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LT Russel - Cenotaph (95th Aero Squadron)

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Details:

Along the left wall towards the back in the town cemetery. Cenotaph


A headstone marks the spot where LT William Muir Russel was originally buried before his remains were repatriated to the US.

LT Russel was assigned to the 95th Aero Squadron, First Pursuit Group of the American Air Service. According to “A Happy Warrior,” on the morning of Aug. 11, 1918, Russel was piloting a Spad XIII plane as a rear guard of a 13-plane patrol. 


Russel was cut off by a German patrol that “ came out of the sun upon him.” His companions rushed to his defense, but he got separated in the dogfight, “and they never saw him again.”


Locals pulled Russel’s body out of the wreckage, dug a grave and buried him in the Courville cemetery. They put up a cross, and someone wrote on it the particulars: Russel’s name and this distinction: “Aviateur Americain.”


After the war, in 1920, Henry Russel left Detroit to get his son’s remains and bury them on American soil, near his mother and brother. But the elder Russel didn’t make it across the Atlantic. He died of pneumonia.


In his will, he left something for the people of Courville: $10,000.       


Monument Text:

A la memoire de William Muir Russel, 1st Lieutenant aviateur americain, mort glorieusement pour la France le 11 aout 1918. 

 ENGLISH TRANSLATION: 

 In memory of Willam Muir Russel, 1st Lieutenant American aviator, killed gloriously for France on 11 August 1918.

Commemorates:

People:

William Muir Russel

Units:

95th Aero Squadron 1st Pursuit Group

United States Air Force

US Army Air Corps

US Army Air Service

Wars:

WWI

Other images :