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1914 in aviation

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This is a list of aviation-related events from 1914.

The outbreak of World War I accelerates all aspects of aviation which in turn changes war in a twofold way. The aeroplane turns the sky into a new battlefield and eliminates the distinction between frontline and hinterland, with the civilian population far behind the frontline also becoming a target. The war results in the deaths of approximately 20,000 flyers, most of them trained pilots.

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Events

January

February

  • The Sikorsky Ilya Muromets sets a load-to-altitude record, lifting 16 people to 2,000 metres (6,600 feet).
  • 1 February The Aero Club of America announces plans to sponsor an around-the-world airplane race.[7]
  • 3 February German aviator Bruno Langer sets a new flight endurance record, flying nonstop for 14 hours 7 minutes.[8]
  • 7 February Karl Ingold sets a new world flight endurance record, flying nonstop for 16 hours 20 minutes in an Aviatik biplane. The flight, from Mulhouse to Munich, Germany, covers a distance of 1,700 km (1,100 mi).
  • 8–10 February Berliner, Haase and Nikolai fly 3,053 km (1,896 statute miles) in their free balloon from Bitterfeld to Perm. This record stands until 1950.[9]
  • 11 February Flying an LFG Roland Pfeilflieger biplane, German aviator Bruno Langer attempts to break the flight endurance record Karl Ingold set on 7 February, but falls 20 minutes short, landing at Kreuz after 16 continuous hours in the air.[8]

March

  • 1 March Pioneer of Argentine aviation Jorge Newbery (b. 1875) is killed in a crash at Estancia "Los Tamarindos" while performing aerobatics prior to an attempt to cross the Andes by air.

April

May

June

July

August

Thumb
A German dirigible hovering over a British fleet.
  • French military aviators "attempted to destroy buildings near Wesel; others have been seen in the district of the Eifel; one has thrown bombs on the railway near Carlsruhe and Nuremberg."[32]
  • Imperial German Navy Rear Admiral Paul Behncke, Chief of the Naval Staff, urges that the navy's Zeppelins begin attacks on London, arguing that Zeppelin attacks "may be expected, whether they involve London or the neighborhood of London, to cause panic in the population which may possibly render it doubtful that the war may be continued."[33]
  • As World War I breaks out, neutral Italy has 28 combat-ready aircraft and 18 military aircraft in reserve.[34] Italy will join the war on the side of the Allies in May 1915.
  • 1 August The Russian Empire enters World War I with Russia's declaration of war on Austria-Hungary.
  • 3 August
    • France and Belgium enter World War I when Germany invades Belgium and declares war on France.
    • The Imperial German Navy leases the cargo-passenger ship Answald for conversion into Germany's first seaplane carrier, SMS Answald, designated Flugzeugmutterschiff I (Airplane Mothership I).[35]
  • 4 August The United Kingdom enters World War I, declaring war on Germany. At the time, the Royal Naval Air Service has 52 seaplanes, of which only 26 are serviceable, with 46 more on order.[36]
  • 5 August The Netherlands decrees that all Dutch military aircraft display an orange disc on each side of the fuselage and on the upper and lower surfaces of the wings.[citation needed]
  • 6 August The first airship lost in combat is the Imperial German Army Zeppelin Z VI. Badly damaged by artillery and infantry gunfire on her first combat mission while bombing Liège, Belgium, at low altitude, she limps back into Germany and is wrecked in a crash-landing in a forest near Bonn.[37]
  • 8 August A French aerial observer is injured by small-arms fire, becoming that nation's first air casualty in a war.
  • 9–10 August Conducting a reconnaissance mission, the French dirigible Fleurus becomes the first Allied aircraft to fly over Germany during World War I.[38]
  • 12 August Lieutenant Robin R. Skene and mechanic R. Barlow crash their Blériot monoplane on the way to Dover, becoming the first members of the Royal Flying Corps to die on active duty.
  • 13 August Twelve Royal Aircraft Factory B.E.2 observation aircraft from No. 2 Squadron, Royal Flying Corps, flying from Dover, become the first British aircraft to arrive in France for the war.
  • 14 August The first true bomber, the French Voisin III, is used in combat for the first time in an attack on German airship hangars at Metz-Frascaty, Germany.[39]
  • 17 August The Imperial Japanese Navy's first aviation ship, Wakamiya, is recommissioned as a seaplane carrier.[40][41][42]
  • 21 August Two Imperial Germany Army Zeppelins on their first combat missions become the second and third airships lost in combat after being damaged by French infantry and artillery fire during low-altitude missions in the Vosges mountains. Z VII limps back into Germany to crash near St. Quirin in Lothringen, while Z VIII crash-lands in Badonvillers Forest near Badonvillers, France, where French cavalry drives off her crew and loots her.[43][44] The loss of three airships on their first combat missions in August sours the German Army on the further combat use of airships.
  • 22 August
    • An Avro 504 of the Royal Flying Corps's No. 5 Squadron on patrol over Belgium is shot down by German rifle fire, the first British aircraft ever to be destroyed in action.[45]
    • An early attempt to get a Lewis gun into action in air-to-air combat fails when a Royal Flying Corps Farman armed with one scrambles to intercept a German Albatros and takes 30 minutes to climb to 1,000 feet (300 meters) because of the gun's weight. On landing, the pilot is ordered to remove the Lewis gun and carry a rifle on future missions.[46]
  • 23 August Japan enters World War I, declaring war on Germany.
  • 25 August Flying a Morane-Saulnier Type G monoplane, Imperial Russian Army pilot Pyotr N. Nesterov becomes the first pilot to down an enemy aircraft in aerial combat. After firing unsuccessfully with a pistol at an Austro-Hungarian Albatros B.II crewed by Franz Malina (pilot) and Baron Friederich von Rosenthal (observer), Nesterov rams the Albatros.[47][48] Both aircraft crash, killing all three men.
  • 27 August The Royal Naval Air Service's famed Eastchurch Squadron arrives in France for World War I service, commanded by Wing Commander Charles Samson.[49]
  • 30 August Paris is bombed by a German aircraft for the first time – by an Etrich Taube flown by Lt Ferdinand von Hiddessen.

September

  • Early September In a memorandum, First Sea Lord Winston Churchill establishes the policy for the air defense of the United Kingdom. He calls for the use of antiaircraft artillery and searchlights around likely targets; the deployment of aircraft forward in Europe to attack all Zeppelin and other enemy air bases within reach; the interception of enemy aircraft between Dover and London by British aircraft, coordinated by telephone and telegraph; the basing of aircraft at Hendon specifically for the defense of London, with their crews specifically trained and equipped for night-fighting and their operations also coordinated by telephone; a blackout in major cities; and warning the public of the dangers of air attack, precautions against it, and how to take shelter when under air attack.[50]
  • 1 September The Imperial Japanese Navy seaplane carrier Wakamiya arrives off Kiaochow Bay, China, to participate in operations during the siege of Qingdao. It is the first combat deployment of an aviation ship by any country.[51][52]
  • 5 September During the siege of Qingdao, the Imperial Japanese Navy carries out its first air combat mission. A three-seat Farman seaplane from the Wakamiya bombs German fortifications at Qingdao, China, and conducts a reconnaissance of Kiaochow Bay.[53]
  • 16 September The Canadian Aviation Corps is formed.
  • 22 September In the first British air raid against Germany in history, Royal Naval Air Service BE.2 aircraft of No. 3 Squadron based at Antwerp, Belgium, attack German airship hangars at Cologne and Düsseldorf, Germany, but fail to inflict damage due to bad weather and the failure of bombs to explode.[29][54]
  • 23 September In France the British No. 2 Anti Aircraft Section Royal Garrison Artillery, in III Corps, commanded by Lieutenant O.F.J. Hogg became the first anti-aircraft unit to shoot down an aircraft, by firing 75 rounds from a QF 1 pdr Mark II ("pom-pom").[55]
  • 27 September The first French bomber group is formed.
  • 28 September The first report by British observers of German military aircraft using the initial form of the wartime Eisernes Kreuz national markings.
  • 30 September
    • The Wakamiya is damaged by a naval mine and forced to retire from the siege of Qingdao, ending the first combat deployment of an aviation ship in history.[51][52]
    • The two America prototypes prepared for the Daily Mail sponsored transatlantic contest in August are shipped to the United Kingdom aboard RMS Mauretania for the Royal Naval Air Service, spawning a fleet of aircraft which saw extensive military service during World War I,[56] developed extensively in the process for anti-submarine patrol craft and air-sea rescue.

October

November

  • The first Imperial German Navy shipboard air operations take place, when the armored cruiser SMS Friedrich Carl embarks two seaplanes with which to scout Russian ports in the Baltic Sea. One is still aboard when Friedrich Carl strikes a mine and sinks on 17 November.[58]
  • 1 November The Ottoman Empire enters World War I when Russia declares war on it.
  • 6 November Aviator Gunther Plüschow is ordered to evacuate the Kiautschou Bay Leased Territory in China using his sole aircraft, a Taube, which however crashes, leaving him to make his own way back to Germany.[59]
  • 18 November The Secretary of State for the German Navy, Admiral Alfred von Tirpitz, advocating massed Zeppelin attacks on London, writes, "The English are now in terror of the Zeppelin, perhaps not without reason...[S]ingle bombs from flying machines are wrong; they are odious when they hit and kill old women, and one gets used to them. If [however] one could set fire to London in thirty places, then what in a small way is odious would retire before something fine and powerful."[60][61]
  • 21 November Three Royal Naval Air Service Avro 504s based at Belfort, France, conduct history's first long-range strategic bombing raid, attacking German airship sheds on the shore of Lake Constance at Friederichshafen. Carrying four 20-pound (9.1 kg) bombs each, they cause a gas works to explode and badly damage a dirigible, losing one aircraft shot down.[29][62]
  • 27 November The first air–sea battle in history occurs when Imperial Japanese Navy Farman seaplanes make an unsuccessful attempt to bomb German and Austro-Hungarian ships in Jiaozhou Bay during the siege of Qingdao.[52]

December

  • Upon the conclusion of the siege of Qingdao, Wakamiya returns Japanese naval seaplanes deployed at Qingdao to Japan. The Japanese naval air arm sees no further combat during World War I.[63]
  • 10 December HMS Ark Royal is completed. She is the first ship with an internal hangar enclosed by her hull, and the first with specially designed internal spaces to accommodate aviation fuel, lubricants, ordnance, and spares and machinery required for aircraft maintenance.[11]
  • 14 December A Royal Naval Air Service Avro 504 of the Eastchurch Squadron drops four 16-pound (7.3 kg) bombs on the Ostend-Bruges railway in Belgium.[62]
  • 16 December SMS Glyndwr is the first Imperial German Navy aviation ship to be commissioned. She serves initially as a seaplane pilot training ship.[64]
  • 21 December
  • 25 December HMS Empress, HMS Engadine, and HMS Riviera launch a seaplane attack on the Zeppelin sheds at Nordholz Airbase. It is the first attempt in history to exert sea power on land by means of the air.[29] Fog prevents the aircraft from reaching their target, and only three of the nine aircraft find their way back to their mother ships.
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First flights

January

February

June

July

Entered service

Retirements

May

Notes

References

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