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Adolphe Pegoud

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Allegiance
  
France

Role
  
Aviator

Years of service
  
1907–1915

Battles and wars
  

Battles/wars
  
Service/branch
  
Name
  
Adolphe Pegoud

Rank
  
Second lieutenant

Adolphe Pegoud The Worlds top fighter aces incredible fighter pilots of

Nickname(s)
  
Roi du ciel (Eng: King of the sky)

Born
  
13 June 1889Montferrat, Isere (
1889-06-13
)

Died
  
August 31, 1915, Petit-Croix, France

Awards
  
Legion of Honour, Medaille militaire, Croix de guerre 1914–1918

Adolphe pegoud 1889 1915


Adolphe Célestin Pégoud (13 June 1889 – 31 August 1915) was a French aviator and flight instructor who became the first fighter ace in history during World War I.

Contents

Adolphe Pegoud Postcard Adolphe Pgoud 13 June 1889 31 August 1915

VU D’ICI : Un as des as repose en Franche-Comté


Biography

Adolphe Pegoud pegoud01jpg

Adolphe Célestin Pégoud was born 13 June 1889 in Montferrat, France. Pégoud served in the French Army from 1907 to 1913. Discharged on 13 February 1913, he immediately began flying, and earned his pilot's certificate 1 March 1913. Using a sacrifice aircraft, Pégoud was the first pilot to make a parachute jump from an airplane. During the first jump, observing the unexpected path of the plane and particularly a loop-like trajectory, he was convinced he could reproduce and control the same in flight. After landing, Pégoud addressed reporters: "I've seen him, alone, looping the loop. So you see that this is possible. Also, I will try!"

Adolphe Pegoud httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

As a test pilot for Louis Blériot, he devoted himself to this goal with a Blériot model XI monoplane in a series of test flights exploring the limits of airplane maneuvers. Having modified his airplane, and after a realistic "head down" ground training, he then flew the first inverted flight on 1 September 1913.

Adolphe Pegoud 05 February 1915 Ace Pilot The Great War Blog

Then, on 21 September he flew a loop, believing it to be the world's first. Pégoud's feat was consequently widely publicized and believed by many to be the first loop, although Pyotr Nesterov, a Russian army pilot, had already flown the first loop on 9 September 1913, 12 days earlier in a Nieuport IV monoplane at an army airfield near Kiev. Soon after his feat, Pégoud was invited by the Czar of Russia to perform in Moscow a series of demonstrations followed by student training.

Pégoud became a popular instructor of French and other European fledgling pilots.

At the start of World War I, Pégoud volunteered for flying duty and was immediately accepted as an observation pilot. On 5 February 1915, he and his gunner were credited with shooting down two German aircraft and forcing another to land. Soon he was flying single-seat aircraft and in April claimed two further victories. His sixth success came in July.

It is not known how many of Pégoud's victories involved destruction of enemy aircraft, as early air combat was rare enough to warrant credit for a forced landing. However, it is certain that Pégoud, rather than Roland Garros (four documented victories), was the first pilot to achieve ace status of any sort.

On 31 August 1915, Pégoud was shot down and killed by one of his pre-war German students, Unteroffizier Walter Kandulski, while intercepting a German reconnaissance aircraft. He was 26 years old. The same German crew later dropped a funeral wreath behind the French lines. A false report stated that two weeks later Kandulski was shot down by the French pilot Roger Ronserail. In fact Kandulski survived the war.

References

Adolphe Pégoud Wikipedia


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