1st Lt Louis Bennett Jr. Memorial Plaque, WW1 Ace
Details:
Inside the town church in one of the wall nooks.
A black plaque with white lettering commemorating Lt Louis Bennett who served with the RAF during WW1 and crashed nearby.
Military aviator Louis Bennett Jr. (September 22, 1894 - August 24, 1918) was West Virginia's only World War I fighter ace. Born in Weston, Bennett was the son of Louis Bennett Sr., the unsuccessful 1908 Democratic candidate for governor, and Sallie Maxwell Bennett. Bennett died in France of injuries sustained when his plane was shot down by German anti-aircraft fire. With 12 combat kills, including three aircraft and nine balloons, Bennett placed himself ninth on the World War I roster of American-born aces. This record was accomplished in just ten days after assignment to his combat unit on August 14, and with only 41 hours of combat flying time.
While attending Yale, from which he graduated in 1917, Bennett conceived the idea of a flying corps (West Virginia Flying Corps) based on the concept of the French Escadrille Lafayette. He hoped to command the unit in Europe. When Governor Cornwell provided $10,000 in state funds, Bennett left Yale and returned to West Virginia and formed the West Virginia Flying Corps, whose flyers were commissioned by the governor on July 26, 1917. But when the U.S. Army refused to accept Bennett's corps as a unit, his eagerness to participate in the war led him to enter flight school with the British Royal Air Force in Canada. He was serving with the RAF at the time of his death. Bennett's mother erected monuments in the U.S. and Europe to commemorate and memorialize his sacrifice. His mother rebuilt this chuch after the war.
He is also remembered on a stained Glass window in Westminster Abby in London. See site Westminster for more on this hero.
Source: https://www.wvencyclopedia.org/entries/417
Monument Text:
A la memoire
du Lieutenant
Benett
Aviateur USA
English translation:
In memory
of Lieutenant
Benett
US Aviator
Commemorates:
People:
Units:
40th Squadron, 24th Pursuit Group (RAF)
Royal Air Force (RAF)
Royal Flying Corps
United States Air Force
Wars:
WWI
Other images :