Townsend F. Dodd, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

Townsend F. Dodd

First US Pilot of World War I to receive the DSM

Date of Birth: 06-Mar-1886

Place of Birth: Anna, Illinois, United States

Date of Death: 05-Oct-1919

Profession: aircraft pilot

Nationality: United States

Zodiac Sign: Pisces


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About Townsend F. Dodd

  • Townsend Foster Dodd (6 March 1886 – 5 October 1919) was the first commissioned US Army aviator.
  • As a University of Illinois graduate with a Bachelor of Science in electrical engineering, he joined the Coast Artillery Corps and shortly thereafter became an aviator in the US Army Air Service.
  • Dodd sat on many boards of review during the service's infancy and was one of the members who condemned pusher planes in favor of tractors.
  • He served with General John Pershing on the Mexican Border where he set records for endurance flying.
  • During World War I he was first assigned as the aviation officer of the American Expeditionary Force in 1917.
  • He was later replaced by Colonel Billy Mitchell and was reassigned to the Bolling Mission. He was the first US pilot to receive the Distinguished Service Medal during World War I.
  • Dodd was promoted to colonel on 14 August 1918 and at the end of the war he was appointed the Chief of Staff, Material under Mitchell.
  • Dodd was then posted to Fort Sam Houston at San Antonio.
  • With the completion of the war he reverted to his pre-war rank of captain and became the commander of Langley Field, Hampton, Virginia.
  • After returning home from the war he competed in endurance flight competitions and during one such contest he crashed and died.
  • Nine years after his death Dodd Army Airfield was named in his honor.

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