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Roger Gunn - Masters of the Air: The Great War Pilots McLeod, McKeever, and MacLaren

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Roger Gunn Masters of the Air: The Great War Pilots McLeod, McKeever, and MacLaren
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Masters of the Air: The Great War Pilots McLeod, McKeever, and MacLaren: summary, description and annotation

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A fascinating look at three of the greatest Canadian pilots in the First World War.Alan McLeod, from Stonewall, Manitoba, Andrew McKeever, originally from Listowel, Ontario, and Donald MacLaren, originally from Calgary, were daring and talented pilots. Although decidedly different from each other in personality, in the planes they flew, and in their contribution to the war effort they all shared a passion for flying and a strong sense of duty. One hundred years after they flew and fought for king and country, Masters of the Air brings these three men to life, detailing their development as pilots, their battles in the air, and their near-death experiences.Like thousands of others, these three men answered the call to fight for the British Empire. In the skies of Europe, they achieved greatness. They performed remarkable deeds in primitive planes, when aviation was in its infancy.

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Copyright Roger Gunn 2019 All rights reserved No part of this publication may - photo 1
Copyright Roger Gunn 2019 All rights reserved No part of this publication may - photo 2
Copyright Roger Gunn 2019 All rights reserved No part of this publication may - photo 3

Copyright Roger Gunn, 2019

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise (except for brief passages for purpose of review) without the prior permission of Dundurn Press. Permission to photocopy should be requested from Access Copyright.

Publisher: Scott Fraser | Acquiring editor: Kathryn Lane | Editor: Dominic Farrell
Designer: Laura Boyle
Cover images (left to right): McLeod, Imperial War Museum, Q 067601
McKeever, Library and Archives Canada, PA- 006026
MacLaren, Directorate of History and Heritage, 2015-06-28-0-32650

Printer: Webcom, a division of Marquis Book Printing Inc.

Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

Title: Masters of the air : the Great War pilots McLeod, McKeever, and MacLaren / Roger Gunn.
Names: Gunn, Roger, author.
Description: Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: Canadiana (print) 20190181354 | Canadiana (ebook) 20190181362 | ISBN 9781459745483 (softcover) | ISBN 9781459745490 (PDF) | ISBN 9781459745506 (EPUB)
Subjects: LCSH: McLeod, Alan Arnett, 1899-1918. | LCSH: McKeever, Andrew Edward, 1894-1919. | LCSH: MacLaren, Donald, 1893-1988. | LCSH: Fighter pilotsCanadaBiography. | LCSH: Great Britain. Royal Flying CorpsAirmenBiography. | LCSH: World War, 1914-1918Aerial operations, British. | LCGFT: Biographies.
Classification: LCC D602 .G86 2019 | DDC 940.4/4941092311dc23

We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts and the Ontario - photo 4

We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts and the Ontario Arts Council for our publishing program. We also acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Ontario, through the Ontario Book Publishing Tax Credit and Ontario Creates, and the Government of Canada.

Care has been taken to trace the ownership of copyright material used in this book. The author and the publisher welcome any information enabling them to rectify any references or credits in subsequent editions.

The publisher is not responsible for websites or their content unless they are owned by the publisher.

Printed and bound in Canada.

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To my grandchildren. May they never have to fight in a war.

Contents
Introduction

The First World War, fought just over one hundred years ago, saw men fully engaged in a war in the air, shooting each other down at the first opportunity. It had been only a half a dozen years prior that the first known flight in Canada of a heavier-than-air machine, called the Silver Dart, flew across Bras dOr Lake in Cape Breton, under the watchful eye of Alexander Graham Bell. The famous inventor of the telephone spent his summers in Nova Scotia and took an interest in the creation of a flying machine. Necessity is the mother of invention, and the coming of the First World War advanced the technology of flying a thousandfold.

Much has been written about Billy Bishop, the highest-scoring Canadian pilot in the First World War, and there are some books on William Barker and Raymond Collishaw, two of the other famed Canadian pilots of the war, but none are devoted to three lesser-known Canadian pilots: Alan McLeod, Andrew McKeever, and Donald MacLaren. They were distinctively different from each other. So too were the machines they flew, and their respective roles in the war. McLeod flew reconnaissance and artillery-spotting missions in an Armstrong Whitworth F.K.8, McKeever a two-seat Bristol F.2B Fighter, and MacLaren a Sopwith Camel scout (today we would refer to this as a fighter plane). All three of these pilots are brought to life in this book, which explores their courage, exploits, and near-death experiences in the skies above France. These three men achieved greatness in the air and on the ground in an era of suffering and devotion to duty. They answered the call to go to war. They, like many thousands of others, went overseas to fight for the British Empire. It survived but was very badly battered. The war would end up destroying monarchies across Europe, and completely alter the way that men and women saw the world.

McLeod, McKeever, and MacLaren were remarkable. These three Canadian pilots of the First World War should be recognized for their accomplishments.

As he lay in his hospital bed, with his head and shoulders propped up by extra pillows, Second Lieutenant Alan Arnett McLeod reflected on the events of March 27, 1918, which had brought him here, to the Prince of Wales Hospital in London. He did not think his actions in the sky over the battlefield of France that day were particularly brave. Yes, he had kept his machine under control while it had been shot about by eight enemy triplanes. But the worst part was the bullet to the petrol tank, causing flames to erupt and practically consume the aircraft. He had somehow managed to land his biplane and, while it was still burning, rescue his observer, Lieutenant Hammond, who was unconscious from the loss of blood from his injuries.

He felt what he had done that day was the same as any pilot would have done to keep himself and his observer (gunner) alive. He contemplated the praise and attention he was receiving now he was back in England, under the care of the medical staff at the London hospital. He felt he really did not deserve it. He was humbled by it all. The visitors, the flowers brought to his bedside by pretty ladies, the mentions in the press. It was all so unnecessary, he felt.

***

On March 21, 1918, six days before Second Lieutenant McLeod was shot down, the Germans began their last big offensive: Operation Michael. Seventy-six German divisions engaged twenty-eight British divisions in the Ypres, Armentires, and Bthune areas of the Western Front. General Ludendorff, commander of the German forces, knew that this offensive was his last chance to bring the Allies to their knees, before overwhelming numbers of American soldiers would arrive at the front.

On March 27, the members of No. 11 Squadron moved to the aerodrome at Fienvillers. However, they were without Andrew Edward McKeever and his observer, Leslie Powell, as they had been withdrawn to Home Establishment, in defence of England, on January 15, 1918. By that time, McKeever had destroyed thirty-one enemy aircraft and Powell, with his rear-facing machine gun, had accounted for nineteen more. From Fienvillers the squadrons pilots carried out numerous attacks against the advancing enemy infantry. Flying their Bristol Fighters, No. 11 Squadron pilots carried out low-level strafing and bombing runs, harassing the advancing Germans.

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