. 566 00:33:07,386 --> 00:33:09,021 And by the time they 567 00:33:09,055 --> 00:33:13,492 left Palm Beach as the weather got too hot down there 568 00:33:13,525 --> 00:33:16,262 and moved back up to their next official training base, 569 00:33:16,295 --> 00:33:20,432 a mansion up in Huntington on the Long Island Sound, 570 00:33:20,466 --> 00:33:24,536 they had all except for one soloed. 571 00:33:24,570 --> 00:33:29,241 One washed out, but they were really moving forward. 572 00:33:29,275 --> 00:33:30,609 Back on the North Shore, 573 00:33:30,642 --> 00:33:34,046 the unit quickly got settled in their new base. 574 00:33:34,080 --> 00:33:37,649 The Navy supplied three Curtiss training planes. 575 00:33:37,683 --> 00:33:40,786 There were now enough machines that all the flyers could get 576 00:33:40,819 --> 00:33:43,089 some time in the air each day. 577 00:33:45,691 --> 00:33:49,628 They also resumed courting the North Shore girls. 578 00:33:49,661 --> 00:33:53,232 One of them, Priscilla Murdoch, attended boarding school 579 00:33:53,265 --> 00:33:55,534 with Kenney MacLeish's younger sister, 580 00:33:55,567 --> 00:33:59,738 and her family had a summer cottage on Peacock Point. 581 00:33:59,771 --> 00:34:03,509 Kenney had many occasions to see Priscilla that summer, 582 00:34:03,542 --> 00:34:07,713 and their relationship soon blossomed into a romance. 583 00:34:10,449 --> 00:34:13,685 By mid-July, after racking up flying times 584 00:34:13,719 --> 00:34:17,756 on a variety of aircraft, the young men had bonded as a unit. 585 00:34:17,789 --> 00:34:20,092 A bond born of friendship, and trust, 586 00:34:20,126 --> 00:34:22,661 and commitment to a common cause. 587 00:34:22,694 --> 00:34:25,264 A bond that seemed unbreakable. 588 00:34:25,297 --> 00:34:28,267 But the First Yale Unit had one more hurdle 589 00:34:28,300 --> 00:34:32,338 to jump before they could be naval aviators, the test 590 00:34:32,371 --> 00:34:34,440 for their wings of gold. 591 00:34:34,473 --> 00:34:36,108 For these young men 592 00:34:36,142 --> 00:34:39,145 to get their wings to be designated naval aviators, 593 00:34:39,178 --> 00:34:43,149 the final test was a flight test, and it was done solo. 594 00:34:43,182 --> 00:34:45,584 This took place in Huntington 595 00:34:45,617 --> 00:34:52,524 on the Long Island Sound with yachts out to observe them. 596 00:34:52,558 --> 00:34:57,396 Trubee Davison's parents were out on one of the yachts. 597 00:34:57,429 --> 00:35:02,634 Trubee Davison had been sick for a few days beforehand. 598 00:35:02,668 --> 00:35:08,640 He even seemed to pass out at some point prior to his exam. 599 00:35:08,674 --> 00:35:10,376 Trubee had worked relentlessly. 600 00:35:10,409 --> 00:35:13,212 I think he had gotten maybe two or three hours of sleep 601 00:35:13,245 --> 00:35:16,382 that night, and he was first up. 602 00:35:16,415 --> 00:35:19,151 And they had to take off from the water 603 00:35:19,185 --> 00:35:21,687 and climb to about 6,000 or 7,000 feet, 604 00:35:21,720 --> 00:35:23,555 and they had to go through some maneuvers. 605 00:35:23,589 --> 00:35:26,825 And then coming back down, they had to cut their engine 606 00:35:26,858 --> 00:35:31,163 and come in and glide and land at a particular buoy 607 00:35:31,197 --> 00:35:33,265 or close enough to this boy that it would show they 608 00:35:33,299 --> 00:35:36,335 had control over the aircraft. 609 00:35:36,368 --> 00:35:40,206 He was performing is required maneuvers, 610 00:35:40,239 --> 00:35:43,609 but he overextended his glide. 611 00:35:43,642 --> 00:35:45,344 He cut his engine 612 00:35:45,377 --> 00:35:47,213 and was heading for this buoy and he 613 00:35:47,246 --> 00:35:49,481 saw that he was going to fall short of it 614 00:35:49,515 --> 00:35:52,418 and he lifted his nose of the plane. 615 00:35:52,451 --> 00:35:54,420 And I think he tried to push 616 00:35:54,453 --> 00:35:58,524 and just didn't feel in his-- literally-- in his hands 617 00:35:58,557 --> 00:36:01,727 and in his mind, didn't feel the stall coming on. 618 00:36:01,760 --> 00:36:03,529 And as Trubee came down, 619 00:36:03,562 --> 00:36:07,233 the plane rolled a little bit and then yawed. 620 00:36:07,266 --> 00:36:09,968 And the plane stalled and fell 621 00:36:10,001 --> 00:36:10,736 into the water. 622 00:36:13,539 --> 00:36:16,775 Trubee was hit in the back by the engine mount 623 00:36:16,808 --> 00:36:18,644 and it broke his back. 624 00:36:18,677 --> 00:36:21,513 His legs were entangled in the wires. 625 00:36:21,547 --> 00:36:23,315 FREDERICK TRUBEE - All I knew 626 00:36:23,349 --> 00:36:27,753 was I couldn't feel a thing from my hips down, and my back hurt. 627 00:36:27,786 --> 00:36:30,456 I got tangled up in the mess. 628 00:36:30,489 --> 00:36:32,324 I can remember so well looking up and seeing 629 00:36:32,358 --> 00:36:35,494 the surface of the water above me, perfectly conscious. 630 00:36:39,565 --> 00:36:41,600 He was really lucky to be alive. 631 00:36:41,633 --> 00:36:43,535 He was lucky to be even pulled out of the boat 632 00:36:43,569 --> 00:36:45,271 and not drowned. 633 00:36:45,304 --> 00:36:47,973 Their leader was badly injured, and yet the rest of them, 634 00:36:48,006 --> 00:36:49,741 they got in the airplanes, they went up, 635 00:36:49,775 --> 00:36:52,344 and they did what they had to do, and they came back down. 636 00:36:52,378 --> 00:36:56,848 And all of the First Yale Unit, except Trubee, got their wings. 637 00:36:56,882 --> 00:36:58,784 His spinal cord was injured 638 00:36:58,817 --> 00:37:01,820 and he was basically disabled for the rest of his life, which 639 00:37:01,853 --> 00:37:03,922 was 60 years. 640 00:37:03,955 --> 00:37:05,957 The person who brought together 641 00:37:05,991 --> 00:37:10,362 this group of young men in such a life changing experience, 642 00:37:10,396 --> 00:37:10,796 he was gone. 643 00:37:14,400 --> 00:37:15,667 His classmates, 644 00:37:15,701 --> 00:37:17,736 the members of the First Yale Unit, 645 00:37:17,769 --> 00:37:20,939 they all went off to France right away. 646 00:37:20,972 --> 00:37:25,744 But they didn't suffer as a result of his absence. 647 00:37:25,777 --> 00:37:28,914 In fact, I would say that they blossomed. 648 00:37:28,947 --> 00:37:33,419 They all stepped up to the plate in the absence of their leader 649 00:37:33,452 --> 00:37:36,355 and they each became leaders themselves. 650 00:37:36,388 --> 00:37:41,893 That, I think, is the greatest example of leadership in men. 651 00:37:50,869 --> 00:37:53,572 Two weeks after witnessing Trubee's crash 652 00:37:53,605 --> 00:37:56,775 and receiving their wings, Bob Lovett and Di Gates 653 00:37:56,808 --> 00:38:02,047 shipped out aboard the SS St. Paul bound for Liverpool. 654 00:38:02,080 --> 00:38:05,417 It was a nerve jangling voyage. 655 00:38:05,451 --> 00:38:09,555 Passengers were on constant lookout for the German u-boats. 656 00:38:09,588 --> 00:38:13,459 John Vorys left for England a month later with Al Sturtevant 657 00:38:13,492 --> 00:38:17,363 and recorded his anxiety in his diary. 658 00:38:17,396 --> 00:38:19,498 We looked on the trip as a glorious lark 659 00:38:19,531 --> 00:38:21,967 before the real thing began. 660 00:38:22,000 --> 00:38:24,636 Once aboard, Al and I paced the deck and thought 661 00:38:24,670 --> 00:38:27,773 about not only how little chance there was to come back, 662 00:38:27,806 --> 00:38:30,876 but also how little chance there was of getting over. 663 00:38:30,909 --> 00:38:34,346 And about leaving home and all home ties and risking all this, 664 00:38:34,380 --> 00:38:37,516 and about what we were risking it for. 665 00:38:37,549 --> 00:38:41,052 Well, we went to bed exalted, but very, very mournful. 666 00:38:48,627 --> 00:38:51,863 What the unit members found in London and Paris 667 00:38:51,897 --> 00:38:55,634 when they reported for duty in the late summer of 1917 668 00:38:55,667 --> 00:38:58,504 was not the stuff of romance on which they had fed 669 00:38:58,537 --> 00:39:00,572 for the last year and a half. 670 00:39:00,606 --> 00:39:03,509 Bob Lovett wrote to Trubee from Paris. 671 00:39:03,542 --> 00:39:06,945 Dear Trubee, first, the condition of France. 672 00:39:06,978 --> 00:39:09,715 You must have remembered it as you saw it two years ago. 673 00:39:09,748 --> 00:39:11,583 You would be heartbroken now. 674 00:39:11,617 --> 00:39:13,752 She's staggering with the weight of the war's toll. 675 00:39:13,785 --> 00:39:15,887 Her people are fed up with war and its suffering. 676 00:39:15,921 --> 00:39:17,956 They would never have been able to face the future 677 00:39:17,989 --> 00:39:20,158 if we had not brought hope just in time. 678 00:39:20,191 --> 00:39:22,994 And why, by all that's powerful, didn't we 679 00:39:23,028 --> 00:39:26,031 come in a year earlier? 680 00:39:26,064 --> 00:39:30,536 It's ironic that it was naval aviation that was the first US 681 00:39:30,569 --> 00:39:33,405 military force to set foot in France because if you look 682 00:39:33,439 --> 00:39:37,443 at what naval aviation compassed in April 1917, 683 00:39:37,476 --> 00:39:41,780 it is not a very impressive force whatsoever. 684 00:39:41,813 --> 00:39:43,649 The members of the First Yale Unit 685 00:39:43,682 --> 00:39:46,752 had expected to go to the front and fly together 686 00:39:46,785 --> 00:39:49,455 doing their bit, putting in the punch, 687 00:39:49,488 --> 00:39:51,923 and winning honor and glory. 688 00:39:51,957 --> 00:39:55,060 But being the reserve squadron with the most flying 689 00:39:55,093 --> 00:39:58,697 experience, their services were needed everywhere. 690 00:39:58,730 --> 00:40:01,567 Before there was to be glory in the air, a lot of groundwork 691 00:40:01,600 --> 00:40:03,969 had to be laid. 692 00:40:04,002 --> 00:40:05,471 If you're going 693 00:40:05,504 --> 00:40:09,007 to build 15 flight facilities, you 694 00:40:09,040 --> 00:40:12,143 need cadres of officers at every one. 695 00:40:12,177 --> 00:40:14,946 If you're going to train thousands of men, 696 00:40:14,980 --> 00:40:18,750 you need people to train every one. 697 00:40:18,784 --> 00:40:23,221 Because the Yale Unit had started first, 698 00:40:23,254 --> 00:40:28,093 they were literally the only available group 699 00:40:28,126 --> 00:40:32,163 of young, qualified officers that the Navy could 700 00:40:32,197 --> 00:40:35,567 plug into the various slots. 701 00:40:35,601 --> 00:40:38,069 They were split up between different assignments. 702 00:40:38,103 --> 00:40:41,006 Some were sent overseas to get the lay of the land 703 00:40:41,039 --> 00:40:44,075 and train on the more sophisticated planes, 704 00:40:44,109 --> 00:40:46,678 others stayed stateside, assigned 705 00:40:46,712 --> 00:40:52,017 the mammoth task of getting US naval aviation on its feet. 706 00:40:52,050 --> 00:40:54,686 They turned them into training officers. 707 00:40:54,720 --> 00:40:57,022 They turned them into staff officers. 708 00:40:57,055 --> 00:41:01,026 They turned them into Naval Air Station commanders. 709 00:41:01,059 --> 00:41:02,828 Squadron commanders. 710 00:41:02,861 --> 00:41:08,500 Every place you looked, if there wasn't a regular Navy officer, 711 00:41:08,534 --> 00:41:11,136 you were going to find somebody from the Yale Unit. 712 00:41:14,005 --> 00:41:15,641 A second wave of flyers 713 00:41:15,674 --> 00:41:20,679 was sent overseas in September, including Dave Ingalls. 714 00:41:20,712 --> 00:41:23,248 Kenney MacLeish actually missed the boat because of a date 715 00:41:23,281 --> 00:41:25,050 with Priscilla. 716 00:41:25,083 --> 00:41:27,018 Here's this guy so eager to get over there, 717 00:41:27,052 --> 00:41:30,055 then he misses his ship. 718 00:41:30,088 --> 00:41:32,724 Well, you know, that's an old kind of lovely. 719 00:41:32,758 --> 00:41:35,527 Kenney was able to hop the next one over, 720 00:41:35,561 --> 00:41:40,198 with the satisfaction that she was now his fiancee. 721 00:41:40,231 --> 00:41:43,535 Eventually, all but four of the nine unit members 722 00:41:43,569 --> 00:41:44,536 would make it overseas. 723 00:41:52,678 --> 00:41:55,547 The young flyers made another shocking discovery 724 00:41:55,581 --> 00:41:57,148 when they arrived. 725 00:41:57,182 --> 00:42:00,018 And suddenly, these young men, almost as soon 726 00:42:00,051 --> 00:42:01,787 as they walked out into the street, 727 00:42:01,820 --> 00:42:07,158 were accosted by women offering them a good time. 728 00:42:07,192 --> 00:42:11,930 And this, too, was an extraordinary experience. 729 00:42:11,963 --> 00:42:13,732 And Paris. 730 00:42:13,765 --> 00:42:17,135 Oh, it's far better than even the wildest tales picture it. 731 00:42:17,168 --> 00:42:20,138 It's as much as your life is worth to go out to dinner here. 732 00:42:20,171 --> 00:42:22,941 There are literally thousands of girls 733 00:42:22,974 --> 00:42:24,976 who say they will show you around Paris, 734 00:42:25,010 --> 00:42:27,879 and it's a two fisted fight to shake them off. 735 00:42:27,913 --> 00:42:29,615 On his first evening in Paris, 736 00:42:29,648 --> 00:42:34,185 young Dave Ingalls, all of 18, got a surprise. 737 00:42:34,219 --> 00:42:35,887 While waiting for a ride, 738 00:42:35,921 --> 00:42:38,023 observing not in my innocence, a sweet 739 00:42:38,056 --> 00:42:41,860 faced little girl passed by, but stopped and returned to say, 740 00:42:41,893 --> 00:42:43,194 will sleep with me? 741 00:42:43,228 --> 00:42:44,630 Probably all she knew. 742 00:42:44,663 --> 00:42:46,031 I had learned something in London 743 00:42:46,064 --> 00:42:48,600 but realized I would learn more in Paris. 744 00:42:48,634 --> 00:42:51,169 For many of them, it was a real shock. 745 00:42:51,202 --> 00:42:53,104 These were young men who had never really been 746 00:42:53,138 --> 00:42:58,276 exposed to this sort of thing, and there it was. 747 00:42:58,309 --> 00:43:02,147 And reading their diaries and letters, some of them 748 00:43:02,180 --> 00:43:06,718 got what David Ingalls called a Parisian education. 749 00:43:06,752 --> 00:43:10,355 And others of them learned to, as Kenney MacLeish did, 750 00:43:10,388 --> 00:43:13,859 who was engaged to his beloved back home, 751 00:43:13,892 --> 00:43:19,197 learned to fight off the temptations. 752 00:43:19,230 --> 00:43:21,332 The first members of the Yale Unit 753 00:43:21,366 --> 00:43:26,137 departed for Europe in August of 1917. 754 00:43:26,171 --> 00:43:32,077 They were sent to existing French flying schools. 755 00:43:32,110 --> 00:43:36,648 They were trained for very specific set of missions. 756 00:43:36,682 --> 00:43:40,185 And those missions were to conduct offshore patrol 757 00:43:40,218 --> 00:43:42,253 searching for submarines. 758 00:43:42,287 --> 00:43:44,856 As the unit members reached their assignments 759 00:43:44,890 --> 00:43:47,325 and began to get settled, they reported back 760 00:43:47,358 --> 00:43:52,197 to command central, Trubee Davison's hospital bed. 761 00:43:52,230 --> 00:43:53,131 St. Rafael. 762 00:43:53,164 --> 00:43:55,366 October 1, 1970. 763 00:43:55,400 --> 00:43:59,237 Dear Trubee, this spending part of one winter at Palm Beach 764 00:43:59,270 --> 00:44:01,106 and starting off another on the Riviera 765 00:44:01,139 --> 00:44:03,809 is quite an unusual way of going to war. 766 00:44:03,842 --> 00:44:07,979 When the real thing does come, I probably won't know how to act. 767 00:44:08,013 --> 00:44:11,717 After I finish here, I'm not sure where I will be ordered. 768 00:44:11,750 --> 00:44:14,152 Of all the bases, Dunkirk is, of course, 769 00:44:14,185 --> 00:44:15,954 the most preferable and exciting place 770 00:44:15,987 --> 00:44:19,825 to be because there one comes in constant contact with the Huns. 771 00:44:19,858 --> 00:44:20,658 Yours, Di. 772 00:44:23,261 --> 00:44:26,131 September 24, 1917. 773 00:44:26,164 --> 00:44:27,833 Paris, France. 774 00:44:27,866 --> 00:44:31,402 Dear old Trubs, I'm to see the real stuff in one month. 775 00:44:31,436 --> 00:44:33,471 And so we come to the purpose of this letter 776 00:44:33,504 --> 00:44:36,875 since I may not have a chance to see you again. 777 00:44:36,908 --> 00:44:38,777 You yourself know how hard it is to express 778 00:44:38,810 --> 00:44:43,048 real feeling in a letter, but make allowances and hear me. 779 00:44:43,081 --> 00:44:45,250 I had hoped to come over here under your leadership 780 00:44:45,283 --> 00:44:48,186 and inspiration, for I have never 781 00:44:48,219 --> 00:44:52,858 ceased to admire the splendid manner in which you managed us. 782 00:44:52,891 --> 00:44:56,061 But fate stepped in and kept you at home, 783 00:44:56,094 --> 00:44:59,297 and sent me as a pretty rotten substitute. 784 00:44:59,330 --> 00:45:00,866 Bob Lovett was still 785 00:45:00,899 --> 00:45:06,237 a young man who was noted for his wit, his charm. 786 00:45:06,271 --> 00:45:10,475 But this was not somebody that you would have necessarily 787 00:45:10,508 --> 00:45:16,114 said, this is a future leader of men in service to their nation. 788 00:45:16,147 --> 00:45:17,883 Time and time again, I 789 00:45:17,916 --> 00:45:20,919 have thought of the manly way you have met your big trial. 790 00:45:20,952 --> 00:45:24,155 And I only pray I can look any misfortune in the face 791 00:45:24,189 --> 00:45:27,926 in the same way you have done. 792 00:45:27,959 --> 00:45:29,527 He was somebody who 793 00:45:29,560 --> 00:45:33,098 had grasped through his experience of working 794 00:45:33,131 --> 00:45:38,136 with Trubee the idea that you could serve by leading. 795 00:45:38,169 --> 00:45:40,839 And he made sure to tell Trubee-- 796 00:45:40,872 --> 00:45:43,942 I take off my hat to you. 797 00:45:43,975 --> 00:45:47,078 As ever, Bob Lovett. 798 00:45:47,112 --> 00:45:48,880 Bob Lovett was sent 799 00:45:48,914 --> 00:45:53,551 to Moutchic in southern France to build the first US Naval Air 800 00:45:53,584 --> 00:45:56,054 Station on the French coast. 801 00:45:59,257 --> 00:46:01,993 And he literally helped to build it by hand. 802 00:46:02,027 --> 00:46:06,131 He literally pulled the first US aircraft overseas out 803 00:46:06,164 --> 00:46:10,535 of a crate, bolted it together himself, and flew it himself. 804 00:46:10,568 --> 00:46:14,806 These were the FBA, Franco-British aviation 805 00:46:14,840 --> 00:46:19,310 flying boats, that were commonly used for training at that time. 806 00:46:19,344 --> 00:46:21,980 Lovett put the plane together. 807 00:46:22,013 --> 00:46:28,253 And in late September of 1917, made the first flight 808 00:46:28,286 --> 00:46:31,356 at Moutchic. 809 00:46:31,389 --> 00:46:34,392 The training for the unit at the French bases 810 00:46:34,425 --> 00:46:37,228 was piecemeal and sporadic, held up 811 00:46:37,262 --> 00:46:41,566 by faulty equipment and a regular delivery of parts. 812 00:46:41,599 --> 00:46:43,334 Not having bought their own machines, 813 00:46:43,368 --> 00:46:46,537 the Americans had to make do with the leftovers. 814 00:46:46,571 --> 00:46:51,943 The training that developed in World War I was not very safety 815 00:46:51,977 --> 00:46:52,978 conscious. 816 00:46:53,011 --> 00:46:55,246 They want to get the pilots out. 817 00:46:55,280 --> 00:46:58,049 If it took losing a lot of young men 818 00:46:58,083 --> 00:47:00,952 to get a well-qualified pilot, that was an acceptable trade 819 00:47:00,986 --> 00:47:02,487 off at that point. 820 00:47:02,520 --> 00:47:04,122 The casualty rate 821 00:47:04,155 --> 00:47:07,592 of World War I flyers was much higher in training 822 00:47:07,625 --> 00:47:09,560 than it was in combat. 823 00:47:09,594 --> 00:47:12,097 The pilots had very low time. 824 00:47:12,130 --> 00:47:14,465 There were young guys with maybe three 825 00:47:14,499 --> 00:47:16,567 or four hours in an airplane. 826 00:47:16,601 --> 00:47:20,071 Probably very limited ground school. 827 00:47:20,105 --> 00:47:21,940 The British approach to training 828 00:47:21,973 --> 00:47:25,310 in the first few years of the war had been pathetic. 829 00:47:25,343 --> 00:47:30,648 Through 1916, the life expectancy of British pilots 830 00:47:30,681 --> 00:47:32,517 was three weeks. 831 00:47:32,550 --> 00:47:37,188 Of the 14,000 deaths in British aviation during the Great War, 832 00:47:37,222 --> 00:47:41,459 8,000 deaths occurred during training. 833 00:47:44,429 --> 00:47:48,900 By late fall, the Navy moved to operate a patrol in a bombing 834 00:47:48,934 --> 00:47:52,037 station at Dunkirk, coveted by flyers 835 00:47:52,070 --> 00:47:54,272 as the most exciting assignment because it 836 00:47:54,305 --> 00:47:58,476 was close to the German lines. 837 00:47:58,509 --> 00:48:01,512 The station would test any pilot's skill, 838 00:48:01,546 --> 00:48:04,916 and the British Navy offered three of the unit's most 839 00:48:04,950 --> 00:48:10,455 promising pilots, Robert Lovett, Di Gates, and Dave Ingalls. 840 00:48:10,488 --> 00:48:14,125 Advanced training in single-seater fighters. 841 00:48:14,159 --> 00:48:18,063 A big jump from the Curtiss flying boats. 842 00:48:18,096 --> 00:48:21,699 But Lovett was promoted to a staff position, 843 00:48:21,732 --> 00:48:24,302 and Di Gates too big to fit into the cockpit 844 00:48:24,335 --> 00:48:26,637 of the available French Hanriot scouts, 845 00:48:26,671 --> 00:48:29,707 was sent to Dunkirk as chief pilot. 846 00:48:29,740 --> 00:48:33,511 Kenney MacLeish and Ken Smith's brother, Edward Shorty Smith, 847 00:48:33,544 --> 00:48:37,215 from the Second Yale Unit took their places. 848 00:48:37,248 --> 00:48:38,984 In December, the three flyers were 849 00:48:39,017 --> 00:48:42,020 sent to the Experimental School of Special Flying 850 00:48:42,053 --> 00:48:45,690 at Gosport, England. 851 00:48:45,723 --> 00:48:49,094 If there were any two flyers that 852 00:48:49,127 --> 00:48:53,398 were twinned together throughout their wartime experience, 853 00:48:53,431 --> 00:48:56,534 it was David Ingalls and Kenneth MacLeish. 854 00:48:56,567 --> 00:48:59,637 You couldn't have picked two people more different 855 00:48:59,670 --> 00:49:02,340 in outlook and personalities. 856 00:49:02,373 --> 00:49:07,512 David Ingalls was only 18 years old when he enlisted. 857 00:49:07,545 --> 00:49:11,316 He was a schoolboy athlete star. 858 00:49:11,349 --> 00:49:15,186 He had remarkable hand-eye coordination. 859 00:49:15,220 --> 00:49:19,724 He had a bright, effervescent personality. 860 00:49:19,757 --> 00:49:21,659 He liked a good time. 861 00:49:21,692 --> 00:49:23,461 He liked the girls. 862 00:49:23,494 --> 00:49:25,130 He liked fun. 863 00:49:25,163 --> 00:49:30,301 The war was the greatest adventure of his life. 864 00:49:30,335 --> 00:49:32,503 Ken MacLeish was much older. 865 00:49:32,537 --> 00:49:34,439 He was 23. 866 00:49:34,472 --> 00:49:36,641 He was much more serious. 867 00:49:36,674 --> 00:49:38,576 He was not an athlete. 868 00:49:38,609 --> 00:49:43,148 He saw the war, in many ways, as a higher calling. 869 00:49:43,181 --> 00:49:47,152 He was much more deliberate in his activities. 870 00:49:47,185 --> 00:49:50,121 And yet, the two of them were paired together almost 871 00:49:50,155 --> 00:49:56,427 from the first day that they met in the Yale Unit. 872 00:49:56,461 --> 00:49:59,397 Dave Ingalls, always a sharp observer, 873 00:49:59,430 --> 00:50:02,233 described the realistic training at Gosport, 874 00:50:02,267 --> 00:50:06,137 which focused on building confidence, aerial acrobatics, 875 00:50:06,171 --> 00:50:08,639 and forced landings. 876 00:50:08,673 --> 00:50:10,775 Here the finishing touches are put on. 877 00:50:10,808 --> 00:50:12,510 Every stunt is taught. 878 00:50:12,543 --> 00:50:15,780 Side slip landings, perfectly balanced turns, et cetera. 879 00:50:15,813 --> 00:50:17,815 There are no rules or regulations, only 880 00:50:17,848 --> 00:50:21,052 an unwritten law to do your flying and do it well. 881 00:50:21,086 --> 00:50:22,353 A paradise for a flyer. 882 00:50:35,366 --> 00:50:37,802 The top pilots in the First Yale Unit 883 00:50:37,835 --> 00:50:40,671 were finally getting what they trained for. 884 00:50:40,705 --> 00:50:43,141 MacLeish estimated he learned to fly 885 00:50:43,174 --> 00:50:45,743 12 different types of planes. 886 00:50:45,776 --> 00:50:48,613 They all agreed, flying land machines 887 00:50:48,646 --> 00:50:52,217 was the best idea ever invented, and they would never 888 00:50:52,250 --> 00:50:55,186 fly a water machine in preference to land. 889 00:50:58,223 --> 00:51:00,191 Kenney was elated. 890 00:51:00,225 --> 00:51:02,693 As he wrote home to Priscilla-- 891 00:51:02,727 --> 00:51:05,196 I'm getting to feel quite at home now. 892 00:51:05,230 --> 00:51:08,466 I used to get lost in vertical banks and spins, 893 00:51:08,499 --> 00:51:11,102 but I know just where I am all the time now. 894 00:51:13,838 --> 00:51:17,142 Lord, there is no game like this in all the world. 895 00:51:17,175 --> 00:51:19,710 You're always taking such wonderful chances, 896 00:51:19,744 --> 00:51:22,447 and it's a grand feeling to get away with them because you 897 00:51:22,480 --> 00:51:23,448 gain self confidence. 898 00:51:27,618 --> 00:51:30,455 But their enthusiasm reached delirious heights 899 00:51:30,488 --> 00:51:32,457 after they were introduced to the Sopwith Camel. 900 00:51:32,490 --> 00:51:42,400 Cam 901 00:51:46,437 --> 00:51:48,806 Ken MacLeish and David Ingalls first 902 00:51:48,839 --> 00:51:54,712 met the Camel in early January of 1918 903 00:51:54,745 --> 00:51:56,781 while they were training at the British flying 904 00:51:56,814 --> 00:51:57,815 school at Gosport, England. 905 00:52:03,421 --> 00:52:07,392 They were absolutely overjoyed. 906 00:52:07,425 --> 00:52:11,128 Whether dangerous or not, they loved this thing. 907 00:52:18,203 --> 00:52:20,238 I finally took a ride in the Camel. 908 00:52:20,271 --> 00:52:23,174 A scout, single-seater fighting machine. 909 00:52:23,208 --> 00:52:24,675 It's so touchy, it just seems to jump 910 00:52:24,709 --> 00:52:26,611 if you shiver, and goes into a spin 911 00:52:26,644 --> 00:52:30,348 every time you take a turn unless you do it perfectly. 912 00:52:30,381 --> 00:52:32,650 I was full of pride that I got back into the same world a 913 00:52:32,683 --> 00:52:33,284 when I started. 914 00:52:44,895 --> 00:52:47,465 It is a very aggressive airplane 915 00:52:47,498 --> 00:52:48,899 with a huge amount of power. 916 00:53:05,950 --> 00:53:08,353 The difficulty was the engine. 917 00:53:08,386 --> 00:53:10,521 The whole engine spins with the propeller 918 00:53:10,555 --> 00:53:13,958 and you have a tremendous amount of gyroscopic force, which 919 00:53:13,991 --> 00:53:17,962 means that that rotating mass forces the airplane to dive 920 00:53:17,995 --> 00:53:19,930 when you're turning to the right and climb when 921 00:53:19,964 --> 00:53:22,600 you're turning to the left because of that rotating mass. 922 00:53:25,370 --> 00:53:27,405 They wrote home to their parents 923 00:53:27,438 --> 00:53:32,243 describing the antics they engaged in in these aircraft. 924 00:53:32,277 --> 00:53:35,480 Fighting each other in mock battles. 925 00:53:35,513 --> 00:53:37,615 They also carried out an activity 926 00:53:37,648 --> 00:53:41,018 they called bush bouncing, which was to take your airplane down 927 00:53:41,051 --> 00:53:45,790 to about 25 or 50 feet off the ground, race at full speed, 928 00:53:45,823 --> 00:53:51,629 approach a house, a tree, a herd of cows, a farmer, 929 00:53:51,662 --> 00:53:53,998 and then jump up in the air over him 930 00:53:54,031 --> 00:53:57,468 and then come right back down to earth. 931 00:53:57,502 --> 00:54:00,671 They absolutely were in love with this machine. 932 00:54:03,641 --> 00:54:04,909 The Camel, I think, 933 00:54:04,942 --> 00:54:06,711 probably was more or less the same 934 00:54:06,744 --> 00:54:09,480 as all other fighters at that time accepting 935 00:54:09,514 --> 00:54:12,717 that it was the slowest of the better fighters, 936 00:54:12,750 --> 00:54:15,986 and without a doubt, the most maneuverable of the fighters 937 00:54:16,020 --> 00:54:17,888 that the Allies had. 938 00:54:17,922 --> 00:54:22,860 It, as I recall, landed perhaps 45 or 50 miles an hour 939 00:54:22,893 --> 00:54:27,498 with a top speed of about 120 miles. 940 00:54:27,532 --> 00:54:28,899 Of course, most people 941 00:54:28,933 --> 00:54:30,701 know it got its name for that hump 942 00:54:30,735 --> 00:54:33,371 over the guns, hence a camel. 943 00:54:33,404 --> 00:54:36,607 But that area is where all the weight is concentrated. 944 00:54:36,641 --> 00:54:39,910 The pilot, the fuel tank, guns, and engine 945 00:54:39,944 --> 00:54:42,012 are all very compact. 946 00:54:42,046 --> 00:54:46,484 It makes it quite maneuverable. 947 00:54:46,517 --> 00:54:47,952 The byproduct of that 948 00:54:47,985 --> 00:54:51,522 is that the airplane gets extremely difficult to fly. 949 00:54:51,556 --> 00:54:54,024 Especially for a novice when the airplane 950 00:54:54,058 --> 00:54:57,495 is trying to divert from what you want it to do. 951 00:54:57,528 --> 00:55:00,798 All that instability, you use it for your own benefit, 952 00:55:00,831 --> 00:55:02,700 and then you become invincible in the sky. 953 00:55:06,371 --> 00:55:08,038 Dave Ingalls, at one point, 954 00:55:08,072 --> 00:55:11,509 takes it up and forces it into a spin. 955 00:55:11,542 --> 00:55:14,412 Something, of course, they were warned not to do. 956 00:55:14,445 --> 00:55:17,815 He then corkscrewed practically to the ground, 957 00:55:17,848 --> 00:55:21,986 pulled out, went up, and did it again. 958 00:55:22,019 --> 00:55:25,089 And did it over, and over, and over, and then 959 00:55:25,122 --> 00:55:27,792 wrote home about how sick to his stomach 960 00:55:27,825 --> 00:55:29,760 he was for the next several hours. 961 00:55:33,831 --> 00:55:36,133 And the machine guns were one of our greatest difficulties 962 00:55:36,166 --> 00:55:39,570 because either due to the timing mechanism or something, 963 00:55:39,604 --> 00:55:42,139 they would shoot only at the most seven or eight times 964 00:55:42,172 --> 00:55:44,675 before there would be a misfire. 965 00:55:44,709 --> 00:55:48,579 And the pilot would have to hit the handle of the loading 966 00:55:48,613 --> 00:55:50,581 apparatus and reload, and then his gun 967 00:55:50,615 --> 00:55:53,418 would shoot again for five to seven times. 968 00:55:53,451 --> 00:55:56,454 Flying these planes was a good deal simpler 969 00:55:56,487 --> 00:55:59,390 in combat. 970 00:55:59,424 --> 00:56:03,861 An actual fight was usually developed into a dogfight 971 00:56:03,894 --> 00:56:05,796 between two planes. 972 00:56:05,830 --> 00:56:08,433 One on each side in a number of different groups. 973 00:56:08,466 --> 00:56:09,967 And they would fly around and around 974 00:56:10,000 --> 00:56:13,971 trying to get on the other man's tail and shoot him down. 975 00:56:14,004 --> 00:56:16,474 Even when you start with a large squadron, 976 00:56:16,507 --> 00:56:19,710 as soon as the fighting starts, it isolates immediately. 977 00:56:19,744 --> 00:56:23,648 So people concentrate on one enemy, they chase that enemy. 978 00:56:23,681 --> 00:56:26,451 That was where the Camel had the decided advantage 979 00:56:26,484 --> 00:56:30,955 because it would turn inside of any airplane that I ever saw. 980 00:56:30,988 --> 00:56:33,491 Couldn't run away from a fight, so once you 981 00:56:33,524 --> 00:56:36,126 were actively involved, you stayed until something 982 00:56:36,160 --> 00:56:37,862 happened one way or the other. 983 00:56:37,895 --> 00:56:39,630 But at least you had an aircraft that 984 00:56:39,664 --> 00:56:41,966 would turn inside the other plane 985 00:56:41,999 --> 00:56:44,101 and give you a chance that I thought was better 986 00:56:44,134 --> 00:56:47,505 than simply speed, which would enable you to dive safely away. 987 00:56:50,508 --> 00:56:52,977 Not only were the top American flyers getting 988 00:56:53,010 --> 00:56:55,613 to know the aircraft, they were also 989 00:56:55,646 --> 00:57:00,918 getting to know each other as pilots, as brothers in arms, 990 00:57:00,951 --> 00:57:06,657 as brash young man full of gusto in a foreign land. 991 00:57:06,691 --> 00:57:08,859 Dave is almost surely off somewhere. 992 00:57:08,893 --> 00:57:10,628 He has a girl in every port. 993 00:57:10,661 --> 00:57:12,597 He drives me and Shorty crazy. 994 00:57:12,630 --> 00:57:14,164 You know what a spoiled kid he is anyway. 995 00:57:14,198 --> 00:57:17,835 Well, on top of that, he's lost all the manners he ever had, 996 00:57:17,868 --> 00:57:20,004 and now he makes the most disgusting noises 997 00:57:20,037 --> 00:57:21,639 you ever heard. 998 00:57:21,672 --> 00:57:24,174 He's so darn nervous and fidgety that we're gradually 999 00:57:24,208 --> 00:57:27,244 going crazy. 1000 00:57:27,277 --> 00:57:28,846 Shorty cabled his girl 1001 00:57:28,879 --> 00:57:30,615 that he was well and lonesome. 1002 00:57:30,648 --> 00:57:33,050 Ken asks almost nightly for some message from Priscilla. 1003 00:57:33,083 --> 00:57:35,820 And I, this old bachelor, am again 1004 00:57:35,853 --> 00:57:39,023 stuck to a bunch of foreign lovers. 1005 00:57:39,056 --> 00:57:41,225 I foresee a hell of a time in one respect. 1006 00:57:41,258 --> 00:57:43,628 These two are going to waste a lot of our time writing 1007 00:57:43,661 --> 00:57:45,830 and talking about their fiancees. 1008 00:57:45,863 --> 00:57:50,701 Sometimes I thank God I am still unshackled. 1009 00:57:50,735 --> 00:57:54,071 But during their advanced training at Gosport, 1010 00:57:54,104 --> 00:58:00,077 the two pilots also gained a mutual respect for each other. 1011 00:58:00,110 --> 00:58:02,647 Ingalls weighed his flying skills 1012 00:58:02,680 --> 00:58:06,216 against MacLeish's in his diary. 1013 00:58:06,250 --> 00:58:08,218 Ken generally puts it all over me. 1014 00:58:08,252 --> 00:58:10,287 He has acquired a damn fine reputation here 1015 00:58:10,320 --> 00:58:11,756 and is considered one of the best 1016 00:58:11,789 --> 00:58:13,090 pupils the schools has had. 1017 00:58:13,123 --> 00:58:15,125 However, I can still hold my own with Shorty, 1018 00:58:15,159 --> 00:58:17,528 and there's time to practice before we get to the front. 1019 00:58:20,731 --> 00:58:22,232 After MacLeish and Ingalls 1020 00:58:22,266 --> 00:58:26,103 were ordered to Dunkirk, Ken wrote a letter to Priscilla 1021 00:58:26,136 --> 00:58:28,205 on the eve of their first flight to the front. 1022 00:58:30,841 --> 00:58:33,177 Crock and I are in the same flight, which 1023 00:58:33,210 --> 00:58:35,145 is perfectly wonderful for both of us 1024 00:58:35,179 --> 00:58:37,948 as I have absolute confidence in his flying, 1025 00:58:37,982 --> 00:58:40,685 and he feels somewhat the same way about mine. 1026 00:58:40,718 --> 00:58:42,853 We've done nothing but fight each other 1027 00:58:42,887 --> 00:58:44,822 in the air for months. 1028 00:58:44,855 --> 00:58:47,625 Consequently, I know exactly what tactics he uses 1029 00:58:47,658 --> 00:58:50,260 and just what he'll do in every possible position 1030 00:58:50,294 --> 00:58:52,830 so that I can plan my tactics accordingly. 1031 00:58:52,863 --> 00:58:55,032 He knows mine from A to Z, and he also 1032 00:58:55,065 --> 00:58:57,167 knows just what I'll do if a Hun gets 1033 00:58:57,201 --> 00:58:59,036 a dangerous advantage over me. 1034 00:58:59,069 --> 00:59:06,010 We're both full out for it, and we only 1035 00:59:06,043 --> 00:59:07,745 pray that we get the chances we want. 1036 00:59:11,782 --> 00:59:21,692 Hey, Fritz, we're going to give you fits. 1037 00:59:23,894 --> 00:59:28,733 With a million Yankee hits, we'll blow you into bits. 1038 00:59:28,766 --> 00:59:30,768 Hey, Fritz-- 1039 00:59:30,801 --> 00:59:33,938 Already on assignment at their new base and soon 1040 00:59:33,971 --> 00:59:36,941 to be under fire, John Vorys and Al Sturtevant 1041 00:59:36,974 --> 00:59:38,876 were among the first American fighters 1042 00:59:38,909 --> 00:59:41,311 to be mixed in with foreign units. 1043 00:59:41,345 --> 00:59:44,649 John Vorys and Albert Sturtevant 1044 00:59:44,682 --> 00:59:51,188 were sent over to be sort of ambassadors of United States 1045 00:59:51,221 --> 00:59:52,389 Naval Air Service. 1046 00:59:52,422 --> 00:59:54,792 And they were immediately attached, 1047 00:59:54,825 --> 00:59:59,063 after some additional training, to the British submarine patrol 1048 00:59:59,096 --> 01:00:02,266 fleet flying out of Felixstowe. 1049 01:00:02,299 --> 01:00:05,135 The missions out of Felixstowe 1050 01:00:05,169 --> 01:00:08,405 were the baptism of fire for the unit. 1051 01:00:08,438 --> 01:00:11,842 Planes from the base hunted for the German u-boats 1052 01:00:11,876 --> 01:00:15,780 over the North Sea and near the English Channel. 1053 01:00:15,813 --> 01:00:18,949 John Vorys described the situation. 1054 01:00:18,983 --> 01:00:20,284 A system of search was 1055 01:00:20,317 --> 01:00:22,419 devised called the spider web. 1056 01:00:22,452 --> 01:00:26,724 It swept an area 4,000 square miles. 1057 01:00:26,757 --> 01:00:29,193 The tables were turned on Fritz, the hunter, 1058 01:00:29,226 --> 01:00:31,829 for here he was the hunted, the quarry, 1059 01:00:31,862 --> 01:00:35,432 the fly that had to pass through one or more sectors of the web. 1060 01:00:35,465 --> 01:00:37,301 The flying boat was the spider. 1061 01:00:41,338 --> 01:00:44,074 The two Americans were popular at the British base 1062 01:00:44,108 --> 01:00:47,111 and the local hotel where they attended dances. 1063 01:00:47,144 --> 01:00:49,213 So popular, in fact, that it became 1064 01:00:49,246 --> 01:00:52,850 necessary to give them a polite warning regarding 1065 01:00:52,883 --> 01:00:57,387 the fascinating Mrs. Dowson. 1066 01:00:57,421 --> 01:00:59,223 Her father was an Irishman 1067 01:00:59,256 --> 01:01:02,059 and her mother came from the Argentine. 1068 01:01:02,092 --> 01:01:04,795 She had an ivory skin and dark blue eyes 1069 01:01:04,829 --> 01:01:07,865 and was very, very lovely. 1070 01:01:07,898 --> 01:01:10,701 A lady with a past, but still a lady. 1071 01:01:10,735 --> 01:01:13,170 Al and I both took a shine to her. 1072 01:01:13,203 --> 01:01:17,174 In short, we were smitten. 1073 01:01:17,207 --> 01:01:19,343 Arriving for their next rendezvous with her 1074 01:01:19,376 --> 01:01:22,346 at the hotel bar, the Yankee flyboys 1075 01:01:22,379 --> 01:01:25,115 were approached by a polite district official who 1076 01:01:25,149 --> 01:01:28,018 informed them that Mrs. Dowson was 1077 01:01:28,052 --> 01:01:31,088 suspected by British intelligence of being 1078 01:01:31,121 --> 01:01:33,824 a German spy. 1079 01:01:33,858 --> 01:01:35,392 Though the flyers remained cordial, 1080 01:01:35,425 --> 01:01:40,765 Mrs. Dowson now intrigued them, noted Vorys, about as much 1081 01:01:40,798 --> 01:01:43,768 as a case of smallpox. 1082 01:01:43,801 --> 01:01:45,936 She was clever enough to be a spy. 1083 01:01:45,970 --> 01:01:48,338 She could certainly find out everything you knew. 1084 01:01:48,372 --> 01:01:50,507 And with a little persuasion, you 1085 01:01:50,540 --> 01:01:53,143 would tell her a great many things you didn't know. 1086 01:01:59,216 --> 01:02:02,486 The other mission for the Felixstowe flyers, 1087 01:02:02,519 --> 01:02:05,890 besides hunting for subs, was escorting the Beef 1088 01:02:05,923 --> 01:02:09,960 Trip, a convoy of merchant ships sailing two or three times 1089 01:02:09,994 --> 01:02:12,963 a month between England and the Hook of Holland 1090 01:02:12,997 --> 01:02:18,002 carrying Dutch beef to England and English beer to the Dutch. 1091 01:02:18,035 --> 01:02:21,471 Escort planes flew great loops some five to ten miles 1092 01:02:21,505 --> 01:02:24,842 in front of the convoy, searching for u-boats 1093 01:02:24,875 --> 01:02:27,211 before they could submerge and fire on their prey. 1094 01:02:33,117 --> 01:02:36,520 Vorys and Sturtevant were each supposed to fly three times 1095 01:02:36,553 --> 01:02:40,157 a week, but in February, the rain and wind of the cold North 1096 01:02:40,190 --> 01:02:43,160 Sea kept the pilots at bay. 1097 01:02:43,193 --> 01:02:46,063 Albert Sturtevant missed several patrols 1098 01:02:46,096 --> 01:02:47,998 because of bad weather. 1099 01:02:48,032 --> 01:02:52,302 He insisted to John Vorys that Vorys allow him 1100 01:02:52,336 --> 01:02:56,106 to take his place on patrol. 1101 01:02:56,140 --> 01:03:00,010 And when this particular flight came up, 1102 01:03:00,044 --> 01:03:03,480 apparently Al turned to Vorys and said, 1103 01:03:03,513 --> 01:03:05,549 how about switching places with me? 1104 01:03:05,582 --> 01:03:10,287 You know, you, you've got, you've got the chance to go, 1105 01:03:10,320 --> 01:03:13,423 but I, I haven't had as many chances because it's 1106 01:03:13,457 --> 01:03:16,093 been in such bad weather. 1107 01:03:16,126 --> 01:03:18,462 Sturtevant went out on that patrol. 1108 01:03:18,495 --> 01:03:23,133 They came under attack by a squadron of German fighter 1109 01:03:23,167 --> 01:03:23,467 planes. 1110 01:03:26,336 --> 01:03:27,571 His plane was shot down. 1111 01:03:32,109 --> 01:03:38,849 Appeared to survive on the water, but later 1112 01:03:38,883 --> 01:03:48,092 on when the Germans came back to look for them, they were gone. 1113 01:03:48,125 --> 01:03:51,028 Albert Sturtevant became the first US 1114 01:03:51,061 --> 01:03:53,931 naval aviator killed in combat. 1115 01:03:53,964 --> 01:03:56,333 The lead pilot and commander of the German air station 1116 01:03:56,366 --> 01:04:01,571 at Zeebrugge was Oberleutnant Friedrich Christiansen, 1117 01:04:01,605 --> 01:04:06,143 the only seaplane pilot to receive the coveted Blue Max. 1118 01:04:06,176 --> 01:04:09,646 Christiansen was contacted by Sturtevant's distraught father 1119 01:04:09,679 --> 01:04:14,618 after the war for news of the last sighting of his son. 1120 01:04:14,651 --> 01:04:16,420 Christiansen reported that he had 1121 01:04:16,453 --> 01:04:19,924 returned to the downed aircraft and seen three of the four 1122 01:04:19,957 --> 01:04:24,461 aviators clinging to the wreckage in heavy seas, 1123 01:04:24,494 --> 01:04:27,097 but the danger was too great to land in the water 1124 01:04:27,131 --> 01:04:28,899 and save them. 1125 01:04:28,933 --> 01:04:33,270 A month after his son's death, Sturtevant's father 1126 01:04:33,303 --> 01:04:35,639 wrote a letter to his daughter. 1127 01:04:35,672 --> 01:04:37,641 I don't think I will ever 1128 01:04:37,674 --> 01:04:40,477 get over Albert's death. 1129 01:04:40,510 --> 01:04:42,312 I was so proud of him. 1130 01:04:42,346 --> 01:04:49,486 Of his looks, his ability, his earnestness, his athletics, 1131 01:04:49,519 --> 01:04:53,958 and I am proud of his death, only it is so hard. 1132 01:04:59,463 --> 01:05:02,366 And suddenly, the members of the First Yale Unit 1133 01:05:02,399 --> 01:05:05,169 realized that for the first time, 1134 01:05:05,202 --> 01:05:10,107 they had lost one of their own, and everything came home. 1135 01:05:10,140 --> 01:05:12,943 They understood that this was war and this was real. 1136 01:05:16,080 --> 01:05:19,616 Dear folks, old Al's gone. 1137 01:05:19,649 --> 01:05:22,286 He went out on patrol and the last we knew about him, 1138 01:05:22,319 --> 01:05:25,422 he was seen being attacked by Huns. 1139 01:05:25,455 --> 01:05:27,291 We hoped against hope for a week that he 1140 01:05:27,324 --> 01:05:29,126 had been interned or made prisoner, 1141 01:05:29,159 --> 01:05:33,497 but Hun reports confirmed our apprehensions, that he'd 1142 01:05:33,530 --> 01:05:37,101 been shot down, and along with the others in the machine, 1143 01:05:37,134 --> 01:05:40,337 had gone to swell that awesome, awful role of honor. 1144 01:05:45,075 --> 01:05:47,444 It's all right to say you don't hate your enemies when you're 1145 01:05:47,477 --> 01:05:51,515 just getting ready to begin, but when you've lost your nearest 1146 01:05:51,548 --> 01:05:56,720 and dearest, you, well, at least would like an eye for an eye. 1147 01:05:56,753 --> 01:05:59,990 Love, John. 1148 01:06:00,024 --> 01:06:01,525 The news of Sturtevant's death 1149 01:06:01,558 --> 01:06:05,129 quickly made the rounds to the unit members stateside. 1150 01:06:05,162 --> 01:06:07,464 John Vorys carried the tragic news home 1151 01:06:07,497 --> 01:06:11,235 as he was reassigned to instruct at Hampton Roads. 1152 01:06:11,268 --> 01:06:14,704 Erl Gould had been transferred to Key West where he would soon 1153 01:06:14,738 --> 01:06:18,575 become the youngest commander of a Naval Air Station 1154 01:06:18,608 --> 01:06:22,146 in charge of all operations and 1,300 men 1155 01:06:22,179 --> 01:06:26,450 at the tender age of 22. 1156 01:06:26,483 --> 01:06:31,121 On February 27, two weeks after Sturtevant's death, 1157 01:06:31,155 --> 01:06:35,592 Gould was writing a letter to Trubee Davison. 1158 01:06:35,625 --> 01:06:38,695 Dear old Trub, come on down here to Key West. 1159 01:06:38,728 --> 01:06:42,299 We really have a fine little station. 1160 01:06:42,332 --> 01:06:47,671 I try to run things just as much like you did as I possibly can. 1161 01:06:47,704 --> 01:06:50,207 You don't know how much every man in the unit 1162 01:06:50,240 --> 01:06:55,179 admires you, Trub, nor how grateful they all are to you. 1163 01:06:55,212 --> 01:06:58,282 Then, in the middle of the letter, 1164 01:06:58,315 --> 01:07:00,684 more tragic news arrived. 1165 01:07:00,717 --> 01:07:03,653 Gould broke off writing. 1166 01:07:03,687 --> 01:07:08,625 My god, Trub, your telegram has just arrived. 1167 01:07:08,658 --> 01:07:13,797 My heart is too full and I feel too sick to tell you any more. 1168 01:07:13,830 --> 01:07:16,300 Dear old Curt. 1169 01:07:16,333 --> 01:07:18,368 Curt Read was a well-loved classmate 1170 01:07:18,402 --> 01:07:21,638 who played Yale baseball and could trace his roots 1171 01:07:21,671 --> 01:07:24,308 to the Puritans at Plymouth. 1172 01:07:24,341 --> 01:07:28,512 His father, a prominent banker, had died in 1916, 1173 01:07:28,545 --> 01:07:33,183 and Curt's mother kept him out of the unit that first summer. 1174 01:07:33,217 --> 01:07:36,220 But Curt joined when the unit was enlarged. 1175 01:07:36,253 --> 01:07:38,422 He became everyone's preferred comrade 1176 01:07:38,455 --> 01:07:44,828 in arms for his dependability, generosity, and enthusiasm. 1177 01:07:44,861 --> 01:07:46,430 Everybody liked him. 1178 01:07:46,463 --> 01:07:50,867 There was no reason not to be a pal of Curt Read's. 1179 01:07:50,900 --> 01:07:54,504 On February 25, having arrived at his assigned base, 1180 01:07:54,538 --> 01:07:57,441 Dunkirk, he wrote a reassuring letter 1181 01:07:57,474 --> 01:08:01,611 to his mother who had given four of her sons to naval aviation, 1182 01:08:01,645 --> 01:08:05,749 including young Bart, who was also with the unit. 1183 01:08:05,782 --> 01:08:07,551 Dearest mother, everything 1184 01:08:07,584 --> 01:08:12,322 is going finely here, and Bart was very well when I left him. 1185 01:08:12,356 --> 01:08:15,192 And I never felt better in my life. 1186 01:08:15,225 --> 01:08:18,262 Don't, for goodness sake, worry about us, for we 1187 01:08:18,295 --> 01:08:21,131 are both as safe as can be. 1188 01:08:21,165 --> 01:08:24,368 Lots of love to you, Curt. 1189 01:08:24,401 --> 01:08:28,205 But Curt had never taken very well to flying. 1190 01:08:28,238 --> 01:08:30,274 Unit member and friend John Farwell 1191 01:08:30,307 --> 01:08:33,810 said, he never got the hang of it. 1192 01:08:33,843 --> 01:08:36,780 Read had started a diary while he was training overseas, 1193 01:08:36,813 --> 01:08:42,619 in which he recorded his anxiety in a kind of shorthand. 1194 01:08:42,652 --> 01:08:45,555 General nervous tension. 1195 01:08:45,589 --> 01:08:49,893 Wish I were off, even if I'm not thoroughly trained. 1196 01:08:49,926 --> 01:08:52,296 Can learn at the front. 1197 01:08:52,329 --> 01:08:55,532 Feeling of fatalism about April. 1198 01:08:55,565 --> 01:08:56,733 Odd. 1199 01:08:56,766 --> 01:08:58,802 Feel that it could really be a climax 1200 01:08:58,835 --> 01:09:01,838 now if I were to have the privilege giving the greatest 1201 01:09:01,871 --> 01:09:03,373 sacrifice. 1202 01:09:03,407 --> 01:09:05,642 Feeling that there is absolutely no other way. 1203 01:09:11,481 --> 01:09:13,583 Di Gates was chief pilot soon 1204 01:09:13,617 --> 01:09:17,954 to be in command at Dunkirk, and the day after Curt's arrival, 1205 01:09:17,987 --> 01:09:19,956 he took his friend up for a quick hop 1206 01:09:19,989 --> 01:09:21,725 to get the lay of the tricky harbor. 1207 01:09:25,862 --> 01:09:27,964 Dunkirk was a very difficult place 1208 01:09:27,997 --> 01:09:29,866 to operate from. 1209 01:09:29,899 --> 01:09:33,970 It is a very congested harbor. 1210 01:09:34,003 --> 01:09:38,708 It contains numerous channels, numerous bends and turns. 1211 01:09:38,742 --> 01:09:41,545 The actual open water is relatively narrow, 1212 01:09:41,578 --> 01:09:44,381 and that's usually filled with warships and merchant ships 1213 01:09:44,414 --> 01:09:46,416 that were coming and going. 1214 01:09:46,450 --> 01:09:47,817 Gates gave the flying boat 1215 01:09:47,851 --> 01:09:50,954 over to Curt, who took off with his observer, 1216 01:09:50,987 --> 01:09:55,425 circled over the city, and headed out to sea. 1217 01:09:55,459 --> 01:09:57,894 He had been flying around for 15 or 20 minutes 1218 01:09:57,927 --> 01:10:00,430 and was making a normal glide, evidently 1219 01:10:00,464 --> 01:10:04,234 with the intention of practicing a landing. 1220 01:10:04,268 --> 01:10:05,835 It was very tight. 1221 01:10:05,869 --> 01:10:10,474 And to land there, you had to come out of the sky pretty fast 1222 01:10:10,507 --> 01:10:12,909 and then hit the water in the right place. 1223 01:10:12,942 --> 01:10:14,711 All of a sudden, the plane 1224 01:10:14,744 --> 01:10:18,482 pitched forward and dove nose first 120 feet into the water 1225 01:10:18,515 --> 01:10:18,982 and flipped over. 1226 01:10:22,852 --> 01:10:25,989 Curt was picked up by a patrol boat. 1227 01:10:26,022 --> 01:10:31,795 He had a fractured skull and died within the hour. 1228 01:10:31,828 --> 01:10:34,398 His observer could not be found. 1229 01:10:38,435 --> 01:10:39,969 There is no need of telling you 1230 01:10:40,003 --> 01:10:41,705 what a blow we have had in the last two 1231 01:10:41,738 --> 01:10:44,908 weeks with the news of Al's loss and Curt's terrible accident 1232 01:10:44,941 --> 01:10:46,443 soon after. 1233 01:10:46,476 --> 01:10:48,545 It really seems impossible and unbelievable. 1234 01:10:55,919 --> 01:10:58,322 As was his mother's wish, 1235 01:10:58,355 --> 01:11:02,492 Curt Read was buried at Dunkirk among, as she said, 1236 01:11:02,526 --> 01:11:07,464 the fellowship of the war's heroic dead. 1237 01:11:07,497 --> 01:11:10,334 He was the first US naval aviation officer 1238 01:11:10,367 --> 01:11:13,403 to be killed in France. 1239 01:11:13,437 --> 01:11:16,806 His body now rests in the American Somme Cemetery 1240 01:11:16,840 --> 01:11:21,511 on a gentle slope in the rolling countryside of Picardy. 1241 01:11:25,715 --> 01:11:28,752 Erl Gould had been Read's roommate at Yale. 1242 01:11:28,785 --> 01:11:30,554 They served on the yearbook committee 1243 01:11:30,587 --> 01:11:35,024 together, were members of Scroll and Key, and were best friends. 1244 01:11:35,058 --> 01:11:36,793 Dear Trubee, thank you 1245 01:11:36,826 --> 01:11:39,429 for your telegram and letter. 1246 01:11:39,463 --> 01:11:42,332 You know that Curt was the truest friend and noblest 1247 01:11:42,366 --> 01:11:44,668 influence of my life, so you can understand 1248 01:11:44,701 --> 01:11:48,505 why I feel as though a knife were sticking in my heart. 1249 01:11:48,538 --> 01:11:51,040 Curt loved you truly and admired you more 1250 01:11:51,074 --> 01:11:53,677 than any young man I know. 1251 01:11:53,710 --> 01:11:55,812 Because you reciprocated his feelings, 1252 01:11:55,845 --> 01:11:57,947 I understand what a blow it was to you 1253 01:11:57,981 --> 01:12:02,118 and sympathize with you and all our unit for the loss. 1254 01:12:02,151 --> 01:12:05,589 With love and sympathy to you all, Erl. 1255 01:12:09,793 --> 01:12:11,928 Late that spring, Trubee Davison 1256 01:12:11,961 --> 01:12:15,031 served as best man for Erl Gould at his wedding, 1257 01:12:15,064 --> 01:12:19,002 making his way to the altar without crutches or assistance 1258 01:12:19,035 --> 01:12:20,904 for the first time. 1259 01:12:20,937 --> 01:12:29,413 For God, for country, and for Yale. 1260 01:12:44,628 --> 01:12:47,531 After the deaths of two of their own, the rest the unit 1261 01:12:47,564 --> 01:12:49,098 went about their business. 1262 01:12:49,132 --> 01:12:53,837 As Alphie Ames described it, behind the smile and carry on, 1263 01:12:53,870 --> 01:12:57,674 everyone is tightening his jaw. 1264 01:12:57,707 --> 01:12:59,676 Bob Lovett kept a stiff upper lip 1265 01:12:59,709 --> 01:13:02,512 in the face of the unit's losses as he ended a letter 1266 01:13:02,546 --> 01:13:04,948 to his beloved Adele. 1267 01:13:04,981 --> 01:13:07,617 Our number is slowly dwindling, 1268 01:13:07,651 --> 01:13:09,819 but our spirit is still the same. 1269 01:13:09,853 --> 01:13:13,890 And I believe that, in the end, is what counts. 1270 01:13:13,923 --> 01:13:15,892 In Bob Lovett, the Navy 1271 01:13:15,925 --> 01:13:22,098 realized early on that they had an extraordinary young officer. 1272 01:13:22,131 --> 01:13:29,639 He was intelligent, energetic, organized, insightful, detail 1273 01:13:29,673 --> 01:13:31,140 oriented. 1274 01:13:31,174 --> 01:13:35,612 He could write reports and draft plans. 1275 01:13:35,645 --> 01:13:38,615 And based on these qualities, which 1276 01:13:38,648 --> 01:13:43,720 would make any senior Naval officer giddy with delight, 1277 01:13:43,753 --> 01:13:47,591 he was put to work as one of the chief troubleshooters 1278 01:13:47,624 --> 01:13:51,861 for naval aviation in Europe. 1279 01:13:51,895 --> 01:13:53,630 His most exciting assignment 1280 01:13:53,663 --> 01:13:56,666 came in February, to which he hinted in an ecstatic letter 1281 01:13:56,700 --> 01:13:58,167 to Adele. 1282 01:13:58,201 --> 01:14:02,071 Dearest Little Professor, my colossal luck 1283 01:14:02,105 --> 01:14:03,807 took a turn yesterday that has left 1284 01:14:03,840 --> 01:14:06,943 me gasping in astonishment. 1285 01:14:06,976 --> 01:14:09,646 It's a deep secret, of course, but it is really 1286 01:14:09,679 --> 01:14:11,681 what I was called over here for. 1287 01:14:11,715 --> 01:14:15,184 I am so blamed excited, I can hardly breathe. 1288 01:14:15,218 --> 01:14:17,521 I get all cold at night thinking about it 1289 01:14:17,554 --> 01:14:21,525 because it is rather scary, and then I get my nerve back 1290 01:14:21,558 --> 01:14:23,993 and revel in dreams. 1291 01:14:24,027 --> 01:14:28,231 Five months into naval aviation's overseas operation, 1292 01:14:28,264 --> 01:14:31,234 Lovett was taking a hard look at the Navy's commitment 1293 01:14:31,267 --> 01:14:33,737 to the seaplane. 1294 01:14:33,770 --> 01:14:36,506 The spider web patrols were proving a deterrent 1295 01:14:36,540 --> 01:14:40,109 to the u-boats, but searching for subs over the North Sea 1296 01:14:40,143 --> 01:14:45,582 was tedious work akin to looking for a needle in a haystack, 1297 01:14:45,615 --> 01:14:47,751 with little chance of finding, not to mention, 1298 01:14:47,784 --> 01:14:50,086 bombing or hitting a u-boat. 1299 01:14:50,119 --> 01:14:51,821 Bob Lovett would 1300 01:14:51,855 --> 01:14:54,824 look at the logs of the aviators as they went out on patrol 1301 01:14:54,858 --> 01:14:56,292 and realized that they were spending 1302 01:14:56,325 --> 01:14:59,262 a lot of hours in the air without finding anything. 1303 01:14:59,295 --> 01:15:00,830 And he began to think 1304 01:15:00,864 --> 01:15:03,299 that this was a very inefficient way 1305 01:15:03,332 --> 01:15:06,603 to try to stop the u-boat risk. 1306 01:15:06,636 --> 01:15:08,938 Seaplanes really were the bread and butter 1307 01:15:08,972 --> 01:15:10,874 of naval aviation, really, from the beginning. 1308 01:15:10,907 --> 01:15:14,077 But as the war progresses, there is an effort 1309 01:15:14,110 --> 01:15:17,681 to integrate land planes into naval operations 1310 01:15:17,714 --> 01:15:19,983 and take advantage of land aircraft 1311 01:15:20,016 --> 01:15:23,186 and really hit the German submarines at their source. 1312 01:15:23,219 --> 01:15:25,722 And that was the genesis behind the Northern Bombing Group 1313 01:15:25,755 --> 01:15:28,091 was really to carry out raids against some 1314 01:15:28,124 --> 01:15:30,694 of the submarine bases in northern Europe 1315 01:15:30,727 --> 01:15:33,096 and really strike the u-boat before they even 1316 01:15:33,129 --> 01:15:34,664 went out to sea. 1317 01:15:34,698 --> 01:15:36,232 In one of his detailed memos 1318 01:15:36,265 --> 01:15:39,235 to the commander of the US Naval Aviation Forces, 1319 01:15:39,268 --> 01:15:41,170 Lovett recorded the lessons learned 1320 01:15:41,204 --> 01:15:44,307 from British naval aviators. 1321 01:15:44,340 --> 01:15:46,309 He was now convinced that the key 1322 01:15:46,342 --> 01:15:49,145 to defeating the submarine menace 1323 01:15:49,178 --> 01:15:52,649 was to fly heavy land bombers against their bases. 1324 01:15:56,986 --> 01:15:59,589 And Lovett got himself assigned to a squadron 1325 01:15:59,623 --> 01:16:04,093 of Handley-Page bombers, behemoth four passenger planes 1326 01:16:04,127 --> 01:16:08,898 with twin Rolls-Royce engines and great, floppy wings. 1327 01:16:08,932 --> 01:16:12,969 The objectives of the Northern Bombing Group 1328 01:16:13,002 --> 01:16:19,108 was the combination of German submarine bases in Belgium. 1329 01:16:19,142 --> 01:16:23,046 These consisted of Ostend and Zeebrugge, which 1330 01:16:23,079 --> 01:16:25,782 are located on the coast, and Bruges, 1331 01:16:25,815 --> 01:16:29,218 which is located inland but is connected to the coast 1332 01:16:29,252 --> 01:16:30,219 by canals. 1333 01:16:33,389 --> 01:16:37,927 This was one of the most heavily fortified spots 1334 01:16:37,961 --> 01:16:40,196 on the western front. 1335 01:16:40,229 --> 01:16:43,833 These submarines were protected by concrete submarine 1336 01:16:43,867 --> 01:16:46,670 pens in Bruges. 1337 01:16:46,703 --> 01:16:53,176 They were ringed with all sorts of anti-aircraft artillery. 1338 01:16:53,209 --> 01:16:56,680 Robert Lovett, as part of his general exposure 1339 01:16:56,713 --> 01:16:59,148 to air operations, decided that he 1340 01:16:59,182 --> 01:17:04,754 needed to learn how heavy bombers flew and experienced 1341 01:17:04,788 --> 01:17:06,823 flying over enemy lines. 1342 01:17:06,856 --> 01:17:08,424 Dearest Little Partner, I'm 1343 01:17:08,457 --> 01:17:11,227 going to the front in 10 days on a wonderful stunt 1344 01:17:11,260 --> 01:17:14,664 upon the success of which hangs our future program. 1345 01:17:14,698 --> 01:17:16,232 The importance of it truly makes me 1346 01:17:16,265 --> 01:17:19,235 burst with pride and happiness. 1347 01:17:19,268 --> 01:17:22,906 Have you ever had your wildest dreams come true? 1348 01:17:22,939 --> 01:17:25,341 Lovett left Paris by motorcycle 1349 01:17:25,374 --> 01:17:30,680 to report for duty at Dunkirk on March 21, 1918. 1350 01:17:30,714 --> 01:17:32,448 The next night, he served as a gunner 1351 01:17:32,481 --> 01:17:36,352 with Canadian Captain John Roy Allan of the Royal Naval Air 1352 01:17:36,385 --> 01:17:42,425 Service in a Handley-Page bomber named The Evening Star. 1353 01:17:42,458 --> 01:17:47,163 They attacked the submarine pens in Bruges harbor. 1354 01:17:47,196 --> 01:17:50,066 As Lovett recorded in a letter to Adele, 1355 01:17:50,099 --> 01:17:53,870 the experience of flying through arching and flaming phosphorus 1356 01:17:53,903 --> 01:17:58,708 was both alarming and revelatory. 1357 01:17:58,742 --> 01:18:00,243 My Dearest Little Partner, 1358 01:18:00,276 --> 01:18:02,011 I have just returned from the front where 1359 01:18:02,045 --> 01:18:04,480 I have been attached to the seven squadron, 1360 01:18:04,513 --> 01:18:08,251 fifth wing of the Royal Naval Air Service. 1361 01:18:08,284 --> 01:18:10,754 It has been the most gratifying and greatest experience 1362 01:18:10,787 --> 01:18:11,921 I have ever had. 1363 01:18:26,970 --> 01:18:27,370 Exciting? 1364 01:18:27,403 --> 01:18:29,906 Ye gods! 1365 01:18:29,939 --> 01:18:32,075 No sooner had we crossed the lines 1366 01:18:32,108 --> 01:18:34,310 and the Huns started to strafe us. 1367 01:18:34,343 --> 01:18:36,746 Archie bursts were seen to the right and left, 1368 01:18:36,780 --> 01:18:38,915 but Roy held us straight. 1369 01:18:38,948 --> 01:18:40,850 Presently, the motors were throttled 1370 01:18:40,884 --> 01:18:42,185 and we were gliding in for our mark. 1371 01:18:45,789 --> 01:18:47,791 It was curiously quiet. 1372 01:18:47,824 --> 01:18:51,260 I had the three guns ready and then, good god, 1373 01:18:51,294 --> 01:18:53,162 the earth seemed to open. 1374 01:18:53,196 --> 01:18:56,232 17 searchlights sprang out and swept about. 1375 01:18:59,202 --> 01:19:02,806 The ack-ack made a wall and floor ahead of us. 1376 01:19:02,839 --> 01:19:04,540 The deadly high explosions crumped 1377 01:19:04,573 --> 01:19:08,011 about and the green balls swayed and spiraled 1378 01:19:08,044 --> 01:19:10,246 as they sought to get us on fire. 1379 01:19:10,279 --> 01:19:12,448 Roy kept straight on, never a waver or turn. 1380 01:19:21,424 --> 01:19:24,193 There was a sudden crash and I thought we were hit, 1381 01:19:24,227 --> 01:19:27,263 but we kept on straight into the intense wall of bursting 1382 01:19:27,296 --> 01:19:29,198 shells ahead and below us. 1383 01:19:29,232 --> 01:19:32,268 Suddenly, one light got us and the whole 17 1384 01:19:32,301 --> 01:19:34,037 hit us with a slap. 1385 01:19:34,070 --> 01:19:37,206 We felt like little kids caught stealing jam. 1386 01:19:37,240 --> 01:19:39,008 Then I got the guns going. 1387 01:19:39,042 --> 01:19:42,145 The tracers darted down the beams toward the gun crews 1388 01:19:42,178 --> 01:19:44,080 and two lights went out. 1389 01:19:44,113 --> 01:19:47,984 The tip of the gun got red and the glow crept up the barrel, 1390 01:19:48,017 --> 01:19:50,153 and we were hit time and again. 1391 01:19:53,489 --> 01:19:56,926 Why we weren't literally blown out of the air, I don't know. 1392 01:19:56,960 --> 01:19:59,929 I saw a tear in the fuselage side and holes in the wings, 1393 01:19:59,963 --> 01:20:03,366 and Roy's face grinning at me in front, and I could have cried. 1394 01:20:03,399 --> 01:20:06,069 I felt so lucky to have been through it all 1395 01:20:06,102 --> 01:20:09,205 and come out safely. 1396 01:20:09,238 --> 01:20:11,474 Lovett ended his letter to the woman 1397 01:20:11,507 --> 01:20:14,043 he planned to marry-- 1398 01:20:14,077 --> 01:20:16,179 I wonder if you know the dreams I dream, 1399 01:20:16,212 --> 01:20:20,283 the thoughts I think, and the hopes I cherish. 1400 01:20:20,316 --> 01:20:22,385 Someday you will, my dearest one, 1401 01:20:22,418 --> 01:20:25,021 and I'm telling you now, though I can't see you, 1402 01:20:25,054 --> 01:20:29,025 as I gain in experience, as I see life with the primal laws 1403 01:20:29,058 --> 01:20:33,462 still reigning, I hold you more and more closely in my heart 1404 01:20:33,496 --> 01:20:37,901 and long for the days that I will be with you again. 1405 01:20:37,934 --> 01:20:41,637 It is a strange thought to consider that the more one has 1406 01:20:41,670 --> 01:20:46,009 to live for, the more readily one is willing to die for it. 1407 01:20:53,382 --> 01:20:55,218 With his new friend Captain Allan, 1408 01:20:55,251 --> 01:20:59,222 Robert Lovett flew a series of successive, sustained night 1409 01:20:59,255 --> 01:21:00,957 bombing missions over three weeks. 1410 01:21:03,559 --> 01:21:05,661 Kenney MacLeish saw Lovett one morning 1411 01:21:05,694 --> 01:21:08,131 and said he has the wind up so badly 1412 01:21:08,164 --> 01:21:10,166 that he can't stand still. 1413 01:21:10,199 --> 01:21:12,368 Lovett's idea was 1414 01:21:12,401 --> 01:21:18,607 that the force should be employed solely 1415 01:21:18,641 --> 01:21:21,510 to attack the submarine bases. 1416 01:21:21,544 --> 01:21:24,313 That it should operate day and night 1417 01:21:24,347 --> 01:21:28,484 using at least two different types of aircraft. 1418 01:21:28,517 --> 01:21:32,088 That it should carry out missions consecutively 1419 01:21:32,121 --> 01:21:36,059 and continuously on one target. 1420 01:21:36,092 --> 01:21:41,264 As each night progressed, he would find that the artillery 1421 01:21:41,297 --> 01:21:44,067 fire was abating. 1422 01:21:44,100 --> 01:21:46,469 As they ran low on ammunition, 1423 01:21:46,502 --> 01:21:48,637 the airborne bombers could then come 1424 01:21:48,671 --> 01:21:52,175 in lower, and lower, and lower, and thus bomb 1425 01:21:52,208 --> 01:21:55,378 more and more accurately. 1426 01:21:55,411 --> 01:21:59,048 And he realized there that strategic bombing 1427 01:21:59,082 --> 01:22:01,650 was going to be the future. 1428 01:22:01,684 --> 01:22:03,953 It is no stretch of the imagination 1429 01:22:03,987 --> 01:22:08,391 to see the raids over German cities in 1943 and 1944 1430 01:22:08,424 --> 01:22:11,995 see their origins in this analysis. 1431 01:22:12,028 --> 01:22:13,596 Lovett's experience was 1432 01:22:13,629 --> 01:22:16,632 the confirmation he needed to write his report for the Navy. 1433 01:22:16,665 --> 01:22:19,702 He was called to headquarters for a conference. 1434 01:22:19,735 --> 01:22:22,638 And as he packed his bags on April 11, 1435 01:22:22,671 --> 01:22:26,075 word arrived that the big stunt over Zeebrugge 1436 01:22:26,109 --> 01:22:28,177 was to be flown that night. 1437 01:22:28,211 --> 01:22:30,346 Roy Allan asked his friend to fly one more 1438 01:22:30,379 --> 01:22:33,049 mission in The Evening Star. 1439 01:22:33,082 --> 01:22:35,051 John Roy Allen thought of Lovett 1440 01:22:35,084 --> 01:22:36,719 as kind of a good luck charm. 1441 01:22:36,752 --> 01:22:42,358 When he flew with Lovett, Allan said, we always came through. 1442 01:22:42,391 --> 01:22:45,361 Well, Lovett was called back to headquarters. 1443 01:22:45,394 --> 01:22:47,630 Allan pleaded for him to stay, but he couldn't. 1444 01:22:47,663 --> 01:22:49,132 He had to leave. 1445 01:22:49,165 --> 01:22:51,400 That night, on the only mission 1446 01:22:51,434 --> 01:22:55,071 of Allan's on which Lovett did not fly, 1447 01:22:55,104 --> 01:22:58,107 The Evening Star was shot down over the North Sea 1448 01:22:58,141 --> 01:22:59,575 and Roy Allan was drowned. 1449 01:23:04,213 --> 01:23:05,314 Lovett wrote to Adele-- 1450 01:23:08,517 --> 01:23:10,619 Isn't it ghastly? 1451 01:23:10,653 --> 01:23:15,458 What luck and what misfortune on my part. 1452 01:23:15,491 --> 01:23:17,560 I wish to God I'd been along. 1453 01:23:17,593 --> 01:23:22,631 Maybe I could have saved him, or at least tried. 1454 01:23:22,665 --> 01:23:25,401 Well, the best of us go first, again proved. 1455 01:23:33,742 --> 01:23:36,345 By the winter of 1918, 1456 01:23:36,379 --> 01:23:39,115 German headquarters realized that they had backed themselves 1457 01:23:39,148 --> 01:23:41,517 into quite a corner. 1458 01:23:41,550 --> 01:23:46,422 The United States was pouring manpower into Europe at a rate 1459 01:23:46,455 --> 01:23:49,492 that they had believed to be impossible. 1460 01:23:49,525 --> 01:23:53,162 In addition, the submarine offensive, 1461 01:23:53,196 --> 01:23:57,500 which had begun with such promise in the spring of 1917, 1462 01:23:57,533 --> 01:24:01,704 while still sinking a large number of ships, 1463 01:24:01,737 --> 01:24:05,308 had been completely unable to stem the flow of men, 1464 01:24:05,341 --> 01:24:07,776 munitions, and supplies. 1465 01:24:07,810 --> 01:24:10,779 Germany threw all they had into Operation 1466 01:24:10,813 --> 01:24:14,450 Michael in late March 1918. 1467 01:24:14,483 --> 01:24:16,485 The attack was directed at the British 1468 01:24:16,519 --> 01:24:18,521 and it took them by surprise. 1469 01:24:18,554 --> 01:24:21,557 Immediately, all the British flying units 1470 01:24:21,590 --> 01:24:24,627 along the front jumped into action 1471 01:24:24,660 --> 01:24:28,531 and began to sustain high casualties. 1472 01:24:28,564 --> 01:24:32,368 A shortage of combat pilots very quickly emerged. 1473 01:24:34,770 --> 01:24:36,472 The commander at Dunkirk 1474 01:24:36,505 --> 01:24:40,443 volunteered the station's top pilots, Ingalls, MacLeish, 1475 01:24:40,476 --> 01:24:43,512 and Shorty Smith, to fill the vacancies 1476 01:24:43,546 --> 01:24:48,851 in number 213 squadron RAF patrolling the coast of France 1477 01:24:48,884 --> 01:24:50,853 and Belgium. 1478 01:24:50,886 --> 01:24:55,891 For the unit members, this was their moment at last. 1479 01:24:55,924 --> 01:24:57,893 The moment for which they'd left school, 1480 01:24:57,926 --> 01:25:01,397 for which they had trained, and for which they had said 1481 01:25:01,430 --> 01:25:05,368 goodbye to their friends and families. 1482 01:25:05,401 --> 01:25:08,437 The young Yale flyers had been waiting 1483 01:25:08,471 --> 01:25:12,508 for a year for exactly this opportunity. 1484 01:25:12,541 --> 01:25:15,178 They couldn't wait to get at the Germans. 1485 01:25:15,211 --> 01:25:17,846 They couldn't wait to get out over lines. 1486 01:25:17,880 --> 01:25:20,649 In their diaries and their letters home, 1487 01:25:20,683 --> 01:25:22,418 they talked about the excitement, 1488 01:25:22,451 --> 01:25:23,886 they talked about the danger, they 1489 01:25:23,919 --> 01:25:27,623 talked about the fear, the nerves of meeting 1490 01:25:27,656 --> 01:25:29,825 the enemy for the first time. 1491 01:25:29,858 --> 01:25:34,297 An American pilot in the spring of 1918 would be joining 1492 01:25:34,330 --> 01:25:38,434 a well-developed air force, a well-developed fighter 1493 01:25:38,467 --> 01:25:41,404 technique, and he would be, unfortunately, 1494 01:25:41,437 --> 01:25:45,174 fighting some of the very best pilots that the Germans had 1495 01:25:45,208 --> 01:25:47,210 in their best airplanes. 1496 01:25:47,243 --> 01:25:48,811 Though none of the Yale flyers 1497 01:25:48,844 --> 01:25:52,915 shot a plane out of the sky that April, all of them 1498 01:25:52,948 --> 01:25:54,883 were under fire. 1499 01:25:54,917 --> 01:25:56,619 Dave Ingalls told me 1500 01:25:56,652 --> 01:25:59,455 that the way that you identified somebody on your tail 1501 01:25:59,488 --> 01:26:01,624 was the fact that you suddenly saw tracers coming out 1502 01:26:01,657 --> 01:26:03,158 on either side of the airplane. 1503 01:26:09,965 --> 01:26:12,868 And that's got to be, get your attention 1504 01:26:12,901 --> 01:26:15,704 in a fairly significant way. 1505 01:26:15,738 --> 01:26:17,906 Tracers also got Kenney MacLeish's attention 1506 01:26:17,940 --> 01:26:21,910 in his Sopwith Camel during an attack on Zeebrugge. 1507 01:26:21,944 --> 01:26:24,647 It was MacLeish's first major sortie. 1508 01:26:27,816 --> 01:26:30,386 I'm so happy I can't even see straight. 1509 01:26:30,419 --> 01:26:31,987 I'm actually on fighting patrols, 1510 01:26:32,020 --> 01:26:34,823 and I actually fly over Hun land. 1511 01:26:34,857 --> 01:26:36,759 You should have seen me on my first patrol. 1512 01:26:36,792 --> 01:26:38,394 I'll never forget it. 1513 01:26:38,427 --> 01:26:40,363 I never knew what excitement was until I 1514 01:26:40,396 --> 01:26:43,532 got into some hot Archie fire the other day 1515 01:26:43,566 --> 01:26:47,803 and then had to scrap with some Huns. 1516 01:26:47,836 --> 01:26:50,706 It gives one a real thrill to realize 1517 01:26:50,739 --> 01:26:55,578 that they're shooting honest to goodness bullets at you. 1518 01:26:55,611 --> 01:26:57,313 But it's simply glorious, and I wouldn't 1519 01:26:57,346 --> 01:26:59,348 have it changed for any job on earth, 1520 01:26:59,382 --> 01:27:02,285 in spite of the torture from cold on high patrol. 1521 01:27:05,388 --> 01:27:07,956 I'll write more when I thaw out. 1522 01:27:07,990 --> 01:27:10,293 As the plans for the Northern Bombing Group 1523 01:27:10,326 --> 01:27:12,761 began to come together, the US decided 1524 01:27:12,795 --> 01:27:15,898 that it wasn't going to devote resources 1525 01:27:15,931 --> 01:27:19,268 that were going to Dunkirk, a very exposed spot 1526 01:27:19,302 --> 01:27:21,837 where it was very difficult to carry out operations. 1527 01:27:21,870 --> 01:27:24,840 The US decided that it was going to devote 1528 01:27:24,873 --> 01:27:27,676 all means it could to create the strategic bomber 1529 01:27:27,710 --> 01:27:30,579 force under Bob Lovett. 1530 01:27:30,613 --> 01:27:32,515 In the meanwhile, it was quite clear 1531 01:27:32,548 --> 01:27:37,286 that Di Gates was going to lose his command at Dunkirk. 1532 01:27:37,320 --> 01:27:42,391 But Bob Lovett, fellow Bonesman, classmate, friend, 1533 01:27:42,425 --> 01:27:45,828 Yale unit member, but also a rival. 1534 01:27:45,861 --> 01:27:48,564 There was always this tension between them. 1535 01:27:48,597 --> 01:27:52,968 Bob Lovett the savvy one, the fashionable one, 1536 01:27:53,001 --> 01:27:55,838 the socially suave man. 1537 01:27:55,871 --> 01:27:59,308 Di Gates the football player, the quiet one, 1538 01:27:59,342 --> 01:28:03,078 withdrawn, a little bit shy. 1539 01:28:03,111 --> 01:28:07,616 So Di Gates wrote a letter home saying that Bob Lovett, 1540 01:28:07,650 --> 01:28:09,051 he's conceited. 1541 01:28:09,084 --> 01:28:11,987 He makes his plans and then he just carries them out 1542 01:28:12,020 --> 01:28:15,591 and leaves us out of them. 1543 01:28:15,624 --> 01:28:18,327 Dear Trubee, I wish you could see Bob 1544 01:28:18,361 --> 01:28:20,028 under these conditions. 1545 01:28:20,062 --> 01:28:22,865 He is absolutely incomprehensible. 1546 01:28:22,898 --> 01:28:25,501 He almost refuses to associate with us. 1547 01:28:25,534 --> 01:28:29,638 And when he does, he is so aloof that it makes me very sick. 1548 01:28:29,672 --> 01:28:35,378 He is about 10 times worse than he ever was in college. 1549 01:28:35,411 --> 01:28:37,780 Lovett was faced with bigger problems than hurt 1550 01:28:37,813 --> 01:28:40,583 feelings over his secrecy. 1551 01:28:40,616 --> 01:28:42,451 If he was going to help mount the largest 1552 01:28:42,485 --> 01:28:45,020 aerial mission in history, he needed 1553 01:28:45,053 --> 01:28:48,624 to find planes and pilots now. 1554 01:28:48,657 --> 01:28:51,427 The delivery, as promised, of American 1555 01:28:51,460 --> 01:28:54,963 built Liberty engines and DH-4 and H-16 bombers 1556 01:28:54,997 --> 01:28:59,067 was months behind schedule, and the British Handley-Pages 1557 01:28:59,101 --> 01:29:01,370 were overtaxed. 1558 01:29:01,404 --> 01:29:03,539 Lovett would have to look further afield. 1559 01:29:06,174 --> 01:29:09,378 As the Germans spring offensive was slowly beaten back, 1560 01:29:09,412 --> 01:29:12,147 he traveled to Italy where he met manufacturer Gianni 1561 01:29:12,180 --> 01:29:13,849 Caproni. 1562 01:29:13,882 --> 01:29:18,587 Lovett was impressed with his Caproni Ca.3. 1563 01:29:18,621 --> 01:29:21,524 The original model of the aircraft were excellent. 1564 01:29:21,557 --> 01:29:24,527 They were very effective heavy bombers. 1565 01:29:24,560 --> 01:29:28,797 Signor Caproni quickly built a larger model, the Ca.5, 1566 01:29:28,831 --> 01:29:30,466 with almost double the horsepower 1567 01:29:30,499 --> 01:29:33,135 and double the bomb carrying capacity. 1568 01:29:33,168 --> 01:29:35,671 The US Army and Navy send a number of pilots, 1569 01:29:35,704 --> 01:29:38,073 including members of the First Yale Unit, 1570 01:29:38,106 --> 01:29:41,043 to ferry them over the Alps to France. 1571 01:29:41,076 --> 01:29:44,647 It was the Northern Bombing Group's first aerial operation 1572 01:29:44,680 --> 01:29:47,082 with its own personnel, and it would 1573 01:29:47,115 --> 01:29:50,886 be the closest the unit would come to uniting for a mission. 1574 01:29:50,919 --> 01:29:56,592 Harry Davison, Trubee's brother, Reg Coombe, 1575 01:29:56,625 --> 01:30:00,963 Sam Walker all went to begin this process of ferrying 1576 01:30:00,996 --> 01:30:02,765 the Capronis. 1577 01:30:02,798 --> 01:30:05,968 Even before they managed to take off, a number of those planes 1578 01:30:06,001 --> 01:30:07,703 broke down. 1579 01:30:07,736 --> 01:30:10,673 After weeks of delays, they made their first hop 1580 01:30:10,706 --> 01:30:13,842 from Milan to Turin, and every one of the motors 1581 01:30:13,876 --> 01:30:15,511 had serious trouble. 1582 01:30:15,544 --> 01:30:18,146 Enough so, sabotage was suspected. 1583 01:30:18,180 --> 01:30:21,884 In truth, the engines had been rushed through production 1584 01:30:21,917 --> 01:30:25,020 and not up to wartime demands. 1585 01:30:25,053 --> 01:30:27,956 After many aborted take-offs, Sam Walker 1586 01:30:27,990 --> 01:30:31,059 reached the mountains only to crash his Caproni 1587 01:30:31,093 --> 01:30:32,561 in an alpine pass. 1588 01:30:32,595 --> 01:30:33,662 And they weren't really 1589 01:30:33,696 --> 01:30:34,930 set up for high altitude. 1590 01:30:34,963 --> 01:30:37,165 They had to get across the Alps. 1591 01:30:37,199 --> 01:30:39,835 And just getting up to 18,000 feet, 1592 01:30:39,868 --> 01:30:41,704 it would have been freezing cold. 1593 01:30:41,737 --> 01:30:43,772 The engines would have been misbehaving terribly. 1594 01:30:48,243 --> 01:30:52,247 Reg Coombe saw two pilots fall to their deaths, 1595 01:30:52,280 --> 01:30:54,116 and he tried to rescue two more when 1596 01:30:54,149 --> 01:30:56,852 their plane tipped over and caught on fire, 1597 01:30:56,885 --> 01:30:58,987 and they burned alive. 1598 01:30:59,021 --> 01:31:01,924 Coombe finally managed to get his plane through the mountain 1599 01:31:01,957 --> 01:31:04,993 passes, barely limping into France. 1600 01:31:05,027 --> 01:31:09,698 Of 17 Capronis, only eight made it to the Northern Bombing 1601 01:31:09,732 --> 01:31:11,500 Group base. 1602 01:31:11,534 --> 01:31:14,837 I think there were two bombing missions in total 1603 01:31:14,870 --> 01:31:16,939 that they were able to carry out. 1604 01:31:16,972 --> 01:31:19,107 I think one or both of the aircraft 1605 01:31:19,141 --> 01:31:22,044 crashed on their return. 1606 01:31:22,077 --> 01:31:27,215 The Caproni program was, in short, a fiasco. 1607 01:31:27,249 --> 01:31:29,785 But despite all the setbacks, Lovett's spirit 1608 01:31:29,818 --> 01:31:35,791 was still buoyed by his old friends and he plowed ahead. 1609 01:31:35,824 --> 01:31:37,159 I confess, I have never 1610 01:31:37,192 --> 01:31:40,128 had to face so many problems or troubles. 1611 01:31:40,162 --> 01:31:42,631 But the satisfaction of winning through and of seeing 1612 01:31:42,665 --> 01:31:44,767 the loyalty of your men is the greatest satisfaction 1613 01:31:44,800 --> 01:31:46,034 in the world. 1614 01:31:46,068 --> 01:31:48,236 In spite of lack of essentials, in spite 1615 01:31:48,270 --> 01:31:51,106 of the failure of machines, the whole crowd 1616 01:31:51,139 --> 01:31:54,677 are magnificent in their energy and spirit. 1617 01:31:54,710 --> 01:31:56,712 We have not reached our strength yet, 1618 01:31:56,745 --> 01:32:00,015 but the goal is within sight and the labor, thought, 1619 01:32:00,048 --> 01:32:03,218 and planning will someday bear fruit. 1620 01:32:03,251 --> 01:32:06,955 Lovett had particular praise for Di Gates, 1621 01:32:06,989 --> 01:32:08,657 as he told Trubee-- 1622 01:32:08,691 --> 01:32:11,627 Di has always played the man's part, 1623 01:32:11,660 --> 01:32:13,829 and all his friends over here accord him 1624 01:32:13,862 --> 01:32:17,232 every honor and all esteem, and no one 1625 01:32:17,265 --> 01:32:18,967 deserves it more than he. 1626 01:32:19,001 --> 01:32:21,203 Before the end of his tour at Dunkirk, 1627 01:32:21,236 --> 01:32:25,007 Gates proved himself in the face of battle. 1628 01:32:25,040 --> 01:32:27,876 A report came in that a Handley-Page bomber had 1629 01:32:27,910 --> 01:32:30,145 gone down offshore and within range 1630 01:32:30,178 --> 01:32:32,047 of German gun emplacements. 1631 01:32:32,080 --> 01:32:34,316 Without waiting for an escort, Gates 1632 01:32:34,349 --> 01:32:38,053 jumped in a Donnet-Denhaut flying boat and took off. 1633 01:32:38,086 --> 01:32:41,924 He found the downed aircraft with the flyers hanging 1634 01:32:41,957 --> 01:32:47,763 on either wing, landed his plane in heavy seas, 1635 01:32:47,796 --> 01:32:52,200 and managed to rescue both men and take off again. 1636 01:32:52,234 --> 01:32:54,937 For his heroism, Gates was awarded 1637 01:32:54,970 --> 01:32:57,773 the Distinguished Service Medal and the Distinguished Flying 1638 01:32:57,806 --> 01:32:59,241 Cross. 1639 01:32:59,274 --> 01:33:02,244 That same month, a second Distinguished Flying Cross 1640 01:33:02,277 --> 01:33:05,080 was awarded to another Yale unit member. 1641 01:33:05,113 --> 01:33:08,283 Between early August and the first week 1642 01:33:08,316 --> 01:33:12,621 of October 1918, David Ingalls spent 1643 01:33:12,655 --> 01:33:18,126 56 or 58 days with the RAF flying Camel missions. 1644 01:33:18,160 --> 01:33:22,164 He flew bombing missions, he flew escort missions, 1645 01:33:22,197 --> 01:33:24,332 he flew ground strafing missions, 1646 01:33:24,366 --> 01:33:27,703 he flew air to air combat. 1647 01:33:27,736 --> 01:33:30,005 And on September 15, returning home 1648 01:33:30,038 --> 01:33:33,909 after a daring raid on a German airbase, 1649 01:33:33,942 --> 01:33:36,945 he flew to his third kill. 1650 01:33:36,979 --> 01:33:39,281 I could see four or five Camels far ahead. 1651 01:33:39,314 --> 01:33:41,149 One turned back and joined me. 1652 01:33:41,183 --> 01:33:42,417 Smith. 1653 01:33:42,450 --> 01:33:45,688 So we tooted along easily at 7,000 feet. 1654 01:33:45,721 --> 01:33:49,157 Just then I saw five Huns over Zeebrugge, 1655 01:33:49,191 --> 01:33:52,294 but didn't think that they could see us. 1656 01:33:52,327 --> 01:33:53,929 Some people would 1657 01:33:53,962 --> 01:33:56,331 have a kind of sixth sense for how to hunt, 1658 01:33:56,364 --> 01:33:58,701 and I think he had that sixth sense. 1659 01:33:58,734 --> 01:33:59,935 Stay behind the clouds. 1660 01:33:59,968 --> 01:34:02,304 Stay high at important times. 1661 01:34:02,337 --> 01:34:06,341 And dive down on your target as quickly and efficiently as 1662 01:34:06,374 --> 01:34:09,712 you can, and not to spend a lot of time 1663 01:34:09,745 --> 01:34:12,815 down low where it's sort of fun, but maybe a little more 1664 01:34:12,848 --> 01:34:15,017 dangerous. 1665 01:34:15,050 --> 01:34:16,985 Anyway, I started to climb 1666 01:34:17,019 --> 01:34:19,822 and just then saw apparently a scout climbing out of Ostend, 1667 01:34:19,855 --> 01:34:24,760 perhaps to pick off the last Camel which was visible. 1668 01:34:24,793 --> 01:34:28,463 I waved at Smithy and headed in a bit, climbing. 1669 01:34:28,496 --> 01:34:31,967 In about four minutes, he saw us and turned east toward Ostend, 1670 01:34:32,000 --> 01:34:34,069 gliding. 1671 01:34:34,102 --> 01:34:36,839 We dived, firing at long range, but I got to about 100 1672 01:34:36,872 --> 01:34:39,174 yards before he hit the clouds at 2,000 feet 1673 01:34:39,207 --> 01:34:40,743 and got into good burst. 1674 01:34:40,776 --> 01:34:43,078 So did Smith. 1675 01:34:43,111 --> 01:34:47,115 He went through clouds at Ostend pier, sort of wallowing. 1676 01:34:47,149 --> 01:34:51,453 I dived through and came out just behind him. 1677 01:34:51,486 --> 01:34:53,756 He was driving steeply, so I opened at 50 yards 1678 01:34:53,789 --> 01:34:55,690 and saw flames and smoke come out. 1679 01:35:07,335 --> 01:35:08,837 Then I saw a lot of tracers from shore and beat it like hell, 1680 01:35:08,871 --> 01:35:11,139 meeting Smith above the clouds. 1681 01:35:11,173 --> 01:35:13,241 And then we went home. 1682 01:35:13,275 --> 01:35:14,843 And along the way, 1683 01:35:14,877 --> 01:35:16,444 David Ingalls managed to shoot down 1684 01:35:16,478 --> 01:35:23,786 at least four German airplanes and a couple of kite balloons, 1685 01:35:23,819 --> 01:35:26,855 earning the title of the Navy's only Ace 1686 01:35:26,889 --> 01:35:29,758 from the First World War. 1687 01:35:29,792 --> 01:35:32,027 For fighter pilots, the title of Ace 1688 01:35:32,060 --> 01:35:34,096 is just one of the most coveted titles 1689 01:35:34,129 --> 01:35:36,131 you can get because it means you've 1690 01:35:36,164 --> 01:35:41,303 shot down five or more enemy aircraft in air to air combat. 1691 01:35:41,336 --> 01:35:45,040 And so David S. Ingalls holds a place in naval aviation history 1692 01:35:45,073 --> 01:35:47,542 forever because he was the first naval aviator 1693 01:35:47,575 --> 01:35:51,379 to become an Ace in combat over the western front. 1694 01:35:51,413 --> 01:35:54,783 In awarding Ingalls the Distinguished Flying Cross, 1695 01:35:54,817 --> 01:35:57,786 a major of the British air staff wrote, 1696 01:35:57,820 --> 01:36:01,356 has helped to destroy two enemy airplanes 1697 01:36:01,389 --> 01:36:05,493 and once, single-handed, attacked six enemy machines, 1698 01:36:05,527 --> 01:36:08,230 driving one down damaged. 1699 01:36:08,263 --> 01:36:13,468 His keenness, courage, and utter disregard of danger 1700 01:36:13,501 --> 01:36:17,472 are exceptional and are an example to all. 1701 01:36:17,505 --> 01:36:21,476 He is one of the finest men this squadron ever had. 1702 01:36:21,509 --> 01:36:25,380 Finally, in early October 1918, 1703 01:36:25,413 --> 01:36:27,983 he was called back from the British 1704 01:36:28,016 --> 01:36:30,886 and he was assigned to be the chief flight 1705 01:36:30,919 --> 01:36:33,388 officer at Eastleigh. 1706 01:36:33,421 --> 01:36:39,194 MacLeish was then sent to take Ingalls' spot with 213 1707 01:36:39,227 --> 01:36:40,528 squadron. 1708 01:36:40,562 --> 01:36:42,464 But before the exchange of assignments 1709 01:36:42,497 --> 01:36:47,002 could take place, the unit received unsettling news. 1710 01:36:47,035 --> 01:36:49,004 In the very short period 1711 01:36:49,037 --> 01:36:51,940 that the members of the First Yale Unit who reached the front 1712 01:36:51,974 --> 01:36:56,378 were there, three members were killed very quickly. 1713 01:36:56,411 --> 01:37:01,616 Al Sturtevant, Curtis Read, and there was to be one more. 1714 01:37:01,649 --> 01:37:05,453 Di Gates and several others managed 1715 01:37:05,487 --> 01:37:10,926 to get themselves assigned to a French Escadrille that 1716 01:37:10,959 --> 01:37:13,962 was operating right nearby. 1717 01:37:13,996 --> 01:37:17,900 And it was flying with this Escadrille, the Escadrille St. 1718 01:37:17,933 --> 01:37:21,136 Pol, that he was out on a mission, 1719 01:37:21,169 --> 01:37:23,371 I believe on the 4th of October. 1720 01:37:23,405 --> 01:37:27,609 Got involved with superior numbers of German aircraft. 1721 01:37:44,059 --> 01:37:49,031 He suffered engine failure and was 1722 01:37:49,064 --> 01:37:53,301 forced to land in a field in occupied Belgium. 1723 01:38:05,313 --> 01:38:07,082 Telegrams and letters quickly 1724 01:38:07,115 --> 01:38:08,984 made the rounds of the unit members 1725 01:38:09,017 --> 01:38:10,285 with updates by the day. 1726 01:38:14,990 --> 01:38:18,460 Dear Trubs, I cannot believe that one so full 1727 01:38:18,493 --> 01:38:20,628 of life as Di could have lost it, 1728 01:38:20,662 --> 01:38:23,331 so we are stretching every effort to get word of him 1729 01:38:23,365 --> 01:38:26,134 in the prison camps. 1730 01:38:26,168 --> 01:38:27,936 Kenney MacLeish thought 1731 01:38:27,970 --> 01:38:33,441 of Di Gates, as he said, the one man I love other than Archie. 1732 01:38:33,475 --> 01:38:35,710 Di was somebody he'd grown up with. 1733 01:38:35,743 --> 01:38:38,280 Di was the one who had brought him into the First Yale 1734 01:38:38,313 --> 01:38:42,951 Unit where he really discovered both his manhood as a pilot 1735 01:38:42,985 --> 01:38:46,388 and the woman he loved. 1736 01:38:46,421 --> 01:38:49,024 Dearest old pal, 1737 01:38:49,057 --> 01:38:50,692 I haven't dared write for the last few days 1738 01:38:50,725 --> 01:38:53,095 because I've just been hoping against hope 1739 01:38:53,128 --> 01:38:58,166 that poor old Di would show up, but I guess 1740 01:38:58,200 --> 01:39:00,168 that the chances are slim. 1741 01:39:00,202 --> 01:39:05,573 Oh, pal, of all the men on earth that it's hard to lose, 1742 01:39:05,607 --> 01:39:07,675 I'm just crushed. 1743 01:39:07,709 --> 01:39:12,580 I've never, never taken anything so badly. 1744 01:39:12,614 --> 01:39:16,484 So much of who he was was tied to Di Gates, 1745 01:39:16,518 --> 01:39:22,057 and he went to the front intent on revenge. 1746 01:39:22,090 --> 01:39:25,593 On October 9, he wrote a letter to Trubee. 1747 01:39:25,627 --> 01:39:27,695 I still feel sure he's all right, 1748 01:39:27,729 --> 01:39:30,398 although I'm weakening as time passes. 1749 01:39:30,432 --> 01:39:32,500 He's too dear a friend to lose. 1750 01:39:32,534 --> 01:39:35,703 Some of those dirty bastards will pay me. 1751 01:39:35,737 --> 01:39:38,073 I'm going out to the front in a day or so, 1752 01:39:38,106 --> 01:39:40,542 and I'll get even with somebody. 1753 01:39:40,575 --> 01:39:43,178 Underneath his roiling emotions, 1754 01:39:43,211 --> 01:39:47,082 MacLeish was philosophical, and he'd often 1755 01:39:47,115 --> 01:39:48,550 shared his thoughts in his letters 1756 01:39:48,583 --> 01:39:50,718 to his family and friends back home. 1757 01:39:50,752 --> 01:39:53,455 I'm going to the front tomorrow. 1758 01:39:53,488 --> 01:39:55,723 I don't think anything will happen to me. 1759 01:39:55,757 --> 01:39:59,261 If it should be my lot to make the supreme sacrifice, 1760 01:39:59,294 --> 01:40:02,030 you'll know that I did it gladly and that I 1761 01:40:02,064 --> 01:40:04,732 bought life's most marvelous reward, 1762 01:40:04,766 --> 01:40:08,570 honor at a dirt cheap price. 1763 01:40:08,603 --> 01:40:11,806 And that I was happy, ever so happy, 1764 01:40:11,839 --> 01:40:14,142 that it was granted to me, unworthy 1765 01:40:14,176 --> 01:40:19,347 as I am, to give up my life for my friends who, fundamentally, 1766 01:40:19,381 --> 01:40:19,781 are my ideals. 1767 01:40:23,818 --> 01:40:26,188 His very first day there, he 1768 01:40:26,221 --> 01:40:28,423 went out for a mission in the morning, 1769 01:40:28,456 --> 01:40:32,026 shot down a German plane, got his first taste of revenge. 1770 01:40:41,269 --> 01:40:43,638 It was his first kill. 1771 01:40:43,671 --> 01:40:46,608 He came back to the base, refueled, 1772 01:40:46,641 --> 01:40:48,776 went out on another mission. 1773 01:40:48,810 --> 01:40:51,479 He promptly found himself caught up in a dogfight. 1774 01:40:54,382 --> 01:40:58,220 He was flying with several others of his squadron. 1775 01:40:58,253 --> 01:41:02,457 And they were going along and all of a sudden off to one 1776 01:41:02,490 --> 01:41:05,727 side, a group of several German fighters showed up. 1777 01:41:15,503 --> 01:41:17,472 And Ken peeled off and went after them. 1778 01:41:17,505 --> 01:41:18,706 This has always been a mystery. 1779 01:41:18,740 --> 01:41:20,842 Why would he have done that? 1780 01:41:20,875 --> 01:41:23,578 He was outgunned, no question about it, 1781 01:41:23,611 --> 01:41:25,713 and he just took off after them. 1782 01:41:25,747 --> 01:41:27,115 Maybe he was mad that morning. 1783 01:41:27,149 --> 01:41:28,616 I don't know. 1784 01:41:28,650 --> 01:41:31,353 Maybe he just did figured, this is my time 1785 01:41:31,386 --> 01:41:34,456 to knock down a couple of these things. 1786 01:41:34,489 --> 01:41:36,524 Obviously, he was not thinking about his own safety. 1787 01:41:39,561 --> 01:41:41,896 He was last seen facing off 1788 01:41:41,929 --> 01:41:45,767 one man against seven Germans. 1789 01:41:58,546 --> 01:42:00,182 When Kenney MacLeish 1790 01:42:00,215 --> 01:42:03,585 went missing on the 14th of October, 1791 01:42:03,618 --> 01:42:05,553 there was a great deal of mystery 1792 01:42:05,587 --> 01:42:08,656 surrounding his ultimate fate. 1793 01:42:08,690 --> 01:42:12,927 There were reports coming back from the front 1794 01:42:12,960 --> 01:42:17,865 that American Navy pilots had been captured. 1795 01:42:17,899 --> 01:42:22,604 There was the possibility that he had been taken prisoner. 1796 01:42:22,637 --> 01:42:26,374 Letters and telegrams passed back and forth 1797 01:42:26,408 --> 01:42:28,610 in which everyone tried to reassure 1798 01:42:28,643 --> 01:42:30,512 each other that hope remained. 1799 01:42:33,381 --> 01:42:40,522 But weeks passed and then months passed, and there was no news. 1800 01:42:40,555 --> 01:42:43,425 But unbeknownst to the devastated unit, 1801 01:42:43,458 --> 01:42:46,261 Di Gates was still alive. 1802 01:42:46,294 --> 01:42:49,664 His engine had been shot up by three Fokker DVIIs 1803 01:42:49,697 --> 01:42:51,533 and he found an open field in which 1804 01:42:51,566 --> 01:42:55,237 to land after pushing his Spad into what 1805 01:42:55,270 --> 01:42:56,438 he called a screaming dive. 1806 01:42:59,807 --> 01:43:01,909 The Spad, nose down, bounced hard 1807 01:43:01,943 --> 01:43:05,413 on the starboard wheel and then flipped over on its back. 1808 01:43:05,447 --> 01:43:08,216 The next thing I remember was the smell of gasoline 1809 01:43:08,250 --> 01:43:10,485 and a moist feeling on my shirt and back. 1810 01:43:10,518 --> 01:43:13,221 A shot rang out and brought me back to the present. 1811 01:43:13,255 --> 01:43:14,956 A flood of enemy soldiers appeared 1812 01:43:14,989 --> 01:43:17,525 from the corner of the field, so I 1813 01:43:17,559 --> 01:43:20,462 reached into my pocket for a box of matches 1814 01:43:20,495 --> 01:43:22,330 that I kept to light a favorite cigar. 1815 01:43:22,364 --> 01:43:23,965 I touched the flame to the canvas, 1816 01:43:23,998 --> 01:43:27,302 and the flame quickly became engulfed in flames. 1817 01:43:27,335 --> 01:43:32,540 I turned my back on the bonfire and walked away slowly. 1818 01:43:32,574 --> 01:43:34,442 Gates was captured and wined 1819 01:43:34,476 --> 01:43:38,913 and dined by German intelligence at a house in Ghent, Belgium. 1820 01:43:38,946 --> 01:43:42,417 But after three days of not giving up any information, 1821 01:43:42,450 --> 01:43:46,488 he was loaded onto a train car bound for a prison camp. 1822 01:43:46,521 --> 01:43:48,456 He was being transported back 1823 01:43:48,490 --> 01:43:52,260 to a prisoner of war camp and he found himself 1824 01:43:52,294 --> 01:43:54,296 in the lavatory of the train. 1825 01:43:54,329 --> 01:43:58,800 And he found that on the wall was a train map with all 1826 01:43:58,833 --> 01:44:01,269 the stations that the train was going 1827 01:44:01,303 --> 01:44:06,541 to and the different railroad lines, 1828 01:44:06,574 --> 01:44:09,311 and he managed to get that off the wall. 1829 01:44:09,344 --> 01:44:11,913 And he determined that at that particular moment in time, 1830 01:44:11,946 --> 01:44:15,350 he might be closest to the Swiss border. 1831 01:44:15,383 --> 01:44:16,751 So he made an escape. 1832 01:44:16,784 --> 01:44:18,953 Going through a tunnel, escaped out 1833 01:44:18,986 --> 01:44:23,758 of the toilet window which, somehow, 1834 01:44:23,791 --> 01:44:26,628 he managed to squeeze through. 1835 01:44:26,661 --> 01:44:28,496 He jumped out of the train 1836 01:44:28,530 --> 01:44:31,032 with the scrap of the map with him 1837 01:44:31,065 --> 01:44:34,636 and made his way towards the border, traveling at night 1838 01:44:34,669 --> 01:44:37,505 so he wouldn't be seen. 1839 01:44:37,539 --> 01:44:39,307 I made 20 miles the first night, 1840 01:44:39,341 --> 01:44:40,875 but I didn't have enough food or water 1841 01:44:40,908 --> 01:44:42,744 and I could only manage half that distance 1842 01:44:42,777 --> 01:44:44,412 the following night. 1843 01:44:44,446 --> 01:44:46,714 I would hide during the day, but it was cold 1844 01:44:46,748 --> 01:44:48,950 and I was only able to sleep sporadically. 1845 01:44:48,983 --> 01:44:51,486 I would wait until night to check my progress by climbing 1846 01:44:51,519 --> 01:44:53,321 the signposts along the roadway and feel 1847 01:44:53,355 --> 01:44:55,790 the impression of the letters with my fingertips 1848 01:44:55,823 --> 01:44:58,593 as if I was reading Braille. 1849 01:44:58,626 --> 01:45:00,895 Unfortunately, in climbing these poles, 1850 01:45:00,928 --> 01:45:03,831 he got a lot of splinters in his inside leg 1851 01:45:03,865 --> 01:45:10,004 and he got a blood infection and got quite sick. 1852 01:45:10,037 --> 01:45:12,740 I took a wrong turn at a fork in the tracks. 1853 01:45:12,774 --> 01:45:14,576 At first, light was breaking over the roofs 1854 01:45:14,609 --> 01:45:16,378 of the houses in the next town. 1855 01:45:16,411 --> 01:45:18,846 I was unsure I could withstand another night out in the cold. 1856 01:45:18,880 --> 01:45:21,048 I decided to take a chance that no one would be awake 1857 01:45:21,082 --> 01:45:23,418 this early and made my way through the center of town 1858 01:45:23,451 --> 01:45:24,886 rather than circling around it. 1859 01:45:24,919 --> 01:45:27,655 Hurrying past the station, I found a burst of energy 1860 01:45:27,689 --> 01:45:30,558 as I rounded a corner and ran into the path of a sentry who 1861 01:45:30,592 --> 01:45:31,893 had just come on duty. 1862 01:45:31,926 --> 01:45:35,363 He just came around the corner at the wrong time 1863 01:45:35,397 --> 01:45:38,400 that a sentry had just come on duty, 1864 01:45:38,433 --> 01:45:41,369 also was coming around the corner. 1865 01:45:41,403 --> 01:45:43,104 He could then see that there was actually 1866 01:45:43,137 --> 01:45:48,410 a break in the barbed wire fence only three yards away, 1867 01:45:48,443 --> 01:45:51,513 and the other side was Switzerland. 1868 01:45:51,546 --> 01:45:54,516 Gates was taken to the American officers POW 1869 01:45:54,549 --> 01:45:59,821 camp at Villingen on November 7th and sentenced to 21 days 1870 01:45:59,854 --> 01:46:03,057 solitary confinement. 1871 01:46:03,090 --> 01:46:04,926 He would not have to stay that long. 1872 01:46:09,163 --> 01:46:16,471 On the morning of November 11, 1918, the armistice was signed. 1873 01:46:16,504 --> 01:46:19,741 After four long years, Germany and Austria-Hungary 1874 01:46:19,774 --> 01:46:21,409 were defeated. 1875 01:46:21,443 --> 01:46:23,911 A virtual surrender that ended hostilities 1876 01:46:23,945 --> 01:46:27,014 between the warring nations. 1877 01:46:27,048 --> 01:46:29,150 Fairly quickly, the unit received word 1878 01:46:29,183 --> 01:46:32,820 that, indeed, Di Gates had been a prisoner of war. 1879 01:46:32,854 --> 01:46:35,790 Di Gates, shortly after the armistice, 1880 01:46:35,823 --> 01:46:37,525 one of the first things he did was 1881 01:46:37,559 --> 01:46:42,129 send off a postcard to Trubee Davison saying, I'm fine. 1882 01:46:42,163 --> 01:46:45,600 Will you be my roommate in New Haven? 1883 01:46:45,633 --> 01:46:49,771 So finally, they knew he was alive. 1884 01:46:49,804 --> 01:46:51,873 The word went out among all the members. 1885 01:46:51,906 --> 01:46:54,175 There was elation among them. 1886 01:46:54,208 --> 01:46:56,978 No word came from Kenney. 1887 01:46:57,011 --> 01:47:02,049 The longer they waited, the gloomier the outlook became. 1888 01:47:02,083 --> 01:47:05,553 They went searching for his aircraft. 1889 01:47:05,587 --> 01:47:07,889 No sign of it still. 1890 01:47:07,922 --> 01:47:10,492 At some point early in 1919, 1891 01:47:10,525 --> 01:47:12,994 after the armistice, a Belgian farmer 1892 01:47:13,027 --> 01:47:15,830 decided it was now safe to get back to his farm. 1893 01:47:15,863 --> 01:47:20,635 Walked back and there, lying in the barnyard, was uncle Kenny. 1894 01:47:20,668 --> 01:47:21,636 Not a very pretty sight. 1895 01:47:21,669 --> 01:47:23,805 The rats had taken his face. 1896 01:47:23,838 --> 01:47:26,508 But his papers were with him and it was perfectly clear 1897 01:47:26,541 --> 01:47:29,744 that he was who he was. 1898 01:47:29,777 --> 01:47:33,080 Because of the irregularity of the mails, 1899 01:47:33,114 --> 01:47:36,584 word of MacLeish's remains did not reach the states 1900 01:47:36,618 --> 01:47:39,687 until late January. 1901 01:47:39,721 --> 01:47:42,557 Di Gates learned of the discovery while in London 1902 01:47:42,590 --> 01:47:44,826 waiting for passage home. 1903 01:47:44,859 --> 01:47:47,929 He sent a telegram to Priscilla. 1904 01:47:47,962 --> 01:47:51,065 30 January, 1919. 1905 01:47:51,098 --> 01:47:53,267 Archie just told me a very sad, definite news 1906 01:47:53,300 --> 01:47:55,670 concerning Kenney. 1907 01:47:55,703 --> 01:47:57,705 My own grief helps me to appreciate yours 1908 01:47:57,739 --> 01:47:59,574 to some extent. 1909 01:47:59,607 --> 01:48:01,208 Will return to New York in morning Friday 1910 01:48:01,242 --> 01:48:03,177 and am looking forward to seeing you. 1911 01:48:03,210 --> 01:48:06,514 My deepest sympathies. 1912 01:48:06,548 --> 01:48:08,550 When I heard my grandfather speak 1913 01:48:08,583 --> 01:48:12,286 about World War I, which wasn't frequently, 1914 01:48:12,319 --> 01:48:15,189 but it would always be in the presence of another survivor 1915 01:48:15,222 --> 01:48:20,962 usually, they often spoke about Kenney MacLeish. 1916 01:48:20,995 --> 01:48:25,266 Somehow, he was an idol, a star. 1917 01:48:25,299 --> 01:48:31,873 And his loss in World War I, they all took very hard. 1918 01:48:31,906 --> 01:48:36,277 He was able to channel the anger and the disappointment, 1919 01:48:36,310 --> 01:48:40,114 the loss, into something that would propel them forward 1920 01:48:40,147 --> 01:48:42,283 in a positive way. 1921 01:48:42,316 --> 01:48:45,319 A year after MacLeish's disappearance, 1922 01:48:45,352 --> 01:48:48,255 Lovett wrote a letter to Ken's brother, Archibald, 1923 01:48:48,289 --> 01:48:51,793 describing Kenney's reaction to Lovett's offer of a plum 1924 01:48:51,826 --> 01:48:54,562 position as squadron commander. 1925 01:48:54,596 --> 01:48:57,331 Dear Archie, he said he was tickled stiff 1926 01:48:57,364 --> 01:48:59,801 and that he would, of course, come over and do 1927 01:48:59,834 --> 01:49:03,838 the best he could but, honest, Bob, it won't fit me. 1928 01:49:03,871 --> 01:49:06,040 He said that he appreciated the honor and all that sort 1929 01:49:06,073 --> 01:49:09,043 of thing, and that removal from active flying duty 1930 01:49:09,076 --> 01:49:12,680 looked pretty good when he thought of the end of the war. 1931 01:49:12,714 --> 01:49:15,282 But unless I asked it as a very special favor, 1932 01:49:15,316 --> 01:49:18,653 he'd rather not take it. 1933 01:49:18,686 --> 01:49:20,788 He wanted to fight. 1934 01:49:20,822 --> 01:49:23,591 Couldn't stand not being in it every minute. 1935 01:49:23,625 --> 01:49:26,728 Would curl up and blow away if they kept him behind the lines. 1936 01:49:26,761 --> 01:49:29,030 And that a single-seater was his idea of a holiday, 1937 01:49:29,063 --> 01:49:31,032 and all he wanted. 1938 01:49:31,065 --> 01:49:34,769 I believe he was the best we had in the line of a pilot, 1939 01:49:34,802 --> 01:49:37,605 and I don't want a finer pal than a man who 1940 01:49:37,639 --> 01:49:44,178 can give up everything for his ideal of service and honor. 1941 01:49:51,418 --> 01:49:53,621 Over 19 months in Europe, 1942 01:49:53,655 --> 01:49:57,825 US naval aviation flew 22,000 sorties patrolling 1943 01:49:57,859 --> 01:50:02,163 over a million nautical miles, dropping over 1944 01:50:02,196 --> 01:50:06,701 100 tons of high explosives on enemy targets. 1945 01:50:06,734 --> 01:50:08,870 Though the full weight of the Northern Bombing Group 1946 01:50:08,903 --> 01:50:12,940 was not brought to bear by the time of the armistice, 1947 01:50:12,974 --> 01:50:16,844 its pilots were busy serving with Navy, Marine, and RAF 1948 01:50:16,878 --> 01:50:19,981 units while its code and tactics would live on 1949 01:50:20,014 --> 01:50:22,717 through the century. 1950 01:50:22,750 --> 01:50:27,054 Among the Yale Unit members were a medal of honor nominee, 1951 01:50:27,088 --> 01:50:30,257 two recipients of the Distinguished Flying Cross, 1952 01:50:30,291 --> 01:50:33,728 three recipients of the Distinguished Service Medal, 1953 01:50:33,761 --> 01:50:38,866 and 11 recipients of the Navy Cross. 1954 01:50:38,900 --> 01:50:41,068 And really, the legacy of the Yale Unit 1955 01:50:41,102 --> 01:50:45,406 is not only in that performance in combat, the flying aces, 1956 01:50:45,439 --> 01:50:50,077 and the ones that sacrificed their lives for their nation, 1957 01:50:50,111 --> 01:50:54,682 it's the ones that returned from World War I 1958 01:50:54,716 --> 01:50:58,385 and just really maintain that commitment to their nation 1959 01:50:58,419 --> 01:51:01,022 because they serve at the highest levels of government 1960 01:51:01,055 --> 01:51:04,025 and in the war department, in the Navy department, 1961 01:51:04,058 --> 01:51:07,328 and then, eventually, in the Department of Defense. 1962 01:51:07,361 --> 01:51:12,734 So they are the ones that really drive US naval aviation, really 1963 01:51:12,767 --> 01:51:14,301 US military policy. 1964 01:51:14,335 --> 01:51:17,371 I mean, from the lowest level when they are junior pilots 1965 01:51:17,404 --> 01:51:20,407 all the way to the highest levels of command 1966 01:51:20,441 --> 01:51:23,277 into the Cold War era. 1967 01:51:23,310 --> 01:51:27,014 So it's really an amazing journey of a truly unique group 1968 01:51:27,048 --> 01:51:28,049 of individuals. 1969 01:51:32,987 --> 01:51:35,990 David Ingalls became assistant secretary of the Navy 1970 01:51:36,023 --> 01:51:37,424 for Air. 1971 01:51:37,458 --> 01:51:40,194 During World War II, he surveyed the Pacific Islands 1972 01:51:40,227 --> 01:51:43,464 for possible bases and supply routes and commanded Pearl 1973 01:51:43,497 --> 01:51:48,335 Harbor NAS, achieving the rank of Rear Admiral. 1974 01:51:48,369 --> 01:51:52,239 Trubee Davison became the first assistant secretary of War 1975 01:51:52,273 --> 01:51:55,242 for Air, went on to serve as president 1976 01:51:55,276 --> 01:51:58,780 of the Museum of Natural History for two decades, 1977 01:51:58,813 --> 01:52:03,384 and was the first personnel director for the CIA. 1978 01:52:03,417 --> 01:52:06,120 John Vorys became a 10 term congressman 1979 01:52:06,153 --> 01:52:09,791 from Ohio, and during World War II, again, 1980 01:52:09,824 --> 01:52:14,295 flew submarine patrols, this time over the Gulf of Mexico. 1981 01:52:14,328 --> 01:52:19,133 Erl Gould was re-activated into the Navy for World War II, 1982 01:52:19,166 --> 01:52:22,904 and during the Battle of Tarawa established a fully operational 1983 01:52:22,937 --> 01:52:28,542 airfield for which he was awarded the Legion of Merit. 1984 01:52:28,575 --> 01:52:33,380 Di Gates became president of New York Trust. 1985 01:52:33,414 --> 01:52:35,850 Gates served as under secretary of the Navy 1986 01:52:35,883 --> 01:52:38,820 for Air during the Second War, dividing his time 1987 01:52:38,853 --> 01:52:40,855 between Washington and the Pacific. 1988 01:52:43,424 --> 01:52:46,227 Robert Lovett was made assistant secretary of War 1989 01:52:46,260 --> 01:52:50,164 for Air, becoming one of the architects of strategic bombing 1990 01:52:50,197 --> 01:52:52,366 in World War II. 1991 01:52:52,399 --> 01:52:55,870 He went on to serve as President Harry Truman's acting secretary 1992 01:52:55,903 --> 01:52:58,305 of state during the Berlin airlift 1993 01:52:58,339 --> 01:53:02,844 and secretary of defense during the Korean War. 1994 01:53:02,877 --> 01:53:06,881 As one of the so-called wise men of governmental advisors, 1995 01:53:06,914 --> 01:53:10,117 Lovett would influence military and foreign policy 1996 01:53:10,151 --> 01:53:14,155 for most of the 20th century. 1997 01:53:14,188 --> 01:53:16,290 The men of the Yale Flying Club had 1998 01:53:16,323 --> 01:53:22,596 a sense of duty, honor, country, and they, they, 1999 01:53:22,629 --> 01:53:26,067 they felt they were privileged and had an obligation 2000 01:53:26,100 --> 01:53:32,439 to lead and take on the dangers inherent particularly 2001 01:53:32,473 --> 01:53:35,042 in a new technology and going to war. 2002 01:53:37,544 --> 01:53:39,446 They wanted to go fight for their country 2003 01:53:39,480 --> 01:53:44,285 because they felt, an their cultural background was, 2004 01:53:44,318 --> 01:53:49,423 there was a duty of service to, to one's country. 2005 01:53:49,456 --> 01:53:53,194 And those who were given much in privilege, much more 2006 01:53:53,227 --> 01:53:53,861 was expected. 2007 01:53:58,099 --> 01:54:01,302 50 years after the formation of the First Yale 2008 01:54:01,335 --> 01:54:06,040 Unit, in a ceremony at Peacock Point in 1966, 2009 01:54:06,073 --> 01:54:10,477 Trubee Davidson was finally honored with his Navy wings. 2010 01:54:10,511 --> 01:54:13,047 That was wonderful. 2011 01:54:20,955 --> 01:54:24,358 See, the Navy took us in as a group of younger brothers. 2012 01:54:24,391 --> 01:54:28,062 We weren't soldiers, or sailors, or airmen. 2013 01:54:28,095 --> 01:54:29,997 We had plenty of things to fight for. 2014 01:54:30,031 --> 01:54:32,967 And you could have the satisfaction of loyalty, 2015 01:54:33,000 --> 01:54:34,401 service, and doing something that you 2016 01:54:34,435 --> 01:54:35,937 believed in with a group of people 2017 01:54:35,970 --> 01:54:37,471 that you loved and respected. 2018 01:54:37,504 --> 01:54:38,539 That's what kept us going. 2019 01:54:38,572 --> 01:54:40,007 There's not a question about it. 2020 01:54:43,010 --> 01:54:46,013 The unit members left an inspirational legacy 2021 01:54:46,047 --> 01:54:47,614 as well. 2022 01:54:47,648 --> 01:54:51,085 Defined by their notion of service, their response 2023 01:54:51,118 --> 01:54:54,455 to the call to arms, dedication to their cause, 2024 01:54:54,488 --> 01:54:59,693 and undying loyalty to one another. 2025 01:54:59,726 --> 01:55:03,297 As Robert Lovett said of Kenneth MacLeish, 2026 01:55:03,330 --> 01:55:08,269 for sheer singleness of purpose, for real idealism 2027 01:55:08,302 --> 01:55:13,674 and for rare spirit, nothing I have ever heard can equal it. 165367

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