Edwin Charles Parsons Explained

Edwin Charles Parsons
Birth Date:24 September 1892
Placeofburial:Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Virginia, Section 30, Lot 1698 LH,
Birth Place:Holyoke, Massachusetts
Death Place:Sarasota, Florida
Nickname:Ted
Allegiance: United States
Branch:French Foreign Legion
Aéronautique Militaire (France)
Air Service, United States Army
United States Navy
Serviceyears:1915–1918
1934–1945
Rank:Rear Admiral
Unit:Aéronautique Militaire
Battles: 
World War I
World War II
Mexican Revolution
Awards:Legion d'Honneur (France)
Médaille militaire (France)
Croix de Guerre (France)
Order of Leopold II (Belgium)
Croix de Guerre (Belgium)
Laterwork:FBI agent, author, and naval officer

Edwin Charles Parsons (September 24, 1892 – May 2, 1968) was a Rear Admiral of the United States Navy, and former French Foreign Legionnaire, flying ace, Hollywood aviation technical advisor, FBI Special Agent, and author.

Early life

Born in Holyoke, Massachusetts, Parsons graduated from Phillips Exeter Academy in 1910 and after attending the University of Pennsylvania, moved to California, where he learned to fly at Dominguez Field, Carson,[1] in 1912,[2] then spent 1913–1915 in the Mexican Army's Aviation Corps. At one point, Pancho Villa wanted him to train airmen; however, Villa's raid on Columbus, New Mexico scotched Parsons' interest.[2]

Parsons was brevetted by Villa as a Captain at a salary of $200 per month, payable in gold. Parsons' attempt to teach some of Villa's cavalrymen to fly foundered on their lack of mechanical ability. Parsons also is reported to have been responsible for purchasing and later flying a Curtiss Model D two-seated pusher, as well as fetching needed parts from El Paso. Parsons departed as the Mexican Revolutionary movement split between Villa and Venustiano Carranza.[3]

World War I

Thus Parsons was an experienced combat pilot when the war began. In late 1915, he traveled to France. He served with the United States Ambulance service before enlisting in the French Foreign Legion. In 1916, he became a pilot in the Aéronautique Militaire (French Air Service) and, beginning in January 1917, he flew with the famed Lafayette Escadrille. He was credited with one victory[4] and flew many times as Raoul Lufbery's wingman.

He later elected to stay in the French air service instead of transferring to the USAAS when his unit was Americanized in February 1918.[2] He was assigned to the French squadron SPA3 in 1918 where he was credited with an additional 7 victories for a total of 8 victories confirmed.[5] Parsons was a tangential figure in a spectacular performance on May 9. It was sparked by a disagreement between René Fonck on one hand, and Parsons and his friend Frank Baylies on the other. Although Fonck's three dozen victories spoke for themselves, the American duo believed that the Frenchman's attitude in his actual speech was atrocious. Perturbed by Fonck's highhanded lectures on aerial success, the two Americans bet Fonck a bottle of champagne that one of them would shoot down an enemy plane before Fonck. Baylies took off despite hazy weather and shot down a Halberstadt CL.II. Back at the airfield, rather than pay off the bet, a sulky Fonck badgered the Americans to change the terms of the bet to whoever shot down the most Germans that day would win. Lingering fog kept Fonck grounded most of the day. It was well into the afternoon before it cleared enough for him to take off at 1500 hours.[2] Between 1600 and 1605 hours, he shot down three enemy two-seater reconnaissance planes. A couple of hours later, he repeated the feat. Understanding the importance of reconnaissance planes, with their potential to direct intensive artillery fire onto French troops, Fonck concentrated his attentions upon them; six shot down within a three-hour span proved it.[6]

List of aerial victories

See also Aerial victory standards of World War I

Confirmed victories are numbered and listed chronologically. Unconfirmed victories are denoted by "u/c" and may or may not be listed by date.

No.Date/timeAircraftFoeResultLocationNotes
1September 4, 1917 @ 0940 hoursNieuportRumpler reconnaissance planeDestroyedNeuilly
2May 6, 1918 @ 1715 hoursSpadGerman two-seaterDestroyedWest of Montdidier
3May 16, 1918 @ 0945 hoursSpadGerman two-seaterDestroyedMontdidier
4May 19, 1918 @ 1220 hoursSpadGerman two-seaterDestroyedMontdidierShared victory with two French pilots
5May 20, 1918 @ 0915 hoursSpadGerman two-seaterDestroyedGratibus
6August 26, 1918SpadFokker D.VIIDestroyedMorchain
7September 26, 1918 @ 1800 hoursSpadGerman two-seaterDestroyedSouth of TahureVictory shared with Pierre Pendaries and another French pilot
8October 1, 1918 @ 1510 hoursSpadGerman two-seaterDestroyedSomme-Py[7]

Between the World Wars

When the war ended, Parsons returned to the United States and joined the Federal Bureau of Investigation[8] as a Special Agent from 1920–1923,[9] but left to form his own unsuccessful private detective agency.[10]

With the help the film director and former World War I aviator William A. Wellman, Parsons was hired by Paramount as a technical consultant, working on the Oscar-winning Wings (1927), and on Howard Hughes epic Hell's Angels (1930), amongst others. Parsons also worked as a screenwriter, occasional actor, and technical director.[10] He wrote articles for magazines, as well as authoring a book. He also wrote and narrated a radio series about his experiences, Heroes of the Lafayette.[8] Whilst in Hollywood in the mid 1930s he was a member of the Hollywood Hussars militia cavalry unit.

World War II

Having joined the Naval Reserve in 1934,[9] during World War II Parsons was an instructor at Pensacola Naval Air Station,[4] and served aboard an aircraft carrier and a seaplane tender, and took part in the Solomon Islands campaign,[4] earning the Bronze Star among other decorations.[9] He joined the Navy as a Lieutenant Commander and ended the war as a Rear Admiral.[4]

The French government awarded him the Légion d'honneur in 1961.[8] He died at 75 in 1968, the last of the Lafayette Escadrille flying aces,[11] and is buried at Arlington National Cemetery.[12]

See also

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Edwin C. Parsons Scrapbooks 1914–1924 . siris-archives.si.edu . October 17, 2010.
  2. Book: SPAD XII/XIII aces of World War I . 16 .
  3. Book: Conquistadors of the Sky: A History of Aviation in Latin America . 106, 108 .
  4. Book: American Aces of World War 1 . 20 .
  5. Web site: Edwin Charles Parsons . theaerodrome.com . April 30, 2010.
  6. Web site: Frank Leaman Baylies . theaerodrome.com . May 1, 2010.
  7. Web site: Edwin Charles Parsons . theaerodrome.com . November 24, 2011.
  8. Book: SPAD XII/XIII aces of World War I . 18 .
  9. Web site: Edwin C. Parsons . earlyaviators.com . October 17, 2010.
  10. Dale L. Walker . First Quarter 1978 . The Ted Parsons Story . Aviation Quarterly . Four . One . October 17, 2010 . November 26, 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20101126141858/http://ourstory.info/library/2-ww1/Laf-Parsons/Parsons.html . dead .
  11. Milestones . May 10, 1968 . Time . July 18, 2021 . October 29, 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20101029101833/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,902212,00.html . dead .
  12. Web site: Burial Detail: Parsons, Edwin C . ANC Explorer . December 20, 2020.