French Lessons
With their own country occupied by Germany, French air cadets came to Alabama to learn to fly. Vive la Dixie!
- By Janelle Dupont
- Air & Space magazine, March 2004
THE STUDENT PILOT KNEW HE HADN'T PERFORMED WELL, and back on the ground he waited for a chewing out by his flight instructor. Instead, the exasperated instructor marched him over to another officer on the flightline and told him to give the student hell—in French.
The obliging officer was my father, Harry Dupont. It was 1943, and he and his fellow U.S. Army Air Forces flight instructors at Gunter Field in Montgomery, Alabama, were struggling to turn young Frenchmen into combat-ready pilots. Eventually, a partnership between the U.S. Army Air Forces and the Free French would bring nearly 5,000 Frenchmen to the United States to train for air crew and ground support positions during World War II. Though few U.S. instructors were able to speak much French, from 1943 to 1945, nearly 1,400 French recruits learned to fly over the piney woods of the American South.
When the Germans took over France in 1940, they devastated the country’s air force, destroying hundreds of French airplanes, confiscating others for their own use, and grounding yet others by removing their propellers. Under the terms of the French-German armistice, the Germans permitted only a few French air force units to operate in France and its North African colonies, and only under German control.
Before the takeover, some pilots managed to fly to England, where they joined the Royal Air Force and flew missions over France and Germany. Eventually the exiled French banded together to form the Free French air force.
In November 1942 the Allies invaded North Africa, defeating the Axis forces there and liberating the French units in Algeria, Morocco, and later Tunisia. These units joined the Free French.
The Free French asked for U.S. aircraft and training to help re-create the French air force. In early 1943 the U.S. military agreed, seeing the benefits of the arrangement. The Allies needed more fliers, and the French had experience in North Africa. But North Africa did not have enough instructors or training fields, so U.S. Major General Carl Spaatz proposed that French student pilots be sent to the United States for flight training.
The French cadets who jumped at the chance to come to the United States for flight instruction had grown up at a time when boys read of World War I aces and dreamed about flying in combat to defend their country. German troops had taken over their towns, and they knew the traumas of occupation.
In November 1942 the cadets were subjected to preliminary testing of their physical and mental abilities, as well as some ground school subjects, such as navigation and gunnery. Those who passed were told to report to Camp Cazes in Casablanca, Morocco, a French air base with two sections, American and French. There the French got their first glimpse of Allied airpower. Compared to France’s aging fleet, the aircraft—Spitfires, P-40s, P-38s, B-17s—were awe-inspiring: roaring, swift, and lethal.
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Comments (5)
Rémi, Janelle Dupont wrote her article as a family history.
Her father was an instructor at Gunter Field in 1944. I was
an instructor at the same time.I do not remember him at all.
She quoted me from an article I wrote in 1982, which was ppublished in Aerospace Historian, Vol.29.No.4, Winter/december 1982,titled The Early Training of French Pilots in the U.S. My article is much more documented. I did the researches at Mawell Library. Hers has errors, but it is still good.If you think you could make use of it in your publications, come to Château Neuf Lévêque and I'll show it to you. I have about two more years to live and much
I could say I don't want to say.
Give me a call.
René
Posted by René Lévêque on October 17,2009 | 03:30 PM
Sadly, Rene Leveque has passed away. He was kiled in a car accident on 11/30/2009. EDITORS' REPLY: Very sad to hear the news. Thank you for telling us.
Posted by Jim Hanson on December 2,2009 | 09:40 AM
One of those French student pilots was Jean Clervoy. He passed away in Paris about one month ago. He retired from the French Air Force as a full colonel.
One of his sons, twins, is Jean-François Clervoy who became an astronaut and completed three Space Shttle Missions, including the first delicate repair mission of the Hubble spacecraft. Jean-François now wears stars in the French military.
The other son, Patrick, is a doctor in the French military. He also wears stars on his shoulders . . .
I had the honor of meeting Jean and his wife Mireille during their attendance of shuttle missions at the Kennedy Space Center.
Quite an accomplished family.
Jacques Adnet
USAF (ret)
Posted by Jacques ADNET Lt Col USAF on March 25,2011 | 01:04 PM
I was stationed at Cazes Air Base, Morocco with the
3355 Signal Service Battalion from Apr 46 to Jul 46. The battalion was deactivated and we were transferred to the
3352 Signal Service Battalion in Paris, France. I am now
CPT-USAR Retired.
Posted by RUSSELL E. ROTHBARD on July 8,2011 | 02:06 AM
My father-in-law was stationed at Lowry in the 775th Technical School Squadron in 1944. He mentioned in one of his letters home "about 400 Free French in our Squadron. They fought in the battle of Paris, retreated to & were interned in Spain, transferred to Casa Blanca, and from there came to Denver. When they first came in, they were wearing blue wool uniforms. Regular U.S. G.I. issue has taken the place of the blue, and the Froggies are all in O.D. now. They really jabber, and on the whole, seem to be a pretty happy bunch of young men -- most of them are under twenty five. Some of them went into the army when they were only fifteen years old." Bill Kumpf
I am trying to find out more about the Free French that were stationed at Lowry, but this letter tells more than anything else I have found. So I was happy to find this article.
Posted by Denise Berg on August 3,2011 | 03:14 PM