Edgar Endicott
Edgar Endicott
Birth 1916-10-06 Death 1955-04-14
First enlistment: 1942-11-18 — Mererd Airbase, CA
December 10, 1898- September 12, 1918) As a 1st Lieutenant, he scored 13 verifiable victories as a flying air ace during World War I, serving with both the French a...
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December 10, 1898- September 12, 1918)
As a 1st Lieutenant, he scored 13 verifiable victories as a flying air ace
during World War I, serving with both the French and U.S. air services and was for a time America’s leading Ace in the war. He won the Distinguished Service Cross, second only the Congressional Medal of Honor.
He was born in Jamaica Plains, Massachusetts, a descendent of the revolutionary war General Israel Putnam who told his men at Bunker Hill “Don’t shoot until you see the whites of their eyes!”
In high school he was superb athlete and orator and during the summers he attended Camp Becket-in-the-Berkshires. There he became a close acquaintance of the camp director, Henry W. Gibson, with whom he later corresponded during the war. As a camper from 1914–1916, and counselor in 1917 after his college freshman year, swimming was one of his passions and he became captain of the Life Saving Crew and Assistant Swimming Instructor.
He was also an exceptional tennis player. He was popular among campers and received the 1915 Honor Emblem and the 1916 Honor Button, the camp’s highest award. He was described in the camp newspaper Seen and Heard as “Modest and unassuming, yet genial and a good mixer, of high moral standard he was without question the most popular boy in the camp.” Camp director, Henry Gibson said: “The sense of fair play, of consideration for the other fellow, of physical bravery, of moral courage — all of these qualities were given a chance to express themselves in his camp life.”
At camp following his freshman year at Harvard College, David went to Gibson in his tent and said, ““I am going across the seas to get in the big fight.” Then, he dropped out of Harvard and took a cattle boat to Europe, where he joined the French Foreign Legion on May 31, 1917.
He was transferred to the French air service, trained at Avord, and was assigned to Escadrille Spa94 on December 12, 1917, but was reassigned to Spa156 on February 7, 1918. In the latter escadrille he shot down four German planes and was subsequently transferred to Spa38 on June 1, 1918, where he shot down two more planes. He was discharged from French service in June 1918 in order to join the American air force.
While serving with the French, on one occasion (June 15, 1918) he single-handedly engaged 10 German aircraft all at once and shot down five of them, but because the action took place behind enemy lines, only one of them was confirmed.