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Anyone
seeking to define "warrior" can do it with
a single word: Rickenbacker. Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker
was a warrior in two wars, becoming the American Ace
of Aces in 1918 and demonstrating rare leadership and
courage in World War II. Rick, as he liked to be called,
never ceased to watch out for the interests of the
United States.
Beloved by many, hated by not a few, Rickenbacker
was the quintessential American leader-patriot of the
20th century, a man who fought to protect his interests
and to promote those of the United States. He also
had his weaknesses, including an inability to bear
fools lightly, a predisposition to speak rashly, and
a cranky insistence that co-workers give a 110 percent
effort.
He was born in Columbus, Ohio, in 1890, the son of
Swiss immigrants. His surname originally was spelled
Rickenbacher. The Teutonic sound of it caused Rickenbacker
many problems and, as a result of World War I, he changed
it. In 1918, he became Eddie "Rickenbacker"--with
the change of that single letter somehow giving him
comfort.
His father, William, was a day laborer who regularly
beat him with a switch. Rickenbacker responded by becoming
a juvenile delinquent--a small-time petty thief and
bully who was so quick with his fists that his impoverished
parents feared he would wind up in reform school. Yet
when his father was murdered on the job, young Edd,
as he was then called, underwent a transformation.
He was not quite 14, but he assumed responsibility
for his family, a task usually shouldered by an eldest
son. (Rickenbacker did have an older brother.) Rickenbacker
immediately dropped out of school to begin working
72-hour weeks in a sweatshop glass factory. At this
job, he earned a nickel per hour--$182 per year. He
didn't have to spend a year there, though, for he was
at the start of a Horatio Alger career that would see
him swiftly take on a series of ever more responsible
jobs for which he was both too young and too uneducated.
His swift ascendancy in part was fueled by the courses
he took from the International Correspondence School,
an institution that helped many a poor lad, Walter
Chrysler among them. By age 17, he was supervising
more than a dozen adult professionals in an experimental
engineering laboratory for the Columbus Buggy Co.,
which was then launching a new line of automobiles.
Racing and Riches
Rickenbacker was on the road to riches. He found he
was a natural salesman and manager. Soon he was earning
$150 a month at a time when lawyers and doctors made
less. By age 19, he was 6 feet, 2 inches tall, weighed
165 pounds, and was sharpening his skills as a professional
racing car driver. Within a few years, he had reached
the top of his new profession, earning $60,000 the
last year he raced. That was the equivalent today of
$1 million.
As a driver, Rickenbacker was shrewd and savvy, carefully
preplanning his races to maximize his advantages. He
developed practical leadership skills and drilled his
pit crew into teams able to change tires and refuel
faster than any competitor. In his prerace planning,
Rickenbacker took account of the track, weather conditions,
and the way his equipment stacked up to the competition.
Then, he drove with cool precision, pushing the envelope
of risk but without recklessness.
He developed a smiling public persona. His race colleagues
thought of him as a mean driver, one who used any trick
he could devise to win. It was good training for a
future fighter pilot.
He did not let his celebrity go to his head, for he
was painfully aware of his lack of education. Rickenbacker
took self-improvement courses and always tried to expand
his vocabulary. Now Rickenbacker, frequently thrust
into exalted company, watched how leaders in politics
and business behaved and began to emulate their actions.
(In his mid-20s, he noted that these individuals had
middle initials, which he lacked. He selected V, and
then selected "Vernon" to go with it.)
In 1916, Britain was at war, but the Sunbeam Motor
Car Co. invited Rickenbacker to England in hopes he
would build a team to race Sunbeam cars in America.
English intelligence was convinced that Rickenbacker
was a German secret agent. It kept Rickenbacker under
close watch around the clock.
Far from being pro-German, however, Rickenbacker itched
to fight for the Allied cause. He proposed creating
an air squadron composed solely of race-driver friends.
The US Army shrugged off his idea as impractical.
When the US entered the war in April 1917, Rickenbacker
volunteered and became an Army staff driver, exchanging
celebrity status and high income for a sergeant's pay.
He went to France confident that he could worm his
way into the flying service, trading his steering wheel
for a joystick.
Chauffeur to Pilot
In France, Rickenbacker proved an excellent chauffeur.
(Some claim he drove for Gen. John J. "Black Jack" Pershing,
the commander of the American Expeditionary Forces
in France. He did not.) On one trip, he impressed Col.
Billy Mitchell with his roadside repairs of their Hudson
staff car. Mitchell, who drove wildly and furiously
himself, liked having the personable and famous Rickenbacker
drive for him.
An old Rickenbacker friend, Capt. James Ely Miller,
was tasked to supervise the buildup at Issoudun of
a huge new flight training center for American aviation
cadets. Running into Rickenbacker in Paris, Miller
asked him to become his engineering officer, a crucially
important job and one for which Rickenbacker was eminently
well-suited. Rickenbacker quickly agreed, on the condition
that he could take flight training. Miller agreed,
and Rickenbacker persuaded Mitchell to release him.
It remained only for him to fudge his true age and
fake his way through his physical (he had vision problems).
He was in.
Rickenbacker
entered France's primary flying school at Tours, starting
on the little clipped-wing Penguins and soloing after
only two hours with an instructor pilot. He racked
up 25 flying hours in 17 days and graduated as a first
lieutenant in the Signal Corps. He was now an officer
and a gentleman and was headed straight for trouble
at Issoudun.
It was a kind of class war. From the start, aviation
attracted wealthy students from some of America's elite
colleges and universities. The Yale Units and the Lafayette
Escadrille personified this staking out of air combat
as a "gentleman's" game.
More than 1,000 young pilot candidates, many from
top schools and America's wealthy families, found themselves
sent to Issoudun for training, only to find that construction
of the 3rd Aviation Instruction Center was far from
complete. They came expecting to go immediately into
flight training. Instead, the Army put them to work
constructing roads, buildings, latrines, railroad spurs,
and hangars, often under the supervision of the newly
commissioned roughneck, Eddie Rickenbacker.
Worse, while they labored in the mud, former colleagues
who had remained in the US were arriving as commissioned
officers.
Furious with the system, the cadets took out their
anger on Rickenbacker, openly mocking his poor grammar
and rough language. In his autobiography, Rickenbacker
writes that he understood how these men could resent
the fact that he, a "Swiss-German engineer with
a grammar school education," had authority over
them. In truth, their remarks deeply angered Rickenbacker.
He got even by assigning them even rougher tasks, such
as digging latrines.
Hard Driver
Had the cadets been more mature, they might have seen
that Rickenbacker was driving himself harder than any
of them, trying to transform Issoudun from muddy fields
into a flying school. Unknown to them, he spent all
his spare time bootlegging ground school and flying
training. He persuaded tough Maj. Carl Spaatz to let
him go to gunnery school at Cazaux to prepare for assignment
to an operational squadron.
The first two operational units, the 94th and 95th
Pursuit Squadrons, were stationed at Villeneuve-les-Vertus,
20 miles behind the front. In March 1918, as pilots
and mechanics began to assemble, their new Nieuport
28 fighters began to dribble in.
At $18,500 each, the Nieuport 28 was one of the war's
most expensive fighters, as well as one of the most
beautiful. It was powered by a 160-hp Gnome rotary
engine, making it fast and maneuverable. France was
glad to sell the Nieuports to the US; its own military
had declined to use them. They knew that its delicate
lines concealed serious design flaws.
The tremendous vibration generated by the whirling
rotary engine and by machine gun fire routinely cracked
the rigid fuel lines connecting tanks and engine. Gasoline
would spew over the fuselage, causing many sudden,
catastrophic in-flight fires. If the Nieuport did not
catch fire, it could break up in a dive, for a buildup
of airspeed could cause the leading edge of the upper
wing to tear off, allowing the fabric to balloon up
and leaving the wing devoid of lift.
Thus Rickenbacker and his colleagues were going to
war against veteran, combat-hardened opponents-who
would be equipped with superior airplanes-in a Nieuport
28 in which they had never trained and which tended
to catch fire spontaneously and lose its wing in a
dive. Rickenbacker could hardly wait.
It now appears fated that Rickenbacker would connect
with Maj. Gervais Raoul Lufbery, a kindred spirit if
ever one existed. Lufbery had distinguished himself
with the Lafayette Escadrille, downing 17 enemy airplanes.
The word in the Escadrille was that his score was much
higher, but the taciturn Lufbery usually flew alone
and rarely reported his kills.

Fellow Mechanic
Lufbery was assigned to the 94th Pursuit Squadron,
Rickenbacker's squadron. It was going into action soon,
and the Americans wanted Lufbery to help guide the
squadron's entrance into combat. Lufbery and Rickenbacker,
both former mechanics, hit it off right away. They
understood engines and the men who worked on them and
regarded grease under the fingernails as a badge of
honor. Lufbery tutored Rickenbacker, escorting him
on his first flight over the lines. Rickenbacker later
said, "Everything I learned, I learned from Lufbery."
Rickenbacker spent much of his spare time on the ground
working with the mechanics to improve the performance
of the Nieuports. In other squadrons, the Gnome engines
normally ran 30 hours before they required an overhaul.
At the 94th, Rickenbacker helped the mechanics find
ways to drill the cylinders to increase the lubrication.
In so doing, the engine's time between overhauls more
than doubled.
Rickenbacker's work with the mechanics generated contempt
among the squadron's more cultured members. His poor
grammar and his profanity were still regarded as the
signs of a blue-collar worker, not an officer.
Rickenbacker discovered that, when aloft, he saw only
a small percentage of what was going on in the air.
Worse, he found he had a tendency to get airsick when
he followed the cautious corkscrew evolutions that
Lufbery used to avoid being surprised. In time he overcame
both difficulties and concentrated on two goals: to
be the first in the squadron to shoot down a German
and to be the first to become an ace.
Double Disappointment
Lt. Douglas Campbell was to deprive him of both prizes.
Campbell, along with Lt. Alan Winslow, shot down the
94th's first two German aircraft--a Pfalz and an Albatros--on
April 14, 1918. Campbell also became the first official
ace with his fifth victory on May 31. Rickenbacker
actually scored his fifth kill on May 28 and his sixth
on May 30, but neither was confirmed until after Campbell's.
Campbell was acclaimed as the first ace. Though he
badly wanted the honor, Rickenbacker never contested
Campbell's claim.
Rickenbacker was a serious pilot, and he flew often.
His first confirmed victory came on April 29 flying
with Capt. James Norman Hall. Hall and Rickenbacker
both dived and fired on a Pfalz, Rickenbacker closing
within 150 yards before firing. The claim was confirmed
even before the two pilots touched down.
The victory gave him confidence, which he sorely needed,
given the hostile or patronizing treatment of his squadron
mates. In an account written in 1919, Rickenbacker
conceded, "There is a peculiar gratification in
receiving congratulations from one's squadron for a
victory in the air. It is worth more to a pilot than
the applause of the whole outside world."
On a subsequent mission, Hall, a flight leader, was
shot down and captured behind German lines. Rickenbacker
was named to replace Hall as a flight commander. He
had been at the front for less than two months, and
his total flying time was under 150 hours, but he was
in charge of leading men in combat.
On May 17, Rickenbacker flew with Reed Chambers on
a voluntary patrol. Bitterly cold in their open cockpits
at 20,000 feet, the two men had no oxygen, just as
they had no heat, parachutes, or radios. Rick spotted
three Albatros fighters, and with his judgment possibly
impaired from a lack of oxygen, put his Nieuport in
a headlong dive.
He fired at the first enemy airplane at about 14,000
feet, killing the pilot, and then pulled up sharply.
His upper right wing failed with a tremendous crack
as his leading edge ripped off and the Nieuport went
into a swiftly turning tailspin. The other two enemy
airplanes followed him down, snap-shooting. By applying
full power, Rickenbacker managed to pull out at 4,000
feet and, controls hard over, staggered back to a hot
landing at his home field.
Only two days later, Rick and the 94th suffered a
blow when Lufbery lost his life in an attack on a high-flying
Rumpler observation airplane, leaping or falling to
the ground from his flaming Nieuport.
The desire to become an ace obsessed Rickenbacker,
and he flew many solo patrols, an increasingly risky
business, for the Germans had just introduced what
would be recognized as the best fighter of the war,
the Fokker D.VII. Rickenbacker never compromised his
leadership duties. He took his responsibilities as
a flight leader seriously, giving newcomers lots of
ground instruction and always accompanying them on
their first flights over the lines.
Rickenbacker had mastered his trade; he "saw
the sky" as clearly as any pilot and was able
to identify enemy aircraft at great distances. He countered
the enemy's technology by making use of the Nieuport's
strong features while avoiding the weak and dangerous.
Rickenbacker scored victories on May 28 and 30 and
reached the coveted status of ace.
Then, serious problems began.
In its first few months, the 94th had run up 16 victories
and was holding its own in the battle to command the
air. It then seemed to disintegrate under the force
of circumstances. A new German offensive brought with
it the best in German airpower. During June, July,
and August, the 94th Pursuit Squadron suffered eight
losses.
For most of that long summer, Rickenbacker was confined
to bed with a chronic fever. Grounded for weeks at
a time and often hospitalized, he nevertheless insisted
on flying whenever he could drag himself to an airplane.
Combat required swift climbs and swooping dives, not
good for an ailing ear, and he was confined to a hospital,
first to have an abscess lanced and then for a mastoid
operation. His doctors assumed he would never fly again.
They assumed wrong.
The Spad XIII
A lesser person might have decided that he had done
quite enough; he was an officer, an ace, and he had
a ticket home. He didn't see it that way. On July 5,
Rickenbacker went to the huge aviation depot outside
of Paris and picked up the very first Spad XIII that
would go to the 94th Squadron.
The Spad XIII was an advanced version of the highly
successful Spad VII and was powered with a 235-hp Hispano-Suiza
geared engine. The engine was far more complex than
a Gnome engine, and it was not unusual for 50 percent
of all Spad XIIIs to be out of action with engine problems.
The pilots liked it when the engine ran, however, for
it was strong and able to dive swiftly and pull out
sharply with no fear of structural failure.
Rickenbacker familiarized himself with the Spad during
a lull in the fighting in July and August and was able
to take a significant role during the September Battle
of St. Mihiel. As anxious as he was to increase his
score, Rickenbacker spent most of the battle in ground
attack sorties, leading his flight down to ground level.
On Sept. 14, he scored his seventh victory and began
a streak that would end with his becoming the Ace of
Aces.
On Aug. 21, 1918, Maj. Harold E. Hartney was appointed
commander of the 1st Pursuit Group, which comprised
the 27th, 94th, 95th, and 147th squadrons .
Hartney inherited a pair of major problems. First,
heavy losses in the four squadrons had produced the
stench of bad morale. Second, the group was riven by
a quarrel over replacing the Nieuport 28s with the
Spad.
Hartney needed help. He had been observing Rickenbacker's
leadership skills both in combat and on the flight
line. Despite strong opposition from headquarters ("not
officer material") and from some of the blue-bloods
in the squadron, Hartney appointed Rickenbacker to
command the 94th.
Rickenbacker was delighted and immediately called
two meetings. The first was with his pilots, where
he set down his rules: No nonsense on the flight line;
everyone takes care of mechanics; every man to fly
often; every man to be aggressive.
The second meeting was with the mechanics. He told
them he knew of their problems with the Spads and would
give them 100 percent support. They responded, and
within weeks, the 94th's Hispano engines were going
100 hours flying time between overhauls, compared to
30 hours in other squadrons.
In just two conversations, Rickenbacker turned the
94th around, propelling it to become the war's crack
fighter unit, with more victories and more hours over
the lines than any other American outfit.
On Sept. 25, Rickenbacker put his words into action.
During a solo mission over the lines, he spotted a
pair of German observation airplanes escorted by a
flight of five deadly Fokker D.VIIs. Rickenbacker attacked,
killing the pilot of one Fokker, then plunged on to
down an observation aircraft before diving out of the
fight. For this act of daring and bravery, Rickenbacker
years later received the Medal of Honor.
Rickenbacker scored twice more in September and another
14 times in October. A promotion to captain, held up
by his enemies in headquarters, came in October.
"Scientific Murder"
Of much greater importance to Rickenbacker was the
success of the 94th, which became the most lethal US
squadron and ended the war having downed 69 enemy aircraft
and receiving 18 losses. Rickenbacker was truly the
Ace of Aces-but he was also the CO of COs. He forged
his leadership in combat, seeking battle himself, and
insisting that his squadron seek it as well. He always
took advantage of the odds, avoiding casualties wherever
possible. Unlike most of his peers, he did not see
aerial combat as some form of latter-day gallantry.
He termed it "scientific murder."
He was a master executioner. He finished the war with
a total of 26 victories, the most of any American.
(In World War I, partial victory credits were counted
as whole credits. By today's count, Rickenbacker's
total would be 24.3, still more than any other American.)
Rickenbacker came home as a national hero but wouldn't
capitalize on it for personal gain. He refused to appear
in films and avoided making endorsements. He helped
found the Rickenbacker Automobile Co., which from 1922
to 1927 produced 35,000 cars but no profits. When it
went bankrupt, Rickenbacker took on the debt and paid
it off in the midst of the Great Depression.
Rickenbacker had greater success with other ventures.
One was renovation and
improvement
of the now-famed Indianapolis Speedway. Yet his greatest
challenge was Eastern Air Lines, whose leadership he
assumed in 1934. Rickenbacker ran the airline with
an iron hand and made it one of the most profitable
airlines in America.
After Japan attacked Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941,
Eddie Rickenbacker volunteered his services. He refused
to take cabinet-level positions in the government or
accept a rank of major general in the Army Air Forces,
preferring to serve the government in a civil capacity.
After some routine tours inspecting bases, Rickenbacker
in October 1942 was given a top secret assignment.
The Secretary of War, Henry L. Stimson, tasked him
to carry a stern reprimand from President Roosevelt
to Gen. Douglas MacArthur, who had been making statements
critical of the Administration. Then came an unexpected
turn of events. On Oct. 21, the B-17 in which he was
flying was forced to ditch in the Pacific. Rickenbacker
and his seven companions spent three weeks on a raft.
One man died of exposure, but Rickenbacker brought
the others through.
Stimson admired Rickenbacker and used him for missions
around the world during the conflict.
When the war ended, Rickenbacker returned to run Eastern
Airlines. Times had changed; the competition was tougher,
and he would make several serious errors in selecting
equipment. For example, he opted for the ill-fated
Lockheed Electra turbojet aircraft at the very moment
that other airlines were beginning to acquire jet transports.
Soon, Rickenbacker was forced to turn Eastern's reins
over to others.
Rickenbacker spent his latter years traveling, making
speeches, and seeing to the ghostwriting of his autobiography,
Rickenbacker. He was, by his own estimation, "the
luckiest man alive." He died in his sleep in 1973
at 82, to be remembered forever as one of American
airpower's true giants.
Walter J. Boyne, former director of the National Air
and Space Museum in Washington, is a retired Air Force
colonel and author. He has written more than 400 articles
about aviation topics and 29 books, the most recent of
which is Beyond the Horizons: The Lockheed Story. His
most recent article for Air Force Magazine, "Ranch
Hand," appeared in the August 2000 issue.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
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