{"id":7182,"date":"2022-06-02T14:58:16","date_gmt":"2022-06-02T20:58:16","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/?page_id=7182"},"modified":"2023-06-12T15:23:57","modified_gmt":"2023-06-12T21:23:57","slug":"donald-swett-poler","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/the-biographies\/donald-swett-poler\/","title":{"rendered":"Donald Swett Poler"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"WPMainDoc\">\n<p>(Medina, New York, June 21, 1896 \u2013 Los Angeles, September 9, 1994).<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote1\" href=\"#WPFootnote1\">1<\/a><\/p>\n<p><a id=\"Top\"><\/a><a href=\"#Oxford\">Oxford, Grantham<\/a>\u00a0 \u272f \u00a0<a href=\"#51\">Nos. 51 and 192 Squadrons<\/a> \u00a0\u272f\u00a0 <a href=\"#Gosport\">Gosport<\/a> \u00a0\u272f\u00a0 <a href=\"#Bruay\">No. 40 Squadron, Bruay<\/a>\u00a0 \u00a0\u272f\u00a0 <a href=\"#Bryas\">No. 40 Squadron, Bryas<\/a> \u00a0\u272f\u00a0 <a href=\"#25\">25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron<\/a><\/p>\n<div id=\"WPMainDoc\">\n<p>Poler\u2019s paternal ancestors were settled in Saratoga County in eastern New York before they relocated in the 1830s to Shelby in Orleans County in the west of the state, where Poler\u2019s great-grandfather and grandfather became prosperous farmers.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote2\" href=\"#WPFootnote2\">2<\/a> Emmett Jay Poler, Poler\u2019s father, worked for a time on the family farm but then became involved in manufacturing and was employed by the A. L. Swett Iron Company at Medina. In 1892 he married Lena Amanda Swett, youngest sister of company owner Albert Louis Swett. The Swett family can be traced back to the early days of the Massachusetts Colony; Lena Amanda Swett\u2019s rather peripatetic father was born in Massachusetts but eventually settled in Medina.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote3\" href=\"#WPFootnote3\">3<\/a><\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_7216\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7216\" style=\"width: 228px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\" wp-image-7216\" src=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Poler-Donald-S.-Cornell-ground-school.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"228\" height=\"376\" srcset=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Poler-Donald-S.-Cornell-ground-school.jpg 1012w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Poler-Donald-S.-Cornell-ground-school-303x500.jpg 303w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Poler-Donald-S.-Cornell-ground-school-621x1024.jpg 621w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Poler-Donald-S.-Cornell-ground-school-768x1266.jpg 768w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Poler-Donald-S.-Cornell-ground-school-932x1536.jpg 932w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 228px) 85vw, 228px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-7216\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Poler from a <a href=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/photos\/ground-school-photos\/#Cornell_SMA_G\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">photo<\/a> of his Cornell ground school class.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Donald Swett Poler attended high school in Medina, graduating in 1914.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote4\" href=\"#WPFootnote4\">4<\/a> He enrolled at Syracuse University; the war interrupted his studies.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote5\" href=\"#WPFootnote5\">5<\/a> When he registered for the draft he was in R.O.T.C. at the Madison Barracks at Sackets Harbor. He later recalled that \u201cI transferred from the infantry, R.O.T.C., into aviation at the first chance I got.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote6\" href=\"#WPFootnote6\">6<\/a> Other men at Madison Barracks included Guy Maynard Baldwin, Wendell Ellison Borncamp, Lloyd Ludwig, and Donald Andrew Wilson. In early July 1917 Poler, along with those four went to Ithaca to attend ground school at the School of Military Aeronautics at Cornell.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote7\" href=\"#WPFootnote7\">7<\/a> They graduated on August 25, 1917.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote8\" href=\"#WPFootnote8\">8<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Along with three quarters of his classmates at Cornell, including Baldwin, Borncamp, Ludwig, and Wilson, Poler chose or was chosen to continue training in Italy. The men proceeded to Mineola on Long Island and, a little over three weeks after completing ground school, set sail from New York on the\u00a0<i>Carmania<\/i>\u00a0as part of a 150-man strong detachment bound for Europe. After a brief stop at Halifax, the\u00a0<i>Carmania<\/i>\u00a0joined a convoy and began the Atlantic crossing on September 21, 1917. Poler said that \u201cIt took us fourteen days to get to Liverpool and I think we must have covered all the Atlantic, going back and forth. The trip was interesting since every day, for two to three hours, we were taught Italian by little Fiorello <a href=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/photos\/other-photos-2\/#Spalding\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">LaGuardia<\/a>, who later became the mayor of New York City,\u201d \u2014LaGuardia was a diminutive five feet three inches to Poler\u2019s nearly six feet\u2014\u201cand Albert <a href=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/photos\/other-photos-2\/#Spalding\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Spaulding<\/a> [<i>sic<\/i>], who was then a fine concert violinist. They both went on to Italy. For most of us, when we got to Liverpool, our orders were changed and we were much disappointed to learn that we were not going to sunny Italy.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote9\" href=\"#WPFootnote9\">9<\/a><\/p>\n<p><a id=\"Oxford\"><\/a><a href=\"#Top\">Oxford, Grantham\u00a0<\/a><\/p>\n<p>In fact the entire \u201cItalian detachment,\u201d as they jokingly called themselves, was ordered to remain in England and to attend ground school (again) at the Royal Flying Corps\u2019s No. 2 School of Military Aeronautics at Oxford University. The 150 men were divided into two groups, with ninety of them assigned rooms in Christ Church College in the charge of Elliott White Springs, and the remaining sixty, including Poler, in The Queen\u2019s College under William Ludwig Deetjen. Having arrived too late for the start of the week\u2019s classes, the men were free to settle in and explore Oxford and the surrounding countryside. Once their instruction began on October 8, 1917, because it was their second time going through much of the material, they did not have to put much effort into studying. According to Deetjen, on the second day of classes Poler joined him, Phillips Merrill Payson, Joseph Frederick Stillman, and Donald Elsworth Carlton for \u201cquite a workout on the river today. Formed a 4 oared crew from our detachment and rowed on the Thames.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote10\" href=\"#WPFootnote10\">10<\/a><\/p>\n<p>There was much socializing, and Americans were evidently in demand for Friday and Saturday night dances. Initially they were allowed late passes on these evenings, but this soon changed to late passes on Tuesdays and Sundays only. As Eugene Hoy Barksdale recounts it, \u201cWell we were already dated up for the dance the following Sat. night [October 20, 1917] &amp; when the time came &amp; no passes could be gotten, my friend [Alexander Miguel] Roberts &amp; I whispered to each other about slipping out &amp; going any way.\u201d Barksdale had second thoughts and \u201cdecided not to take the risk of being sent to France under disgrace,\u201d but Roberts \u201ccollected up two other partners (Wilson &amp; Poler) to venture out with him and they went out to see their fair dames.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote11\" href=\"#WPFootnote11\">11<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Unfortunately this was the evening the men of the first Oxford detachment\u2014fifty cadets who had arrived in early September\u2014 staged a bibulous celebration of their exam results and their impending departure from Oxford, thereby greatly annoying the British authorities. \u201cThe C.O. [Bertram Richard White Beor, C.O. of the Oxford S.M.A.] and Major [Gerald Graham] Adeley [assistant C.O.] had been strolling around &amp; ran up on some fellows drunk. They ask [<i>sic<\/i>] to see their passes &amp; the boys ran. The C.O. thot these were American boys . . . (The three boys were afterward found out to be English cadets).\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote12\" href=\"#WPFootnote12\">12<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Deetjen recounts in his diary how \u201cAt 11:30 [p.m.] we were all formed, and rolls were called. \u2018A\u2019 Flight was present, I had 3 men absent in \u2018B\u2019 Flight. They were Wilson (room mate) Poler and Roberts.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote13\" href=\"#WPFootnote13\">13<\/a> It seems the three men had assumed they would not be missed and, rather than returning late after the dance, had put up at the Clarendon Hotel. They returned to Queen\u2019s around 10 a.m. Sunday \u201cto find they were caught,\u201d as they had been absent from the previous night\u2019s roll call. \u201cThey were then told to report to the Lieut. Colonel (C.O.) the next day to be court martialed.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote14\" href=\"#WPFootnote14\">14<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Deetjen did his best to lose track of the names of the men who had missed roll call, and Geoffrey Dwyer, who oversaw American cadets in England, did his best to defend Poler, Roberts, and Wilson to Adeley. Fortunately, when Deetjen took the three truants to Beor on Monday morning, the C.O. had calmed down. He \u201cread them the riot act,\u201d but did not otherwise punish them.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote15\" href=\"#WPFootnote15\">15<\/a>\u00a0However, as a consequence of the Saturday night shenanigans, all the second Oxford detachment were ordered to move from Christ Church and Queen\u2019s to the (even) less comfortable Exeter College.<\/p>\n<p>The men remained a month at Oxford. All of them hoped they would quickly move on to actual flying training, but openings at squadrons were in short supply. Thus most of them went on November 3, 1917, not to squadrons, but to a machine gun school, Harrowby Camp, near Grantham in Lincolnshire. The preceding evening, in the midst of packing, Poler joined Fremont Cutler Foss, Perley Melbourne Stoughton, and Leo McCarthy in bidding a champagne and scotch farewell to Frank Aloysius Dixon, one of the select twenty going to Stamford rather than Grantham.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote16\" href=\"#WPFootnote16\">16<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Poler\u2019s fellow detachment member Murton Llewellyn Campbell described the men\u2019s activities once they arrived Grantham: \u201cWe are here . . . for four weeks, two on the Vickers and two on the Lewis. We are treated as officers and are called thus by the English officers. Eight of us in a tent with an orderly to take care of us. Nothing to do but go to the gun rooms and work on the Vickers all day long. We have from 9 to 1 P.M. with one or two hours out for field drill.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote17\" href=\"#WPFootnote17\">17<\/a>\u00a0Campbell and his mates may have been housed in a tent, but it is more likely that he was actually referring to the wooden huts that housed most of the men at Grantham, including Poler. Poler\u2019s hutmates were initially Borncamp, George Atherton Brader, Ralf Andrews Crookston, Burr Watkins Leyson, Clark Brockway Nichol, Hilary Baker Rex, and Wilson. Midway through November, places for fifty men opened up at squadrons, but Poler and his hutmates were not among the fortunate fifty. Some reshuffling was done, and a ninth man, Lloyd Ludwig, was added to their hut. Around this time they moved on from the Vickers to learning about and practice firing the Lewis machine gun.<\/p>\n<p><a id=\"51\"><\/a><a href=\"#Top\">Nos. 51 and 192 Squadrons<\/a><\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_7196\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7196\" style=\"width: 477px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\" wp-image-7196\" src=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Foss-Dec-3-list-Marham-only.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"477\" height=\"208\" srcset=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Foss-Dec-3-list-Marham-only.jpg 2701w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Foss-Dec-3-list-Marham-only-500x218.jpg 500w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Foss-Dec-3-list-Marham-only-1024x446.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Foss-Dec-3-list-Marham-only-768x334.jpg 768w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Foss-Dec-3-list-Marham-only-1536x669.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Foss-Dec-3-list-Marham-only-2048x892.jpg 2048w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Foss-Dec-3-list-Marham-only-1200x522.jpg 1200w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 477px) 85vw, 477px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-7196\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Men bound for Marham, a portion of the list of men posted December 3, 1917, drawn up by Foss.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>On November 29, 1917, the day after Thanksgiving, Ludwig wrote in his diary that he had gotten \u201cnews that we would be posted to Squadron on Monday. It looks as tho we\u2019re going to a place called Marham Smeath, near Downham in Norfolk with Wilson, Poler, Brader, Borncamp &amp; [Melville Folsom] Webber.\u201d And, indeed, on December 3, 1917, the six men, who would continue as a group as they progressed through their training postings, left Grantham for No. 51 Squadron at Marham in Norfolk. No. 51, commanded at this time by Frederic Cecil Baker, was a home defense squadron tasked with defense against Zeppelin raids. Poler was billeted with Borncamp, Ludwig, and Webber at the local vicarage, the home of Harry Stanley Branscombe, vicar of Marham.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote18\" href=\"#WPFootnote18\">18<\/a><\/p>\n<p>The cadets were in for a disappointment. The day after their arrival at Marham they learned that \u201cAll the machines here are FE2B\u2019s and as none of them are dual control machines; we will not be able to learn to fly here.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote19\" href=\"#WPFootnote19\">19<\/a> Ludwig writes of several rides as a passenger in the squadron\u2019s F.E.2bs, and Poler later recalled that \u201cI had my first flight there [Marham] in the front seat of an F.E. 2c pusher. We had quite a time flying up and down the Wash at night.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote20\" href=\"#WPFootnote20\">20<\/a> Poler\u2019s first flight was probably actually in an F.E.2b, in which the observer sits in front, rather than in an F.E.2c, in which he would have sat behind the pilot.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote21\" href=\"#WPFootnote21\">21<\/a> Otherwise, \u201cWe have absolutely nothing to do here except eat, sleep, enjoy ourselves and go on joy rides whenever we can. It is rather cold so we spend a good part of our time trying to keep warm.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote22\" href=\"#WPFootnote22\">22<\/a> On December 11, 1917, Poler went with Ludwig to nearby Narborough Aerodrome, where they had the opportunity to fly in a DH.6\u2014a training aircraft that felt to Ludwig like \u201ca steady slow bus\u201d compared to the FE2b.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote23\" href=\"#WPFootnote23\">23<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Perhaps just to keep them busy, Major Baker arranged for the cadets \u201cto go around and visit the two other detached flights which are stationed at Mattishall and Lydd [<i>sic<\/i>; sc. Tydd] St. Mary.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote24\" href=\"#WPFootnote24\">24<\/a> While Webber and Borncamp went to the latter air field, Poler and Ludwig spent a few days with A flight at Mattishall. \u201cOnce more we are billeted in the village. Have quite good rooms at the house of a Mr. &amp; Mrs. Neave.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote25\" href=\"#WPFootnote25\">25<\/a><\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_7221\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7221\" style=\"width: 991px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-7221 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Neaves-Mattishall-unframed.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"991\" height=\"642\" srcset=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Neaves-Mattishall-unframed.jpg 991w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Neaves-Mattishall-unframed-500x324.jpg 500w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Neaves-Mattishall-unframed-768x498.jpg 768w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 709px) 85vw, (max-width: 909px) 67vw, (max-width: 1362px) 62vw, 840px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-7221\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">James Neave, grocer and draper, owned Victoria Stores on Church Plain (Square) in Mattishall. Assuming Neave and his wife, Anna Eliza, n\u00e9e Harvey, lived over the shop, the building at left may be where Poler and Ludwig stayed in Mattishall. The image is a postcard auctioned on Ebay; it apparently dates from the 1920s or 1930s, when the Neaves&#8217; son, Albert Anthony Neave, ran the store.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>They got in no flying that day or the next. On December 15, 1917, \u201cTiny and Major Baker flew over from Marham for lunch. The Major said that we could go up and do some photography whenever the weather was good. However later in the afternoon, after they left we got a telephone message saying that we were all going down to Newmarket on Monday to be posted with the 192<sup>nd<\/sup> Squadron there.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote26\" href=\"#WPFootnote26\">26<\/a> In very inclement weather the next day they returned to Marham, and then on December 17, 1917, the six American cadets travelled via Ely to Newmarket, not far from Cambridge. No. 192, like No. 51, was a home defense squadron. Poler and Ludwig were assigned to A flight, commanded by a Captain Richardson. \u201cThe planes here are FE again, no dual controls, so we will have no chance of getting instruction.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote27\" href=\"#WPFootnote27\">27<\/a> And, between the fact that there were \u201cpractically no machines serviceable for flying\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote28\" href=\"#WPFootnote28\">28<\/a>\u00a0and the bad weather, flying was almost nonexistent at Newmarket.<\/p>\n<p><a id=\"Gosport\"><\/a><a href=\"#Top\">Gosport<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Not long after Christmas, the luck of the six American cadets finally turned. On December 29, 1917 (Saturday), they learned that they were to report to \u201can office in London to get instruction to where we were to go. As we were to report Sunday morning Major Money suggested that we might like to run to town and spend the night there so we hustled around and left Newmarket on the 3:46 train reaching London about 6:20.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote29\" href=\"#WPFootnote29\">29<\/a>\u00a0On the last day of 1917, Ludwig wrote in his diary: \u201cLeft the Waterloo Station at 9:35 for Gosport where we were to report. Arrived here about one o\u2019clock. We are at what is known as the School of Special Flying, Fort Rowner, Gosport.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Gosport was where Robert Raymond Smith-Barry had developed a training method for R.F.C. pilots that replaced seat-of-the-pants flying with theory and experience-based training, providing pupils with the knowledge and skills to, for example, get into and out of a spin. Smith-Barry had been able to take advantage of the two-seater Avro 504j, \u201ca reliable aircraft with the handling characteristics of a single-seater fighter . . . [it] could thus be used to carry out all the aerobatics in his syllabus.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote30\" href=\"#WPFootnote30\">30<\/a> Poler recalled that \u201cWe were told that we were the luckiest in the crowd, as this primary training at Gosport was for instructors.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote31\" href=\"#WPFootnote31\">31<\/a><\/p>\n<p>The School used Grange Aerodrome, an open area to the west of Gosport\u2019s Forts Grange and Rowner; the students were quartered in the Fort Rowner barracks. Ludwig wrote that \u201cDon Poler and I have a room together with an English officer. The rooms are fine\u2014each of us has a spring bed, mattress, blankets &amp; sheets, a washstand, a table and a wicker arm chair. It really is almost like luxury after what we have been having. The mess appears to be very good.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote32\" href=\"#WPFootnote32\">32<\/a><\/p>\n<p>They began training almost immediately. On January 7, 1918, Ludwig wrote in his diary that \u201cI did not get up with Lt. [Reginald John Bedlington] Benson at all today as he was busy with Don S.P. who after making some more landings with Benson in the afternoon went up for his first solo. He did mighty well and we all were proud of him.\u201d Poler recalled that \u201cReading my diary recently I noticed that I soloed in five hours, twenty minutes. . . . The school was glad to get us off the ground and the faster we went on to advanced instruction the better.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote33\" href=\"#WPFootnote33\">33<\/a><\/p>\n<p>In addition to their flying, the cadets still had machine gun and \u201cbuzzer\u201d (Morse code) classes, but they also had a good deal of leisure time. There are many accounts in Ludwig\u2019s diary of what \u201cDon and I,\u201d sometimes with George (Brader) or \u201cBorny\u201d (Borncamp), and occasionally Donald (Wilson), did in nearby Portsmouth: movies, theater, dinner, dances, and socializing with people met at Portsmouth hotels. On February 11, 1918, \u201cthe six of us Americans and 2<sup>nd<\/sup> Lt. Watson gave a dinner for our instructors at the Queens [Hotel in Southsea]. Capt. Smart, Capt. Watson, Lt. Benson, Lt. Long and Lt. Holbrow were there we had a fine dinner and fine time and went into the Hippodrome afterwards.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote34\" href=\"#WPFootnote34\">34<\/a> Three days later, they \u201cHeard that we were going to leave here after this week.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote35\" href=\"#WPFootnote35\">35<\/a><\/p>\n<p>On February 16, 1918, the recommendation for Poler\u2019s and Ludwig\u2019s commissions was forwarded by Pershing to Washington.\u00a0 \u00a0The date of their <a href=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/photos\/other-photos\/#Graduation\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">graduation<\/a> from this stage of R.F.C. training is not documented, but they probably, like Borncamp and Brader (whose R.A.F. service records include the notation \u201cGrad C.F.S. 15-2-18\u201d) finished up in mid-February.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote36\" href=\"#WPFootnote36\">36<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Around this time Poler asked \u201cthe Commanding Officer at Gosport to let me have one of his best Clerget Avros, just to go on a flight around the Isle of Wight. . . . I went around the isle but on the way back, where the west end of the isle meets the mainland at the \u2018Needles,\u2019 I didn\u2019t recognize it as the point at which I should turn back. I continued west on the south coast of England and finally ran out of petrol. I didn\u2019t know where I was and . . . made a forced landing on the parade ground of a tank camp. . . . In making my last turn in the Avro she slipped and fell.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote37\" href=\"#WPFootnote37\">37<\/a>\u00a0There was some damage to the Avro and to Poler\u2019s teeth, but the incident was apparently not serious enough to merit a casualty card.<\/p>\n<p>Soon after this the six men were transferred to Castle Bromwich in Warwickshire; Poler recalled getting in \u201cabout eight or nine hours on S.E.5\u2019s there.\u201d Towards the end of the men\u2019s second week at Castle Bromwich, on February 28, 1918, Poler, Wilson, and Ludwig practiced aerial fighting despite snowy conditions. After they landed, Ludwig went up again; while stunting, one of his wings collapsed, and he crashed and was killed.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote38\" href=\"#WPFootnote38\">38<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Over the course of March and the first part of April, Poler trained in Scotland; he was at Turnbery when he was assigned to active duty on March 20, 1918<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote38a\" href=\"#WPFootnote38a\">38a<\/a> (Brader was killed there in an air crash on April 5, 1918); from Turnberry he went to Ayr. \u201cGradually, after Ayr, we were assigned to a ferry pool in London. While we were in the pool we were sent to various places in England to ferry planes over to France. I ferried several S.E.5a\u2019s over.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote39\" href=\"#WPFootnote39\">39<\/a><\/p>\n<p><a id=\"Bruay\"><\/a><a href=\"#Top\">No. 40 Squadron, Bruay, April\u2013May<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Poler was posted to France in mid-April. On April 17, 1918, he crossed the Channel, this time not by plane but by boat, and then kicked up his heels at a pilots pool until April 24, 1918, when he was assigned to No. 40 squadron R.A.F.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote40\" href=\"#WPFootnote40\">40<\/a>\u00a0Reed Gresham Landis of the first Oxford detachment had been assigned to No. 40 two weeks previously; Robert Alexander Anderson of the second would arrive in July.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_7198\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7198\" style=\"width: 1284px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-7198\" src=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Service-record-detail.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"1284\" height=\"514\" srcset=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Service-record-detail.jpg 1284w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Service-record-detail-500x200.jpg 500w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Service-record-detail-1024x410.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Service-record-detail-768x307.jpg 768w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Service-record-detail-1200x480.jpg 1200w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 709px) 85vw, (max-width: 909px) 67vw, (max-width: 1362px) 62vw, 840px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-7198\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Poler&#8217;s R.A.F. service record has him assigned to No. 40 Squadron as soon as he left for France, but his <a href=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Poler-casualty-form.jpg\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">casualty form<\/a> is likely to be more accurate.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>No. 40 Squadron was part of the 10<sup>th<\/sup> Wing of the R.A.F., which was attached to I Brigade, part of the British First Army. Stationed at Bruay and, since late 1917, flying S.E.5s and S.E.5a\u2019s fitted with underwing bomb racks, No. 40 had assisted the British Third Army during the initial phase of the German Spring Offensive from March 21 through April 5, 1918.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote41\" href=\"#WPFootnote41\">41<\/a>\u00a0No. 40 then returned to the First Army front and was intensely active during the Battle of the Lys, which was winding down when Poler arrived. Prior to Lys, the front line had been just east of Armenti\u00e8res, but that city had fallen, and the front was now approximately ten miles west of it. The part of the front assigned to the First Army had run from just north of Armenti\u00e8res south to Gavrelle near Arras; it now stretched approximately from the Forest of Nieppe (due west of Armenti\u00e8res) south to Gavrelle.<\/p>\n<p>In the face of the German advances in March and April, a number of R.A.F. squadrons relocated west to safer regions, but No. 40 was not among them. On April 14, 1918, Gwilym Hugh Lewis, leader of No. 40 Squadron\u2019s B flight, wrote to his family from Bruay that \u201cWe haven\u2019t moved our aerodrome yet, though the Huns have advanced north-west of it. We are not anxious to do so, as we never get bombed here.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote42\" href=\"#WPFootnote42\">42<\/a> On the day Poler arrived at No. 40 Squadron, however: \u201cWe have now got a new form of amusement. We spend most of our nights trembling in every nerve while high velocity shells pitch within a few hundred yards of us. Most of them pitch in a little valley just the other end of the aerodrome, but at other times they drop them around the town. They make an enormous noise and cause great damage.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote43\" href=\"#WPFootnote43\">43<\/a><\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_7201\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7201\" style=\"width: 242px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\" wp-image-7201\" src=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Lewis-Gwilym-Hugh-1918-studio-portrait-detail.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"242\" height=\"277\" srcset=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Lewis-Gwilym-Hugh-1918-studio-portrait-detail.jpg 439w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Lewis-Gwilym-Hugh-1918-studio-portrait-detail-436x500.jpg 436w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 242px) 85vw, 242px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-7201\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Gwilym Hugh Lewis, from a 1918 studio portrait.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Poler, consulting his diary, recalled in the early 1960s that \u201cBetween assignment [to No. 40 Squadron] and my first patrol the time was well spent in familiarizing myself with the equipment, gunnery practice, Cook\u2019s Tours along the front lines, and in getting generally acquainted with the terrain.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote44\" href=\"#WPFootnote44\">44<\/a> Poler had his first \u201cCook\u2019s Tour\u201d on April 28, 1918, when Lewis took him and another recent arrival, Frans Helfrich Knobel, on a line patrol.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote45\" href=\"#WPFootnote45\">45<\/a>\u00a0The squadron record book does not note their route that first day, only that no E.A. (enemy aircraft) were sighted. Poler got in a second line patrol on May 2, 1918, led this time by Cecil Oswald Rusden (Lewis being on leave). They flew at low altitude in poor visibility from La Bass\u00e9e, just east of and over the lines from Bruay, south to Arras. Two days later, Poler flew his third and final introductory line patrol in the company of Knobel and another newcomer, William Leslie Andrew, and three experienced pilots. This time the route took in the length of the First Army\u2019s sector, from the Scarpe (Arras) north to Armenti\u00e8res, and the patrol lasted about an hour and a half.<\/p>\n<p>On May 6, 1918, slightly less than two weeks after his arrival at Bruay, Poler, flying the absent Lewis\u2019s S.E.5a D3540, participated in the first of the more than ninety offensive patrols that he flew with No. 40 Squadron over the next four months.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote46\" href=\"#WPFootnote46\">46<\/a>\u00a0He was one of eight pilots who took off at 6:20 that evening on a mission that lasted about an hour and a half. Cecil William Usher, apparently flight leader in Lewis\u2019s absence, reported seeing three triplanes 6,000 feet below; he, Poler, Stanley Porteous Kerr, Henry Samson Wolff, and Henry Harben Wood dived on them in formation, but, as Usher reported: \u201cTriplanes disappeared in mist near Bois de [<i>sic<\/i>; sc. du] Biez,\u201d i.e., about two and a half miles north-northwest of La Bass\u00e9e.<\/p>\n<p>Over the next week Poler, usually flying S.E.5a D3540, participated almost daily in offensive patrols, and on some days took part in two missions. He later recalled that \u201cPatrols at dawn, or afternoon or evening, were made usually with one or two flights of 5\u20137 planes each, and were started at 18,000 feet. Patrol time was determined by our gas supply, 2 hours and 15 mins. And it took about 45 minutes to reach patrol altitude.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote47\" href=\"#WPFootnote47\">47<\/a>\u00a0The front was relatively quiet; nevertheless some of Poler\u2019s fellow pilots engaged in combats and reported sightings during their patrols in the first three weeks of May. Poler\u2019s most frequent entry in the squadron record book\u2019s remarks column was \u201cNo E.A. seen\u201d\u2014he was evidently still learning to see in the air. May 14 and 15, 1918, brought a new task: Poler was among those assigned to escort pilots attacking enemy balloons.<\/p>\n<p>On the latter day, Poler flew a second mission late in the afternoon and for the first time was involved in attacking an enemy plane. The patrol, judging from their reports of sightings of enemy planes, began near the north end of their sector around Estaires and flew south towards Arras where they espied \u201c2 E.A., (one Phalz [<i>sic<\/i>] and 1 Albatross) in company near Scarpe and W. of S.E. patrol.\u201d Usher shot down the Albatros and received credit for it. Then, with John Leam Middleton, George Watson, and Poler, he focused on the Pfalz, later reporting that the \u201cPilot of Phalz, which was new type, with Albatross Scout tail, was exceedingly good.\u00a0.\u00a0.\u00a0. This machine was attacked by 3 other S.E.s of the patrol and forced right down to 200&#8242; where he contour chased across to La Brayelle. S.E.s finished at 2,000&#8242; &amp; returned heavily archied.\u201d (La Brayelle airfield was just west of Douai.) Poler reported that he \u201cWith other S.E. drove down Phalz Scout near Brebi\u00e8res.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The archie encountered on the 15<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0did not put S.E.5a D3540 out of commission, for Poler flew it the next afternoon when, if I have correctly understood the squadron\u2019s record book, the patrol, led by Usher, flew from Douai north to Vieux-Berquin; they saw eleven enemy aircraft east of Armenti\u00e8res but were \u201cunable to attack owing to shortage of petrol, having been up nearly 2 hours.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The next day, May 17, 1918, Poler flew a patrol with Lewis, who had just returned from leave and was once again leading B flight. Lewis resumed flying D3540; Poler flew several different S.E.5a\u2019s over the next week or so, eventually settling on D3941.<\/p>\n<p>On May 20, 1918. Poler was involved in his first \u201cdog fight\u201d; the others in the flight during this patrol were Lewis, squadron C.O. Roderic Stanley Dallas, Rusden, Ivan Frank Hind, and Wood.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote48\" href=\"#WPFootnote48\">48<\/a> They left the ground just before 7 p.m. and, an hour later, over Merville, encountered a number of enemy planes. According to the joint combat report they filed, \u201cThe S.E. patrol attacked an E.A. formation and a general fight ensued, all pilots engaging various E.A. During the combat two pilots saw one E.A. low down and falling out of control, but no pilot is prepared to claim the credit of shooting it down.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote49\" href=\"#WPFootnote49\">49<\/a><\/p>\n<p>The next morning Lewis\u2019s flight, including Poler flying S.E.5a D3561, again engaged a large number of enemy aircraft, this time over Douai. Lewis described the encounter: \u201cLed patrol into action with 12 E.A who were below SEs. E.A. were at once reinforced by the arrival of a further 8 E.A. A dog fight ensued between the whole of the two formations.\u201d The planes of No. 40 Squadron were flying at around 18,000 feet when they dove on the enemy aircraft beneath them. In the remarks column of the squadron record book Poler noted of his own participation \u201c2 indecisive combats.\u201d He later recalled that \u201cI got in several shots at a Pfalz, and had a stoppage in my Vickers, and used the Lewis gun on an Albatros. After a few minutes the Huns cleared out and we went back to count our bullet holes. One [D5968] had so many that the ship was written off.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote50\" href=\"#WPFootnote50\">50<\/a> Lewis received credit for one plane destroyed, and two other flight members recorded a plane driven down out of control.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote51\" href=\"#WPFootnote51\">51<\/a> On returning from another offensive patrol late that afternoon when no enemy aircraft were seen, Poler had the misfortune to stall D3561, which pancaked and overturned; the plane was struck off charge; Poler was not injured.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote52\" href=\"#WPFootnote52\">52<\/a> He flew D3530 on uneventful morning patrols the next two days, and then \u201cCapt. Lewis gave me a new machine and I took it up for a test to 21,000 feet. It was perfect. Cold up there without oxygen, and tiresome. We have been carrying 20 pound Cooper bombs just for morale, but with no bombsights we can do little damage.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote53\" href=\"#WPFootnote53\">53<\/a>\u00a0The new plane was presumably S.E.5a D3941, which, according to the record book, Poler took for a ninety minute test flight the morning of May 25, 1918, and which he continued to fly through June 7, 1918.<\/p>\n<p>The end of May 1918 would bring a kind of mission new to Poler. From May 29 through June 2, 1918, he took part in six bombing missions, with Estaires and Merville as the main targets. The squadron record book notes some ground strafing, which suggests that these patrols were flown at low altitude where the lack of bomb sights was perhaps not an issue.<\/p>\n<p><a id=\"Bryas\"><\/a><a href=\"#Top\">No. 40 Squadron, Bryas, June\u2013September<\/a><\/p>\n<p>On June 4, 1918, No. 40 Squadron finally put a bit more distance between themselves and the front, moving about eight miles southwest to Bryas (now Brias) \u201cnear St. Pol, on a beautiful but small aerodrome at the edge of a woods. On days when the weather was too \u2018dud\u2019 to fly we would visit the front lines near Arras, or go to the beach at Paris Plage, or ride the saddle horses assigned to the squadron.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote54\" href=\"#WPFootnote54\">54<\/a> No. 40\u2019s missions and targets, however, did not change with their location: they continued to conduct offensive patrols and bombing missions along the First Army front. On June 7, 1918, three days after flying D3941 to the new aerodrome, Poler took part in an offensive patrol over Estaires and engaged an enemy two seater. His S.E.5a, D3941, was \u201cshot through by m[achine] g[un] fire\u201d and badly enough damaged that it was struck off charge; Poler was not hurt.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote55\" href=\"#WPFootnote55\">55<\/a><\/p>\n<p>The next day, June 8, 1918, Poler experienced his second crash while with No. 40 Squadron. Flying S.E.5a D3505 for the first time, he left Bryas with Lewis and Usher shortly before 10 a.m. on a line patrol. On their return, Poler \u201cLost wheel and tilted on nose\u201d; the plane was struck off charge a few days later; Poler was OK.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote56\" href=\"#WPFootnote56\">56<\/a><\/p>\n<p>The day after this incident, the Germans initiated the third phase of their Spring Offensive, the Battle of Matz. As a result, according to Lewis, \u201cLife has been extremely dull lately. The attack down south has robbed us all of the chances of doing what we are, I suppose put here to do.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote57\" href=\"#WPFootnote57\">57<\/a> Poler\u2019s repeated report \u201cNo. E.A. seen\u201d no longer had anything to do with his sky vision but rather with the absence of enemy planes. Lewis wrote \u201cTime after time, day after day, I have patrolled the whole sky at all heights in all places, and found nothing\u00a0.\u00a0.\u00a0.\u00a0.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote58\" href=\"#WPFootnote58\">58<\/a><\/p>\n<p><figure id=\"attachment_7203\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7203\" style=\"width: 440px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-7203\" src=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Bryas-aerodrome.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"440\" height=\"279\" srcset=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Bryas-aerodrome.jpg 742w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Bryas-aerodrome-500x317.jpg 500w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 440px) 85vw, 440px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-7203\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Roger Austin of the Great War Forum has marked in red ink the air field used by No. 40 Squadron in this detail from trench map &#8220;[Bethune] 36b: France&#8221; from the McMaster University collection of World War 1 military maps. The map coordinates for the air field are 36b N 27d &amp; 28c.<\/figcaption><\/figure>On June 23, 1918, Poler had the misfortune to crash once again, on his return from a mission during which he dropped four bombs on Douai. The aircraft casualty report states: \u201cCrashed after wind caused wing to hit ground on landing.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote59\" href=\"#WPFootnote59\">59<\/a> The plane, S.E.5a D3969, was wrecked and struck off charge, but Poler\u2019s luck held; he was not hurt. Poler later recalled that \u201cMy score for running undercarriages off that S.E.5 and going over on my back was pretty high\u201d; this was at least in part related to the difficulties of the field at Bryas: \u201cYou really had to be a pilot to be able to operate out of this airdrome. It was just a little field. It was long and had a good section for an S.E.5 to get off and land. The wind was invariably from the direction of a forest, trees that were 50, 60 feet high. In order to land into the wind and not overshoot into a ditch down at the end, we actually had to bring the S.E.5 right down beside the forest, lower than the trees, and then make a nice sort of sideslip into the wind.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote60\" href=\"#WPFootnote60\">60<\/a>Not long after the June 23, 1918, incident, Lewis\u2019s flight, including Poler, now flying S.E.5a E1284,<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote61\" href=\"#WPFootnote61\">61<\/a> as well as another American, Paul Verdier Burwell, had an encounter with enemy planes\u2014the relevant page in the squadron record book bears no date, but it was probably June 27, 1918. Lewis described the encounter in a letter home on June 28, 1918: \u201cTwo very sporty Hun scouts attacked a straggler of our formation. One with a very bright red top plane and yellow body, and the other a mottled brown.\u201d Lewis\u2019s report in the squadron record book identifies the red plane as a Pfalz and the brown as probably a Fokker. \u201cBolo [Poler] had an excellent fight with the red fellow, who fought with equal determination, finally leaving each other at a few thousand feet.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote62\" href=\"#WPFootnote62\">62<\/a>\u00a0Poler\u2019s diary entry is more definite about the second plane: \u201cAt a 1:30 patrol we engaged two Huns. One, our first Fokker D.VII, and a Pfalz with wings painted red and fuselage yellow. I had a wonderful dogfight with the last down to 7,000 feet, away over the lines. No one was hurt.\u201d\u00a0<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote63\" href=\"#WPFootnote63\">63<\/a> In his letter Lewis notes that \u201cI have a great deal of fun with my Flight now. Our formation flying is our great point; no matter what way I turn they are always there.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote64\" href=\"#WPFootnote64\">64<\/a>Perhaps inspired by George Edward Henry McElroy\u2019s successful attack on a balloon on June 28, 1918, Poler, still flying S.E.5a E1284, attacked and brought down a balloon over Vitry-en-Artois on July 1, 1918, scoring his first aerial victory.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote65\" href=\"#WPFootnote65\">65<\/a> According to Lewis, Poler \u201csaid he hadn\u2019t done anything for \u2018the King and Country\u2019, so insisted on doing this.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote66\" href=\"#WPFootnote66\">66<\/a> Afterwards Poler \u201chad to land at No. 16 Sqn\u2019s field [at Camblain-l&#8217;Abb\u00e9] to get some water for my engine was heating. Found I had been a favorite target of ground gunners and took some hits.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote67\" href=\"#WPFootnote67\">67<\/a><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter wp-image-7206\" src=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/13_-Individual-Combat-Records-of-American-Pilots-Serving-with-the-Royal-Air-Force.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"551\" height=\"844\" srcset=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/13_-Individual-Combat-Records-of-American-Pilots-Serving-with-the-Royal-Air-Force.jpg 3150w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/13_-Individual-Combat-Records-of-American-Pilots-Serving-with-the-Royal-Air-Force-326x500.jpg 326w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/13_-Individual-Combat-Records-of-American-Pilots-Serving-with-the-Royal-Air-Force-669x1024.jpg 669w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/13_-Individual-Combat-Records-of-American-Pilots-Serving-with-the-Royal-Air-Force-768x1176.jpg 768w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/13_-Individual-Combat-Records-of-American-Pilots-Serving-with-the-Royal-Air-Force-1003x1536.jpg 1003w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/13_-Individual-Combat-Records-of-American-Pilots-Serving-with-the-Royal-Air-Force-1337x2048.jpg 1337w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/13_-Individual-Combat-Records-of-American-Pilots-Serving-with-the-Royal-Air-Force-1200x1838.jpg 1200w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 551px) 85vw, 551px\" \/>Poler took part in two more offensive patrols in early July 1918 before going on leave from July 6 until July 25, 1918. On his first evening back in England, he dined at the Putney home of American businessman Robert Noyes Fairbanks, where he ran into Harold Ernst Goettler.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote68\" href=\"#WPFootnote68\">68<\/a> Lewis had written his family that Poler \u201cis home on leave. I told him to call if he felt like it.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote69\" href=\"#WPFootnote69\">69<\/a> There is no record of a visit, but it seems likely that Poler, like Keith Logan (Grid) Caldwell and Edward Corringham (Mick) Mannock, would have availed himself of Lewis\u2019s invitation to visit the family home, St. David\u2019s, on Templewood Avenue near Hampstead Heath.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote70\" href=\"#WPFootnote70\">70<\/a> While in England Poler \u201chad some clothes made, and got some teeth fixed, the ones knocked loose in a crash in training at Gosport. And was a weekend guest at the home of Sir Randolph Baker, M.P., in Dorsetshire.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote71\" href=\"#WPFootnote71\">71<\/a><\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_7220\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7220\" style=\"width: 1600px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-7220\" src=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Ranston-House-from-ebay-p.c..jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"1600\" height=\"978\" srcset=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Ranston-House-from-ebay-p.c..jpg 1600w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Ranston-House-from-ebay-p.c.-500x306.jpg 500w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Ranston-House-from-ebay-p.c.-1024x626.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Ranston-House-from-ebay-p.c.-768x469.jpg 768w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Ranston-House-from-ebay-p.c.-1536x939.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Ranston-House-from-ebay-p.c.-1200x734.jpg 1200w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 709px) 85vw, (max-width: 909px) 67vw, (max-width: 1362px) 62vw, 840px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-7220\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Ralston House, home of Sir Randolf Littlehales Baker, where Poler spent a weekend of his leave. The image is from a postcard auctioned on Ebay and dates from 1910 or before.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>By the time Poler returned to No. 40 Squadron, Lewis himself had gone on leave, knowing that he would not be returning to France. From a passing remark in David Gunby\u2019s history of the squadron, it appears that Hind took over as B flight leader.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote72\" href=\"#WPFootnote72\">72<\/a><\/p>\n<p>On the last day of July 1918 Poler made a visit to No. 56 Squadron, stationed at Valheureux, perhaps to visit Borncamp, who had been with 56 for about two weeks. Otherwise, in late July and early August 1918, Poler continued flying offensive patrols, more often than not involving the bombing of targets east of Arras. On one occasion (the page in the squadron record book lacks a date), Poler fired on two enemy balloons; Landis, on the same patrol, reported that \u201cthe balloons were pulled down in a very damaged and semi deflated condition.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>On August 7, 1918, flying E1284\u2014his plane since late June\u2014Poler crash landed at Ostreville shortly after taking off from Bryas on an offensive patrol; the engine had failed. Yet again the plane was so badly damaged that it was struck off charge while Poler walked away uninjured.<\/p>\n<p>The next day, August 8, 1918, marked the opening of the Amiens Offensive, the British and French attack along a fifteen-mile front east of Amiens and the beginning of the Hundred Days Offensive. On that day and on the morning of the ninth it was business as usual for No. 40 Squadron. Poler was involved in indecisive combats east of Arras on both the morning and afternoon patrols on August 8, 1918; both that afternoon and the next morning he experienced engine trouble in S.E.5a E1304.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote73\" href=\"#WPFootnote73\">73<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Beginning the afternoon of August 8, 1918, strenuous efforts were made by the R.A.F. to bomb bridges over the Somme east of Amiens in the hope of trapping German troops on the river\u2019s south and west banks near Peronne. The next afternoon the fighter squadrons of I Brigade, including No. 40 Squadron, were \u201cbrought down from the north\u201d to patrol \u201cjust above the clouds,\u201d thus freeing up the fighter squadrons of IX Brigade to escort the bombers tasked with destroying bridges.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote74\" href=\"#WPFootnote74\">74<\/a> Poler did not take part in that afternoon\u2019s mission, described in the record book as \u201cescort to bombers,\u201d as he needed to test a new plane, C9132. He did, however, fly this S.E.5 with the squadron the next morning, August 10, 1918, when thirteen planes took off at 6:30 a.m. and landed about two hours later at Moyencourt, having, according to Poler, gotten lost; they then flew to Bertangles, where No. 84 Squadron R.A.F. was stationed, and \u201chad breakfast, filled up the tanks.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote75\" href=\"#WPFootnote75\">75<\/a> They were back at Bryas at 11:20, having been in the air nearly three hours in all. A second patrol in the afternoon, described cryptically in the record book as \u201cO.P. and Fienvillers,\u201d involved another three hours and forty minutes in the air. Poler\u2019s diary provides more detail: \u201cAt 2:00 PM went down to the \u2018push\u2019 east of Amiens, and did a line patrol. Had tea at 43 Sqdn. [at Fienvillers]. At 5:00 went on another show then came home\u201d arriving back at about 7 p.m. having flown over country just abandoned by the Germans and having experienced \u201cthe longest day of flying\u20146 hours.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote76\" href=\"#WPFootnote76\">76<\/a>\u00a0Enemy aircraft were seen by some of the pilots, but not engaged.<\/p>\n<p>On August 11, 1918, No. 40 Squadron made two offensive patrols in the afternoon; Poler returned early from the first one with engine trouble, but flew C9132 again later in the day. At least the latter mission was flown back up north, as Poler reported seeing \u201c1 E.A. twoseater E of B\u00e9thune at 3000&#8242; too far E to engage.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote77\" href=\"#WPFootnote77\">77<\/a><\/p>\n<p>On the morning of August 12, 1918, the squadron flew south to Allonville, just northwest of Amiens.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote78\" href=\"#WPFootnote78\">78<\/a>\u00a0Soon after their arrival they set out on an offensive patrol\u2014presumably still tasked with patrolling at altitude to protect the bridge bombers and their escorts. This time enemy aircraft were encountered in abundance: the reports in the record book mention \u201c8 Fokkers,\u201d \u201c6 E.A.,\u201d \u201c20 E.A. over Peronne,\u201d \u201cAbout 50 E.A. seen,\u201d and \u201cInnumerable E.A. seen.\u201d Poler, who flew C9132 on that patrol, later recalled that \u201cWe tried to gain height on a formation of twenty-two (22) Huns, but could\u2019nt. [<i>sic<\/i>] At last the Huns broke up and we went after them. Later six (6) of us climbed up to 15,000 feet and attacked six (6) E.A. twelve miles over the lines, and just over the village of Brie. We fought for a full half-hour and had eight indecisive combats, one of which I claimed as out of control.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote79\" href=\"#WPFootnote79\">79<\/a> During this mission Hind was shot down and killed, and Wood shot down and taken prisoner.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote80\" href=\"#WPFootnote80\">80<\/a>\u00a0Poler recalls flying a second offensive patrol in the afternoon: \u201cI got up to 8000&#8242; and my engine made an awful roar and then stopped. I got back all right with two big slide-slips [<i>sic<\/i>]. Found that the front of engine casing was cracked.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote81\" href=\"#WPFootnote81\">81<\/a><\/p>\n<p>No. 40 Squadron apparently flew its last two missions in support of the Amiens Offensive on August 14, 1918. They made the fifteen minute flight from Bryas to Fienvillers, about fifteen miles north of Amiens, in the early morning and immediately set out on an offensive patrol. Poler, however, flying D6180, twice had to return to Bryas because of oil leakage and did not participate in the morning patrol. He arrived in time for the second mission of that day, which was uneventful except insofar as more than half the planes (not including Poler\u2019s) had to return early because of engine or gear trouble.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote82\" href=\"#WPFootnote82\">82<\/a>\u00a0In the early evening the squadron returned to Bryas and the next day resumed their patrols on the First Army\u2019s sector.<\/p>\n<p>On August 16, 1918, a day after an indecisive combat as well as bouts of radiator and engine trouble in C9132, Poler took off early in the morning in D8440 with two other pilots, evidently balloon hunting. While Wolstan Vyvyan Trubshawe \u201cfired 250 rds at enemy balloon without result,\u201d Poler reported having \u201cShot balloon down in flames\u201d; his combat report indicates this occurred near Biache-Saint-Vaast, very near where he scored his previous balloon.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote83\" href=\"#WPFootnote83\">83<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Poler took part in several largely uneventful offensive and line patrols through August 21, 1918, and then came down with tonsillitis, for which he was treated at No. 12 Stationary Hospital at St. Pol. He was \u201cdischarged to duty\u201d on August 26, 1918.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote84\" href=\"#WPFootnote84\">84<\/a> Prior to his sick leave, enemy aircraft were rarely sighted during patrols by No. 40 Squadron planes, but on August 27, 1918, the record book noted \u201cabnormal activity of E.A.,\u201d and this would be the case during the remainder of Poler\u2019s time with No. 40. On August 26, 1918, the First Army had opened the Battle of the Scarpe, \u201cstriking eastwards from Arras,\u201d and No. 40 Squadron was tasked with making patrols starting at dawn to \u201cprevent useful observation from enemy balloons in the battle area, to keep enemy airplanes at a distance, and to afford general protection to the low-flying planes.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote85\" href=\"#WPFootnote85\">85<\/a><\/p>\n<p>This assignment led to a memorable encounter for Poler on August 27, 1918, that he recalled in his 1959 interview with James J. Sloan and George D. Hocutt: \u201cToward September . . . three of us took a dawn patrol.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote86\" href=\"#WPFootnote86\">86<\/a> According to the record book, there were initially four pilots, Middleton, Poler, Philip Bryce Myers, and Arthur Thomas Drinkwater, but Drinkwater returned after fifteen minutes with engine trouble. Middleton wrote of that patrol that \u201cWe were to fly at 6,000 feet and look after 208 Squadron who were to shoot down balloons south of Arras. We got to the lines at about 6am.\u00a0.\u00a0.\u00a0. There seemed to be no Camels [of 208 Squadron] in sight and there was a balloon somewhere near Vitry that seemed to be bearing a charmed live; nobody seemed to be taking the slightest notice of it. We waited about for quite a long time but still no Camels turned up.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote87\" href=\"#WPFootnote87\">87<\/a> Poler recollected that a \u201cballoon was up around Cambrai. There was another balloon south of there.\u00a0.\u00a0.\u00a0. I signaled to Middleton that I would go after one balloon. He signaled that he would go after the other.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote88\" href=\"#WPFootnote88\">88<\/a>\u00a0As they approached their respective targets, both were attacked by Fokkers. Poler: \u201cJust before I opened fire I noticed fourteen (14) Fokkers driving [<i>sic<\/i>] at us from the West. Eight (8) of them piled onto me, then at three thousand feet. I threw my machine around until all but one left and I was down to 1,000 feet over a gas attack and three miles over and completely dazed as to direction. In order to save myself, I had to roll six times before he left me. During the fight one bullet ripped open my sleeve; and my watch, on the instrument board, saved a bullet from entering my petrol tank.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote89\" href=\"#WPFootnote89\">89<\/a> Poler landed back at Bryas at 7:55 a.m., as did Myers. Middleton had a worse time: \u201cJust when I was getting within range I saw five Fokkers coming down on me. I was only at about 5,000 feet at the time so I was soon in a mess. They started firing at me right away but I seemed to be dodging the bullets alright. But not for long! With a crack and a bang my engine ceased to function!! I was still about three miles from the lines, so I could not hope to reach them. The chaps in my flight saw what had happened and they drove the Huns away so that I was able to land in peace.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote90\" href=\"#WPFootnote90\">90<\/a> Poler recalled that Middleton \u201cgot back to the squadron in about three days. He had crashed in no-man\u2019s land and he hid in a shell hole there.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote91\" href=\"#WPFootnote91\">91<\/a>\u00a0The squadron record book specifies the location: \u201cW of Mercatel.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>It must have taken some nerve to fly two more missions that same day. And Poler would in the meantime have learned that his fellow second Oxford detachment member Anderson, whom he had known since ground school at Cornell, had failed to return from the three man \u201cdawn patrol\u201d that had set out just before Poler\u2019s. Nevertheless Poler took off a second time late in the morning of August 27, 1918, this time flying E4036\u2014C9132 was perhaps undergoing repairs. He had to return just over an hour later with engine trouble. In the afternoon he was back flying C9132, but again had to return because of engine trouble.<\/p>\n<p>Bad weather on August 28, 1918, meant there was little flying, but on August 29, 1918, ten planes from No. 40 Squadron, including C9132 piloted by Poler, set off at 6:15 a.m. A number of enemy planes were observed. Poler, as was his wont, focussed on an enemy balloon and was able to report having driven it down. Later in the morning Middleton flew C9132 and drove a Fokker down out of control but stood the plane on its nose when he landed. Middleton was OK, but C9132 was struck off charge three days later.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote92\" href=\"#WPFootnote92\">92<\/a>\u00a0Thus Poler was flying yet a different plane, D8440, when he took part in his second mission that day, when many enemy aircraft were seen near Cambrai, too far east to engage. Over the course of the last two days of August Poler flew five missions and engaged in \u201cindecisive combat\u201d during two of them. In the evening on August 31, 1918, with Trubshawe acting as his guard, Poler set out in S.E.5a E3982 on a \u201cSpecial Mission.\u201d He reported that he \u201cDived on hostile balloon SW of Douai but was unable to attack owing to heavy machine gun barrage. Saw the observer jump out.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>During the first week of September Poler flew ten missions. On September 6, 1918, flying E9135 he experienced engine trouble and had a forced landing at No. 6 Squadron, stationed at Le Hameau, north-northwest of Arras, but both he and the plane were OK. Leaving the machine at Le Hameau, Poler returned to Bryas and the next day flew S.E.5a E4053 on his final mission with No. 40 Squadron. At 6 a.m. he, Gilbert John Strange, and Burwell \u201cwent over especially for balloons.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote93\" href=\"#WPFootnote93\">93<\/a>\u00a0The remarks column in the record book states that he \u201cFired 50rds at hostile balloon S of Cambrai saw 1 observer jump out. 7 Fokker biplanes seen. 1 indec: combat.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a id=\"25\"><\/a><a href=\"#Top\">25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Bad weather kept No. 40 Squadron on the ground for the next week, during which Poler learned that he was about to be transferred back to the American army. On September 12, 1918, he, along with Burwell and Landis, \u201cProceeded to 3<sup>rd<\/sup> Aviation Instrn. Centre &amp; Struck off Strength of R.A.F.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote94\" href=\"#WPFootnote94\">94<\/a>\u00a0According to Paul Stuart Winslow of the first Oxford detachment, Poler, Burwell, and Landis were part of a group of thirteen American pilots serving with the R.A.F. ordered at this time to the 3<sup>rd<\/sup>\u00a0A.I.C. at Issoudun. They \u201creported to Headquarters and were told to come back tomorrow.\u00a0.\u00a0.\u00a0. When we reported to Major [Thomas George] Lamphier [<i>sic<\/i>; sc. Lanphier], we were told that we were ordered here by mistake, and they did not know what to do with us, but would wire Tours and let us know tomorrow.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote95\" href=\"#WPFootnote95\">95<\/a>\u00a0After much confusion Poler, Burwell, and Landis were assigned to the U.S. 25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron at Colombey-les-Belles; Baldwin and Wilson as well as several other second Oxford detachment members would also join the 25<sup>th<\/sup> Aero. Landis was made C.O. of the squadron and Poler was B flight commander.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote96\" href=\"#WPFootnote96\">96<\/a><\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_7225\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7225\" style=\"width: 2048px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-7225\" src=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Poler-AEF-ID-background-erased.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"2048\" height=\"1536\" srcset=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Poler-AEF-ID-background-erased.jpg 2048w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Poler-AEF-ID-background-erased-500x375.jpg 500w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Poler-AEF-ID-background-erased-1024x768.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Poler-AEF-ID-background-erased-768x576.jpg 768w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Poler-AEF-ID-background-erased-1536x1152.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-content\/uploads\/Poler-AEF-ID-background-erased-1200x900.jpg 1200w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 709px) 85vw, (max-width: 909px) 67vw, (max-width: 1362px) 62vw, 840px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-7225\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Poler&#8217;s A.E.F. identification card. My thanks to Steve Russell for the image; the card itself was sold at an online auction.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>On October 24, 1918, the squadron moved to Toul, where it joined the 17<sup>th<\/sup>, 148<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0and 141<sup>st<\/sup> Aero Squadrons to form the Fourth Pursuit Group of the American Second Army at Gengoult Field.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote97\" href=\"#WPFootnote97\">97<\/a>\u00a0Poler recalled how \u201cEvery pilot that came into the 25<sup>th<\/sup> Squadron, as he reported, got his orders to go over to England and bring back an S.E.5a.\u00a0.\u00a0.\u00a0. I made three trips.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote98\" href=\"#WPFootnote98\">98<\/a> On one occasion he and Burwell \u201cstopped in London.\u00a0.\u00a0.\u00a0. We went to the hotel where we usually stayed and found Lt. Anderson, in civvies, escaped from Germany.\u00a0.\u00a0.\u00a0. We then went over to the R.A.F. Club and met Capt. \u2018Noisy\u2019 [Gwilym Hugh] Lewis. What a dinner, and what a time reminiscing!\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote99\" href=\"#WPFootnote99\">99<\/a>\u00a0\u201cThe third trip over from England ferrying an S.E.5a I landed at Orly Field outside of Paris, on the 10<sup>th<\/sup> of November. We all went into Paris to stay, instead of the place where we should have stayed, at Orly. The next morning we woke up and heard the guns and found ourselves in various and sundry parades. Paris had gone wild.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote100\" href=\"#WPFootnote100\">100<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Poler returned to Toul and continued to serve with the 25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero after the armistice. Finally, on May 23, 1919, he and other members of the 25<sup>th<\/sup>, including Burwell, boarded the U.S.S.\u00a0<i>Frederick<\/i> at Brest for the voyage home; they arrived at Hoboken on June 2, 1919; both Poler and Burwell were now captains.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote101\" href=\"#WPFootnote101\">101<\/a> That same month Poler was awarded the Silver Star. The wording of the citation indicates that American authorities were ill informed about Poler\u2019s service with the R.A.F.: \u201cPoler distinguished himself by gallantry in action while serving with the 25th Aero Squadron, American Expeditionary Forces, in action at Vitrey-en-Artois, France, 1 July 1918, in destroying an enemy kite balloon.\u201d<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote102\" href=\"#WPFootnote102\">102<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Poler resumed his studies at Syracuse University and graduated with a degree in business administration.\u00a0<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote103\" href=\"#WPFootnote103\">103<\/a> He worked in the insurance industry, relocating by 1930 to Los Angeles.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote104\" href=\"#WPFootnote104\">104<\/a> In 1931 the state of New York awarded him their Conspicuous Service Cross.<a id=\"LinkTo_WPFootnote105\" href=\"#WPFootnote105\">105<\/a><\/p>\n<div class=\"WPHardPageBreak\" style=\"text-align: right;\"><span style=\"color: #999999;\"><em>mrsmcq June 2, 2022<\/em><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote\">\n<h3><\/h3>\n<h3>Notes<\/h3>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote1\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote1\"><strong>1<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0For Poler\u2019s place and date of birth, see Ancestry.com,\u00a0<i>U.S., World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917\u20131918<\/i>, record for Donald S Poler. For his place and date of death, see Ancestry.com,\u00a0<i>California, Death Index, 1940\u20131997<\/i>, record for Donald Swett Poler.\u00a0 The photo is a detail from a <a href=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/photos\/squadron-photos\/#25th_Aero_Thanksgiving\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">photo<\/a> of the officers of the 25th Aero Squadron.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote2\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote2\"><strong>2<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Cutter,\u00a0<i>Genealogical and Family History of Central New York<\/i>, vol. 2, pp. 880\u201381. Family trees at Ancestry.com indicate, without obvious documentation, that the Polers came from the Netherlands.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote3\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote3\"><strong>3<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0On the Swett family, see Cutter,\u00a0<i>Genealogical and Family History of Central New York<\/i>, vol. 1, pp. 344 ff.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote4\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote4\"><strong>4<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0\u201cMedina High School Graduates 1914.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote5\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote5\"><strong>5<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0<i>The Onondagan 1921<\/i>\u00a0indicates Poler graduated after the war.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote6\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote6\"><strong>6<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Sloan and Hocutt, \u201cOne of the \u2018Warbirds\u2019,\u201d p. 20.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote7\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote7\"><strong>7<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0\u201cCadets Enjoy Their Usual Sunday Rest.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote8\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote8\"><strong>8<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0\u201cGround School Graduations [for August 25, 1917].\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote9\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote9\"><strong>9<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Sloan and Hocutt, \u201cOne of the \u2018Warbirds\u2019\u201d, p. 20. The men\u2019s heights are given on the verso of their World War II draft registration cards.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote10\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote10\"><strong>10<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Deetjen, diary entry for October 9, 1917.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote11\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote11\"><strong>11<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Barksdale, \u201cThe Diary of Lt. Eugene Hoy Barksdale 1917\u20131918,\u201d entry (mis)dated October 8, 1917.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote12\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote12\"><strong>12<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0<i>Ibid<\/i>. This is one of several accounts of the evening; see, for example, the entry for October 22, 1917, in\u00a0<i>War Birds<\/i>.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote13\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote13\"><strong>13<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Deetjen, diary entry for October 21, 1917.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote14\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote14\"><strong>14<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Barksdale, \u201cThe Diary of Lt. Eugene Hoy Barksdale 1917\u20131918,\u201d entry (mis)dated October 8, 1917.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote15\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote15\"><strong>15<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0See Deetjen, diary entry for October 21, 1917; and, for the quotation, October 23, 1917.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote16\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote16\"><strong>16<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Foss, diary entry for November 2, 1917.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote17\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote17\"><strong>17<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Murton Campbell, diary entry for November 5, 1917.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote18\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote18\"><strong>18<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Ludwig, Diary, December 3, 1917.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote19\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote19\"><strong>19<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Ludwig, Diary, December 4, 1917.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote20\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote20\"><strong>20<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Sloan and Hocutt, \u201cOne of the \u2018Warbirds\u2019,\u201d p. 21. Poler is reported as referring to \u201cthe Wash at Wareham\u201d; this is presumably a misrecollection or mistranscription of Marham.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote21\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote21\"><strong>21<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Both Philpott,\u00a0<i>The Birth of the Royal Air Force<\/i>, and Jefford,\u00a0<i>R.A.F. Squadrons<\/i>, indicate that No. 51 Squadron had F.E.2b\u2019s at this time and make no reference to F.E.2c\u2019s.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote22\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote22\"><strong>22<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Ludwig, Diary, December 6, 1917.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote23\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote23\"><strong>23<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Ludwig, Diary, December 11, 1917.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote24\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote24\"><strong>24<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Ludwig, Diary, December 12, 1917.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote25\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote25\"><strong>25<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Ludwig, Diary, December13, 1917. On James Neave and his store in Mattishall, see Taylor, \u201cChurch Plain.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote26\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote26\"><strong>26<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Ludwig, Diary, December 15, 1917. \u201cTiny\u201d is not identified.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote27\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote27\"><strong>27<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Ludwig, Diary, December 18, 1917.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote28\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote28\"><strong>28<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Ludwig, Diary, December 19, 1917.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote29\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote29\"><strong>29<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Ludwig, Diary, December 29, 1917; I have not been able to identify Marjor Money.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote30\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote30\"><strong>30<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Wise,\u00a0<i>Canadian Airmen and the First World War<\/i>, p 105.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote31\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote31\"><strong>31<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Sloan and Hocutt, \u201cOne of the \u2018Warbirds\u2019,\u201d p. 21.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote32\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote32\"><strong>32<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Ludwig, Diary, December 31, 1917.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote33\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote33\"><strong>33<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Sloan and Hocutt, \u201cOne of the \u2018Warbirds\u2019,\u201d p. 21.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote34\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote34\"><strong>34<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Ludwig, Diary, February 11, 1918; 2<sup>nd<\/sup>\u00a0Lt. Watson is not identified, but the instructors were presumably Harry George Smart, Donald Watson, Reginald John Bedlington Benson, Walter Brian Long, and William Gerald Holbrow. See \u201cGosport School of Special Flying, names of instructors?\u201d.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote35\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote35\"><strong>35<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Ludwig, Diary, February 14, 1918.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote36\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote36\"><strong>36<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0 Cablegram 612-S, dated February 16, 1918, includes the commission recommendations for Poler and Ludwig. Wilson is recommended in cablegram 726-S (March 14, 1918); Borncamp, Brader, and Webber are recommended in cablegram 739-S (March 16, 1918).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote37\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote37\"><strong>37<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Sloan and Hocutt, \u201cOne of the \u2018Warbirds\u2019,\u201d pp. 21\u201322.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote38\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote38\"><strong>38<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0See the last page of the transcription of Ludwig\u2019s diary, where Wilson\u2019s account of the crash has been transcribed.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote38a\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote38a\"><strong>38a<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0 Biddle, \u201cSpecial Orders No. 35.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote39\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote39\"><strong>39<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Sloan and Hocutt, \u201cOne of the \u2018Warbirds\u2019,\u201d p. 22.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote40\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote40\"><strong>40<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0\u201cLieut. Donald S Poler USAS\/RCAS.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote41\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote41\"><strong>41<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Jones,\u00a0<i>The War in the Air<\/i>, vol. 4, p. 299.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote42\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote42\"><strong>42<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Lewis,\u00a0<i>Wings over the Somme 1916\u20131918<\/i>, p. 157.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote43\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote43\"><strong>43<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0<i>Ibid<\/i>., p. 159 (letter of April 24, 1918).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote44\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote44\"><strong>44<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Sloan, \u201cThe 25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron,\u201d p. 25.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote45\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote45\"><strong>45<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Information on Poler\u2019s activities with No. 40 Squadron are based, unless otherwise noted, on the No. 40 Squadron Record Book (RFC\/RAF). Quotations are taken from the record book\u2019s remarks column.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote46\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote46\"><strong>46<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Two of Lewis\u2019s photos of his plane with himself in the cockpit are reproduced on p. 147 of his\u00a0<i>Wings over the Somme<\/i>.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote47\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote47\"><strong>47<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Sloan, \u201cThe 25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron,\u201d p. 25.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote48\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote48\"><strong>48<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0The relevant combat report includes Landis in the patrol, but he does not appear in the entry for this patrol in the record book. See No. 40 Squadron Combat Reports (RFC\/RAF). Poler seems to have forgotten this combat when he supplied information to Sloan in the 1960s, recalling instead that \u201cMy first dog fight came on May 21st\u201d; see Sloan, \u201cThe 25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron,\u201d p. 25.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote49\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote49\"><strong>49<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0No. 40 Squadron Combat Reports (RFC\/RAF).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote50\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote50\"><strong>50<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Sloan, \u201cThe 25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron,\u201d p. 25. On S.E.5a D5968, flown by Donald Frederick Murmann, see Pentland,\u00a0<i>Royal Flying Corps<\/i>..<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote51\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote51\"><strong>51<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0No. 40 Squadron Combat Reports (RFC\/RAF).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote52\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote52\"><strong>52<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Information taken from Pentland,\u00a0<i>Royal Flying Corps<\/i>.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote53\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote53\"><strong>53<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Poler\u2019s diary entry about his new plane, as reported on p. 25 of Sloan\u2019s \u201cThe 25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron,\u201d is dated May 24, 1918, while the squadron record book records his test flight on May 25, 1918, so the two may refer to two separate occasions, but I suspect that the date of the diary entry has been recorded inaccurately.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote54\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote54\"><strong>54<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Poler\u2019s diary entry for June 3, 1918, transcribed by Sloan, \u201cThe 25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron,\u201d p. 25. The record book makes it clear that the move took place June 4, 1918.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote55\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote55\"><strong>55<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0This information comes from Pentland\u2019s transcription of the relevant casualty report at his\u00a0<i>Royal Flying Corps<\/i>; my copy of the record book does not appear to have an entry for this mission.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote56\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote56\"><strong>56<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Casualty report for D3505 as transcribed by Pentland at his\u00a0<i>Royal Flying Corps<\/i>.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote57\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote57\"><strong>57<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Lewis,\u00a0<i>Wings over the Somme<\/i>, p. 169 (letter of June 17, 1918).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote58\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote58\"><strong>58<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0<i>Ibid<\/i>.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote59\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote59\"><strong>59<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Casualty report for D3969 as transcribed by Pentland at his\u00a0<i>Royal Flying Corps<\/i><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote60\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote60\"><strong>60<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Sloan and Hocutt, \u201cOne of the \u2018Warbirds\u2019,\u201d p. 27.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote61\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote61\"><strong>61<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0No. 40 Squadron Record Book (RFC\/RAF) erroneously records Poler\u2019s plane as E1248 (an R.E.8).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote62\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote62\"><strong>62<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Lewis,\u00a0<i>Wings over the Somme<\/i>, p. 171.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote63\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote63\"><strong>63<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Poler\u2019s diary entry dated June 27, 1918, transcribed by Sloan, \u201cThe 25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron,\u201d p. 25.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote64\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote64\"><strong>64<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Lewis,\u00a0<i>Wings over the Somme<\/i>, p. 171.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote65\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote65\"><strong>65<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0See No. 40 Squadron Combat Reports (RFC\/RAF); the combat report can also be seen on p. 22 of\u00a0<i>Individual Combat Records of Pilots with R.A.F.<\/i>\u00a0The location is given there as \u201cN. of Scarpe\u201d; Poler specifies \u201cover Vitry\u201d in his diary entry for July 1, 1918, transcribed by Sloan, \u201cThe 25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron,\u201d p. 25.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote66\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote66\"><strong>66<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Lewis,\u00a0<i>Wings over the Somme<\/i>, p. 175 (letter of July 11, 1918).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote67\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote67\"><strong>67<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Diary entry transcribed by Sloan, \u201cThe 25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron,\u201d pp. 25\u201326.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote68\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote68\"><strong>68<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0See Goettler, diary entry for July 6, 1918.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote69\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote69\"><strong>69<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Lewis,\u00a0<i>Wings over the Somme<\/i>, p. 175 (letter of July 11, 1918).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote70\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote70\"><strong>70<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0See the photo of Caldwell with Lewis\u2019s father on p. 163 of Lewis\u2019s\u00a0<i>Wings over the Somme<\/i>; and, on Mannock, p. 117 of Adrian Smith\u2019s\u00a0<i>Mick Mannock, Fighter Pilot: Myth, Life and Politics.<\/i><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote71\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote71\"><strong>71<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Diary entry transcribed by Sloan, \u201cThe 25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron,\u201d p. 26.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote72\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote72\"><strong>72<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Gunby,\u00a0<i>Sweeping the Skies<\/i>, p. 63.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote73\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote73\"><strong>73<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Cf. Poler\u2019s diary entry for August 8, 1918, as it appears in Sloan, \u201cThe 25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron, p. 26.\u201d The entry appears to elide events that took place over August 8 through August 10, 1918.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote74\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote74\"><strong>74<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0See Jones,\u00a0<i>The War in the Air<\/i>, volume 6, pp. 449\u201350.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote75\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote75\"><strong>75<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0 Poler\u2019s diary entry for August 8, 1918, as it appears in Sloan, \u201cThe 25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron, p. 26.\u201d Poler recalls having been made \u201cacting Flight Commander\u201d that day; it is not possible to verify this using the record book. It seems somewhat more likely that this appointment occurred after Hind was killed on August 12, 1918.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote76\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote76\"><strong>76<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0<i>Ibid<\/i>.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote77\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote77\"><strong>77<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0I should note that I have found the copy of the squadron record book available to me confusing; pages appear to be out of order, and on some pages no date is provided. However, I believe I have reconstructed the sequence of squadron activities accurately.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote78\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote78\"><strong>78<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0The events of this day appear in the transcription of Poler\u2019s diary under the date August 11, 1918; the mention of Hind and Wood being missing make it clear that the date should be August 12, 1918.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote79\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote79\"><strong>79<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Munsell, \u201cAir Service History,\u201d pp. 65\u201366 (257\u201358). Poler\u2019s combat report is referred to in the squadron record book, but I have not been able to locate a copy. Munsell, \u201cAir Service History,\u201d p. 46 (239), describes the combat as having occurred at \u201c9:40 A.M. W. of Mons,\u201d i.e., of Mons-en-Chauss\u00e9e.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote80\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote80\"><strong>80<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Gunby is apparently in error when he writes in\u00a0<i>Sweeping the Skies<\/i>, p. 65, that these casualties occurred on 40\u2019s \u201cown sector of the front.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote81\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote81\"><strong>81<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0This second mission does not appear in my copy of the record book; a page may be missing.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote82\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote82\"><strong>82<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0The record book, or at least my copy of it, appears to be missing some information about the squadron\u2019s activities on August 13, 1918.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote83\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote83\"><strong>83<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0See No. 40 Squadron Record Book (RFC\/RAF) and No. 40 Squadron Combat Reports (RFC\/RAF); and see Sloan and Hocutt, \u201cOne of the \u2018War Birds\u2019,\u201d p. 23.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote84\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote84\"><strong>84<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0\u201cPoler, D.S. (Donald S.).\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote85\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote85\"><strong>85<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Jones,\u00a0<i>The War in the Air<\/i>, vol. 6, pp. 484 and 486.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote86\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote86\"><strong>86<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Sloan and Hocutt, \u201cOne of the \u2018War Birds\u2019,\u201d p. 24. See also Poler\u2019s account on p. 26 of Sloan, \u201cThe 25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote87\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote87\"><strong>87<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0From Middleton\u2019s typescript diary at the RAF Museum, London, quoted in Hart,\u00a0<i>Aces Falling<\/i>, p. 287.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote88\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote88\"><strong>88<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Sloan and Hocutt, \u201cOne of the \u2018War Birds\u2019,\u201d p. 24.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote89\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote89\"><strong>89<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Munsell, \u201cAir Service History,\u201d p. 258 (65).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote90\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote90\"><strong>90<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0From Middleton\u2019s typescript diary at the RAF Museum, London, quoted in Hart,\u00a0<i>Aces Falling<\/i>, p. 287.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote91\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote91\"><strong>91<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Sloan and Hocutt, \u201cOne of the \u2018War Birds\u2019,\u201d p. 25.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote92\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote92\"><strong>92<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Pentland,\u00a0<i>Royal Flying Corps<\/i>: \u201cSideslipped and smashed u\/c on landing but took off again and stood on nose on landing from OP. Capt JL Middleton Ok.\u201d The crashes are not noted in the squadron record book.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote93\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote93\"><strong>93<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Munsell, \u201cAir Service History,\u201d p. 258 (65).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote94\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote94\"><strong>94<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0\u201cLieut. Donald S Poler USAS\/RCAS.\u201d And see \u201cLieut. Paul Verdier Burwell U. S. A. S.\u201d and \u201cLieut. Reed G. Landis U.S.A.S.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote95\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote95\"><strong>95<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0\u201cAttached to No. 56,\u201d p. 320 (diary entry for September 13, 1918).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote96\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote96\"><strong>96<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0\u201cHistory of 25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron, (Pursuit),\u201d pp. 4\u20135; Sloan, \u201cThe 25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron,\u201d p. 27.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote97\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote97\"><strong>97<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0\u201cHistory of 25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron, (Pursuit),\u201d p. 5.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote98\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote98\"><strong>98<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Sloan and Hocutt, \u201cOne of the \u2018War Birds\u2019,\u201d p. 26.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote99\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote99\"><strong>99<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Sloan, \u201cThe 25<sup>th<\/sup>\u00a0Aero Squadron,\u201d p. 26.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote100\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote100\"><strong>100<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Sloan and Hocutt, \u201cOne of the \u2018War Birds\u2019,\u201d p. 26.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote101\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote101\"><strong>101<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Ancestry.com,\u00a0<i>U.S., Army Transport Service, Passenger Lists, 1910-1939<\/i>, record for Dowald [<i>sic<\/i>] S. Poler.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote102\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote102\"><strong>102<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0\u201cDonald S. Poler.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote103\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote103\"><strong>103<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0<i>The Onondagan 1921<\/i>, p. 108.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote104\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote104\"><strong>104<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Ancestry.com,\u00a0<i>1930 United States Federal Census<\/i>, record for Donald S Poler.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote105\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p><a href=\"#LinkTo_WPFootnote105\"><strong>105<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0Ancestry.com,\u00a0<i>New York, U.S., Record of Award Medal, 1920-1991<\/i>, record for Donald S Poler.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"WPFootnote\">\n<div id=\"WPFootnote89\" class=\"WPNormal\">\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>(Medina, New York, June 21, 1896 \u2013 Los Angeles, September 9, 1994).1 Oxford, Grantham\u00a0 \u272f \u00a0Nos. 51 and 192 Squadrons \u00a0\u272f\u00a0 Gosport \u00a0\u272f\u00a0 No. 40 Squadron, Bruay\u00a0 \u00a0\u272f\u00a0 No. 40 Squadron, Bryas \u00a0\u272f\u00a0 25th\u00a0Aero Squadron Poler\u2019s paternal ancestors were settled in Saratoga County in eastern New York before they relocated in the 1830s to Shelby &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/the-biographies\/donald-swett-poler\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;Donald Swett Poler&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":7191,"parent":30,"menu_order":103,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-7182","page","type-page","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/7182","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=7182"}],"version-history":[{"count":10,"href":"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/7182\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":8148,"href":"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/7182\/revisions\/8148"}],"up":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/30"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/7191"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/parr-hooper.cmsmcq.com\/2OD\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=7182"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}