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#1
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Hi all,
I live near a fort called "Fort Brown" in Brownsville, Texas and there is an historical marker that reads, "'First Army US Warplane', on this spot was made the first flight of US Army plane to be fired on in armed hostilities on April 20, 1915." Then it goes on about how the planes were a group of signal corps officers who were out scouting the area near the fort due to heightened Mexican hostilities in the vicinity. The planes were hit by machine gun fire, etc. I also read elsewhere that (not on the marker, but from an autobiography of a pilot) that the first aviation dogfight also ocurred nearby when two pilots with pistols duked it out in the skies with their Curtiss Pusher aircraft. Does anyone have anymore info? |
#2
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Here's a start for you....
http://www.globalsecurity.org/milita...expedition.htm http://www.earlyaviators.com/emattery.htm "TooPlaneCrazy7" wrote in message ... Hi all, I live near a fort called "Fort Brown" in Brownsville, Texas and there is an historical marker that reads, "'First Army US Warplane', on this spot was made the first flight of US Army plane to be fired on in armed hostilities on April 20, 1915." Then it goes on about how the planes were a group of signal corps officers who were out scouting the area near the fort due to heightened Mexican hostilities in the vicinity. The planes were hit by machine gun fire, etc. I also read elsewhere that (not on the marker, but from an autobiography of a pilot) that the first aviation dogfight also ocurred nearby when two pilots with pistols duked it out in the skies with their Curtiss Pusher aircraft. Does anyone have anymore info? |
#3
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Here's a start for you......
http://www.earlyaviators.com/emattery.htm http://www.globalsecurity.org/milita...expedition.htm This one is in Spanish, but looks interesting... http://www.airpower.maxwell.af.mil/a...mes97/taylor.h tm Finally... I thought this site was pretty good reading.... http://cnparm.home.texas.net/Subj/Flight/Flight02.htm Mark "TooPlaneCrazy7" wrote in message ... Hi all, I live near a fort called "Fort Brown" in Brownsville, Texas and there is an historical marker that reads, "'First Army US Warplane', on this spot was made the first flight of US Army plane to be fired on in armed hostilities on April 20, 1915." Then it goes on about how the planes were a group of signal corps officers who were out scouting the area near the fort due to heightened Mexican hostilities in the vicinity. The planes were hit by machine gun fire, etc. I also read elsewhere that (not on the marker, but from an autobiography of a pilot) that the first aviation dogfight also ocurred nearby when two pilots with pistols duked it out in the skies with their Curtiss Pusher aircraft. Does anyone have anymore info? |
#4
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Great, all interesting info. Wouldn't this make for a great movie? I know that
one was tried in the 60s called "Villa Rides" and starred Robert Mitchum, but it sucked! |
#5
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TooPlaneCrazy7 wrote:
Hi all, I live near a fort called "Fort Brown" in Brownsville, Texas and there is an historical marker that reads, "'First Army US Warplane', on this spot was made the first flight of US Army plane to be fired on in armed hostilities on April 20, 1915." Then it goes on about how the planes were a group of signal corps officers who were out scouting the area near the fort due to heightened Mexican hostilities in the vicinity. The planes were hit by machine gun fire, etc. I also read elsewhere that (not on the marker, but from an autobiography of a pilot) that the first aviation dogfight also ocurred nearby when two pilots with pistols duked it out in the skies with their Curtiss Pusher aircraft. Does anyone have anymore info? Said "first dogfight" happened in 1913, between two American pilots working as mercenaries for opposite sides of the Mexican civil war. Their names were Dean Lamb and Phil Rader. Lamb was flying a Curtiss product, while Rader piloted a "Christofferson". Neither was reported to have scored any hits on his opponent. -Marc -- Marc Reeve actual email address after removal of 4s & spaces is c4m4r4a4m4a4n a4t c4r4u4z4i4o d4o4t c4o4m |
#6
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![]() I believe that Sterling Seagrave uses this incident to open his Time-Life book, Soldiers of Fortune, about mercenary pilots. all the best -- Dan Ford email: (put CUB in subject line) see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
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