The Indianapolis Star, November 3, 1917
Wartime Sidelights - American Flyers for France
by Paul Ayres Rockwell
Paris - The
Medaille Militaire (Military Medal) is conferred upon Corporal James Hall,
of the Lafayette Escadrille. An American citizen, invalided out
of service after having been a machine-gunner in the British
Army, re-enlisted as a pilot-aviator with the Lafayette
Escadrille. From the moment of his arrival at the front he showed
a splendid courage and the purest spirit of sacrifice. June 26,
1917, he attacked alone seven enemy aeroplanes, to the astonished
admiration of the troops
who watched the combat from the ground. Gravely wounded during
the struggle, he succeeded in bringing his machine back into our
lines. He lost consciousness while saying, "My only regret is
that I was not a more experienced flyer, so that I could have
destroyed several
of them."
The present nomination carries with it the War Cross with palm.
This citation in the order of the French Army was awarded
Corporal James Norman Hall of Colfax, Ia., following the most
remarkable experience in the history of the American Escadrille,
one which indeed is unique in the annals of the French Aerial
Corps.
Corporal Hall, who had been at the front as a flyer but a few
days, was ordered to make a late afternoon sortie over the lines
near Sissons with Lieuts Thaw, Lufbery and other experienced
airmen. Hall was the last man to leave the aviation field,
however, and arrived over the trenches alone. He scouted up and
down the lines for a few minutes, enjoying the novelty of the
scene and keeping an eye open for enemy 'planes. Some 4,000
meters below him a heavy
bombardment, preparatory to a night attack, was going on. Small
white clouds continually appearing around him indicated that he
had attracted the attention of the boche anti-aircraft gunners,
but that did not interest Hall. He was hunting a German aeroplane.
He had gotten quite a way back into enemy territory when he saw,
about 500 meters below him, a biplane enemy observation machine.
Also he saw, flying at the same altitude as himself, a group of
six
boche 'aeroplanes de chasse. Hall spent about three seconds
deciding what to do, then he dived straight down and attacked the
biplane.
Immediately the six fighting planes came down after the daring
American, and, at the same instant he began firing at the
observation machine, they started circling around him and
shooting him up. Hall realized that he was in a most dangerous
predicament and maneuvered to fight his way out. A bullet cut his
forehead, and, as he did a "renversement," another passed
between his legs, grazing the thigh. Then a bullet struck him
under the left shoulder blade, and passed cleanly through his
chest, barely missing the heart. Hall lost consciousness and
began falling. The fight had occurred two kilometers within the
German lines and thousands of
French poilus who were anxiously watching from their trenches
were sure that the Nieuport was going to smash up in boche
territory. But although Hall had fainted, his subconscious will
made him keep tight hold on the controls of his airplane, which
gradually straightened out and volplaned toward the French
trenches. The machine got about 400 meters behind the friendly
first line when Hall regained consciousness for an instant. Not
knowing where he was he cut off his motor, turned round his
machine, which, to the astonished agony of the watching
Frenchmen, turned again in the direction of the enemy. Then Hall
fainted for the second time.
The wounded aviator was hurried to a field hospital a few miles
away. Three days later, Capt. Thenault, the French commander of
the American flyers, went to the hospital and pinned the military
medal and the war cross on Hall's breast. The latter received his
merited decorations with characteristic modesty, saying: "I think
you for this great honor, captain, but I have done nothing to
deserve it." Later Hall was moved to the American Ambulance at
Neuilly, and
within three weeks from the day he was wounded was walking about
in Paris, looking not at all like a man who had so recently gazed
death in the face. When he was wounded reports were cabled to
America that he had been killed and now Hall gets much amusement
from reading the obituary notices friends clip from newspapers
and send him.
Corporal James Norman Hall was in England on a pleasure trip in
August, 1914. He at once enlisted in an English regiment and went
to the front as a machine gunner. He spent fifteen months in the
trenches of northern France, then was invalided from the service
and returned home. He wrote a successful book about his
experiences as a "Tommy," called "Kitchener's Mob." He came to
Paris in August, 1916, and shortly after enlisted to fly for
France. last mid-June he joined the Lafayette group on the Aisne
front. On his first flight over the lines he attacked a German
machine and, carried away by the ardor of the combat, almost
collided with his adversary. The Boche pilot was so frightened by
the impetuous onslaught that he did
not attempt to fire at Hall but turned his machine nose downward
and dived straight to the ground. It was on his second sortie
that Hall was wounded.
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