The Last Bombing Run
They survived the mission; would they survive the landing?
- By Tom Murphy
- Air & Space magazine, March 2012
White was acquainted with the pilot who had mistakenly landed this British bomber at a German airfield. German soldiers got a good look at the Handley-Page; the dog’s attention was elsewhere.
Drake Goodman
Tom Murphy of Las Vegas writes: As a pilot of Britain’s Independent Force 100 Squadron, my grandfather, Daryl E. White, flew a Handley-Page night bomber in World War I and kept a diary of his adventures.
April 1917: I was with the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company in their Seattle office, working as an electric engineer salesman covering railway, generating, and transmitting equipment in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Montana. Age 28, single, and healthy, I had decided that if the United States got into the world war, I would enlist in the Army’s Aviation Section. Nobody in the Pacific Northwest seems to know anything about such a section, though the Army enlistment office in the Pioneer Building in Seattle had heard something about flying: They said I should write to the Aviation Section, Signal Reserve Corps of the U.S. Army at North Island, San Diego. I did so immediately.
May 15: Received orders to appear at North Island for a physical examination—at my own expense.
June 13: Left Seattle on the steamship Admiral Dewey. Passed the physical and returned to Seattle to await further orders.
August 1: Enlisted as a cadet in the Aviation Section Signal Reserve Corps of the U.S. Army, starting at $33 per month, with clothing and food furnished. School was a three-story apartment house just outside the North Island campus, where we studied aerodynamics, engines, and navigation—everything except actual flying. Then we were off to new barracks at Mitchel Field, Mineola, New York, and thence to Liverpool on the S.S. Kroonland, arriving in mid-November along with nine other ships in convoy. Very little time to see the sights before we entrained for the rest camp at Southampton, England.
November 24: Left for Le Havre, France. On our way to fight “The War That Will End War,” we were God’s gift to humanity and the world, and we just ate it up. Nothing was too good for the flyboys. Little did we know that it would be late March 1918 before any of us would get into the air. Winter was coming on and the weather was too rough for the French instructors to fly.
We were quartered in immense French stone barracks, known as Quartier de Beaumont. The buildings were cold as hell, with big rooms, small stoves, canvas cots, little heat. The only running water was outside.
December: Snow on the ground. We were all broke, there were no pay prospects, and no flying. Nothing but guard, KP, and latrine duties. We didn’t exactly mutiny but we came close. As a pretty militant gang, we earned the name “Beaumont Bastards.”





Comments (4)
In the March 2012 issue the story about the Handley-Page is interesting. At the end of the story appears the following: "White returned home to Seattle in April 1919. During World War II, he flew as copilot, ferrying Boeing B-25s; they were fine airplanes, he said, but for sheer joy, “give me an old Handley-Page.” He died in 1976, in part due to injuries from a car crash." Why does this use the term "Boeing B-25s?" the B-25 was made by North American and should always be given that credit. It would be better to just use - B-25 - than to give it an erroneous builders name. I am a retired USAF Navigator/Electronic Warfare Officer from a Boeing B-52D crew and a retired Boeing Software Test Engineer. Thanks for an otherwise superb magazine. Jim Bradley, Lt Col, USAF (Ret)
Posted by James E Bradley on January 30,2012 | 10:16 PM
Hey, way great bit of story,. Thanks..
A secret hint to salesmen who are trying to do business in like Alaska ??
Don't make your initial appointments for spring, or the beginning of King Salmon fishing season. They're are scads of tourist executives just looking to get in a fishing trip.
Make your appointments and show up in the middle of winter.
When they watch you shake off, and hang up even your "City Parka", coming in out of a storm, they get to know, right quick, that you're serious about your work.
The relationships and trust are way deeper and long.
Willybee71 (a Brooklyn NY boy)
PS:
btw, play Midnight Golf at Elmendorf AFB.
Posted by Willybee71 on January 31,2012 | 04:19 PM
Mr. Bradley is correct. As the editor of this story, I completely missed the error. Apologies to all readers.
-- Pat Trenner
Posted by Pat Trenner on February 1,2012 | 12:18 PM
I think Boeing built B-25s under contract from NA -- the arrangement ended when the B-29 project needed room.
Posted by Nelson Monroe on February 15,2012 | 01:01 PM