
An Incipient Mutiny
The Story of the U.S. Army Signal Corps Pilot Revolt
Dwight R. Messimer(Author)
Potomac Books Inc (Publisher)
Published on 1. January 2020
Book
Hardback
328 pages
978-1-64012-212-3 (ISBN)
Description
An Incipient Mutiny traces the creation of the U.S. Army Signal Corps Aeronautical Division in 1907 up to the establishment of the Air Service of the National Army in 1918. It is a shocking account of shortsightedness, mismanagement, criminal fraud, and cover-up that led ultimately to a pilot revolt against the military establishment. Dwight R. Messimer focuses on the personalities of the pilots who initiated the rebellion and on the Signal Corps officers whose mismanagement brought it on.
The official air force histories say nothing about the poor construction and design flaws in the airplanes that the Signal Corps used, which were responsible for the deaths of 25 percent of the pilots, a death rate so high that no life insurance company would issue them a policy. At the same time, there were airplanes on the market that were superior in every way to the planes the army was using and less expensive as well. The loss of human life, then, could not have been more senseless.
The official air force histories say nothing about the poor construction and design flaws in the airplanes that the Signal Corps used, which were responsible for the deaths of 25 percent of the pilots, a death rate so high that no life insurance company would issue them a policy. At the same time, there were airplanes on the market that were superior in every way to the planes the army was using and less expensive as well. The loss of human life, then, could not have been more senseless.
Reviews / Votes
"In an intensely human story of ambitions and bureaucratic infighting, Dwight Messimer has made an outstanding contribution to aviation history through his extensive research and detailed use of primary sources, army documents, and personal letters and accounts. It concludes with a masterful, edge-of-your-seat courtroom account rivaling The Court Martial of Billy Mitchell."-Cdr. Alan D. Zimm, U.S. Navy (Ret.), author of Attack on Pearl Harbor: Strategy, Combat, Myths, Deceptions"Drawing on long-neglected primary sources, Dwight Messimer tells the story of bureaucratic rivalry, personality clashes, and rival military theories that led to mutiny and scandal among the United States' earliest U.S. Army aviators. A riveting story in itself, An Incipient Mutiny is a valuable addition to our understanding of why the United States, the world's leader in aeronautics in 1903, fell so far behind the rest of the world in military aviation by World War I."-Jonathan Roth, author of Roman Warfare and director of the Charles Burdick Military History Project
"In this straightforward, well-researched, and engaging work, Dwight Messimer highlights early U.S. military aviation challenges. . . . Focusing on a highly publicized court martial that facilitated Army Aviation's much-needed reorganization, the author adroitly weaves the interplay of aircraft technology and aviation administration-both in their infancy-within the context of legal precision and the full spectrum of human behaviors."-Forrest L. Marion, historian for the Air Force Historical Research Agency and author of Flight Risk: The Coalition's Air Advisory Mission in Afghanistan, 2005-2015
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Dulles
United States
Product notice
Cloth over boards
Illustrations
24 photographs, 3 illustrations, index
Dimensions
Height: 162 mm
Width: 237 mm
Thickness: 33 mm
Weight
630 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-64012-212-3 (9781640122123)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
01/2020
Potomac Books Inc
€36.99
Available for download

E-Book
01/2020
Potomac Books Inc
€36.99
Available for download
Person
Dwight R. Messimer has written a dozen books on military and naval history, including Find and Destroy: Antisubmarine Warfare in World War I and The Baltimore Sabotage Cell: German Agents, American Traitors, and the U-boat Deutschland during World War I.
Content
List of Illustrations
Introduction
Chapter 1. The Army's Balloons, 1892-1908
Chapter 2. Benjamin D. Foulois, 1909-1911
Chapter 3. Paul Ward Beck, 1911-1912
Chapter 4. The Benjamin Foulois-Paul Beck Feud, 1911-1913
Chapter 5. The Flying Club, 1911-1912
Chapter 6. The First Signs of Trouble, 1912
Chapter 7. Upheavals, 1913
Chapter 8. An Incipient Mutiny, March 1913
Chapter 9. Beck Makes His Move, 1913-1915
Chapter 10. Cowen's Flight Pay, 1913-1915
Chapter 11. The Seeds of Rebellion, 1911-1914
Chapter 12. William Lay Patterson, 1914-1915
Chapter 13. The Rift, 1914-1915
Chapter 14. Rebellion, 1915
Chapter 15. The Reaction, 1915
Chapter 16. The Turn-Around, May-August 1915
Chapter 17. Court Martial, 1915
Chapter 18. The Garlington Board and The Kennedy Committee, 1916
Chapter 19. Separation Achieved, 1917-1918
Epilogue
End Notes
Bibliography
Introduction
Chapter 1. The Army's Balloons, 1892-1908
Chapter 2. Benjamin D. Foulois, 1909-1911
Chapter 3. Paul Ward Beck, 1911-1912
Chapter 4. The Benjamin Foulois-Paul Beck Feud, 1911-1913
Chapter 5. The Flying Club, 1911-1912
Chapter 6. The First Signs of Trouble, 1912
Chapter 7. Upheavals, 1913
Chapter 8. An Incipient Mutiny, March 1913
Chapter 9. Beck Makes His Move, 1913-1915
Chapter 10. Cowen's Flight Pay, 1913-1915
Chapter 11. The Seeds of Rebellion, 1911-1914
Chapter 12. William Lay Patterson, 1914-1915
Chapter 13. The Rift, 1914-1915
Chapter 14. Rebellion, 1915
Chapter 15. The Reaction, 1915
Chapter 16. The Turn-Around, May-August 1915
Chapter 17. Court Martial, 1915
Chapter 18. The Garlington Board and The Kennedy Committee, 1916
Chapter 19. Separation Achieved, 1917-1918
Epilogue
End Notes
Bibliography