Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Lucien Gasser

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Allegiance
  
France


Name
  
Lucien Gasser

Rank
  
Adjutant

Unit
  
8e Regiment d'Artillerie, Escadrille 87

Awards
  
Legion d'honneur, Medaille militaire, Croix de Guerre with seven palmes and an etoile de vermeil, Mentioned in Dispatches five times

Died
  
February 14, 1939, Malzeville, France

Service/branch
  
Artillery; aviation

Adjutant Lucien Marcel Gasser was a French flying ace during World War I. He was a double ace, credited with ten confirmed aerial victories.

Contents

World War I

On 21 August 1914, Gasser volunteered for military service until war's end. As a soldat de 2e classe, he was posted to artillery service. On 7 March 1915, he was promoted to enlisted Brigadier; 10 February 1917 saw his further promotion to Maréchal-des-logis. On 25 May 1917, Gasser began pilot training at Dijon. Once awarded Military Pilot's Brevet No. 8126 on 22 August 1917, he polished his skills at advanced training before assignment to Escadrille 87 on 1 January 1918.

Gasser used a Spad to score his first victory on 16 February 1918. He scored four more times in March, becoming an ace on the 27th. On 23 April 1918, he was promoted to Adjutant. The Médaille militaire that was awarded Gasser on 16 June credited him with four wins; by that time, his tally had risen to seven. On 7 July, he scored his last victory. His record showed he single-handedly shot down six enemy airplanes, teamed with other French pilots to destroy three others, and downed a German observation balloon to become a balloon buster. Eight days later, 15 July 1918, he was wounded so severely in the left leg that amputation resulted. On 3 August, he was selected as a Chevalier in the Légion d'honneur.

Postwar

Gasser rose to Commandeur in the Légion d'honneur. He was killed in a flying accident on 14 February 1939.

References

Lucien Gasser Wikipedia