The padded envelope arrived on my doorstep with an ominous thump. The return address, Knox Burger Literary Agency, confirmed my apprehensions: It was the manuscript I’d mailed to my irascible literary agent only a week before. Apparently, he hadn’t liked it.
Knox Burger had learned his trade during the Second World War, writing from Tinian in the Mariana Islands for Yank magazine. He flew on the B-29 raid that burned the heart of Tokyo to ash. He was one of the first journalists to walk that city’s streets after the war, and sent back a haunting interview with a Japanese fireman who’d tried to put out a firestorm with a bucket.
Knox was and remains almost impossible to please. Even worse, he’s usually right. So I wasn’t eager to tear open that package and see what he’d done to my manuscript.
But I was wrong. Inside I found a large book of photographic plates: Notes on the Interpretation of Aeroplane Photographs, bound in heavy cardboard, peeling tape, and twine. It looked, even smelled, old. And in Knox’s spare, demanding style, a note: “I found this in my father’s things. Make sure it finds its way into the right hands.”
I’d researched modern intelligence gathering for a book about submarines, Hostile Waters, that I’d co-authored. But “aeroplane?” How old was this book? I opened it, taking care with the fragile binding. A handwritten label said the book had been issued in 1918 to Knox’s father, Captain Carl Burger of the 344th Infantry, United States Army.
I’ve seen stills taken from the Predator, a General Atomics unmanned aerial vehicle that flies reconnaissance missions over Iraq; the old plates in Captain Burger’s book were far sharper. Taken during the Great War, the photographs were astonishingly clear and detailed, showing shell-pocked moonscapes around the Somme River in France, trenches, and the tracks left by soldiers rushing to battle, as well as a chaos of trails made by men fleeing for their lives. In one, I could even make out a biplane rising up from an enemy aerodrome.
The accompanying text began: “In the British Army, the whole trench system of the enemy is photographed from a standard height of 6,600 feet at least once every ten days.”
Could “whole trench system” mean the entire Western Front, from the North Sea all the way to the Swiss border and beyond? That was 500 miles—a lot of flying, a lot of photographs.


Comments
Thank you for an excellent article ("Portrait of the Enemy"). I had the honor to serve with a Naval Photo Recon squadron, RVAH-9, during the Vietnam era. Our pilots flew the RA-5C Vigilante, a very remarkable nuclear-bomber-turned-recon jet. I'm sure your readers would enjoy an Air & Space Magazine article on the unique aircraft, outstanding pilots, amazing cameras & the superb work done by photo reconnaissance personnel of "Heavy Nine" and her sister squadrons at that time. Thank you. Stephen R. Fisher Oak Park, MI
Posted by Stephen R. Fisher on July 15,2008 | 11:46AM
I enjoyed the article. Did the author use my book (Shooting the Front) as a reference? It covers the allied role in WW1 aerial reconnaissance. Nice to see the word is getting out on a forgotten legacy of WW1. Terry Finnegan
Posted by Terry Finnegan on July 18,2008 | 06:29AM
Tim: I'm very pleased you found the article enjoyable. Though I'm a pilot and have been for nearly 30 years, my knowledge of things First World War was extremely limited. Before I received Notes on the Interpretation of Aeroplane Photographs, I wasn't at all aware that aerial photography played such a large, and occasionally central, role. Your book helped me come to know who was who, and some of the difficulties (technical, military and social) they encountered along the way. Thank you. There were several online resources I used in researching timelines and military maneuvers, such as overthefront.com and firstworldwar.com. And the Smithsonian's own vast collection of aviation images also helped a great deal. Most of all, the simple, hand typed inserts that accompanied Notes were the vehicles that transported me back to a time that seems at once impossibly remote, and yet, as far as aerial recon goes, very, very up to date.
Posted by Robin White on July 18,2008 | 12:54PM
Terry: I tried to post a reply here last week but it seems to have evaporated. Yes, I was lucky to find a copy of your book and the insights it offered into the people, technologies and even the social problems that impeded aerial reconnaissance were invaluable. So, too, the vast archive of material available at such online sites as firstworldwar.com. I found the the notes and hand-typed pages that accompanied Notes on the Interpretation of Aeroplane Photographs a real time capsule that took me back to an era that seemed to impossibly distant, yet, when it came to aerial reconnaissance, surprisingly modern.
Posted by Robin White on July 20,2008 | 09:00PM
I enjoyed the article very much. Knowing the great photographic recon of 1918 and the further improved technology of the U2 and the Vigilante, how in the hell could Congress and our allies get so duped into believing the trash recon which lead to our initiating the Iraq War. Where was all the correct interpretation of the photos provided to us all just prior to our attack on Iraq?
Posted by Donald Pray on July 23,2008 | 08:28PM
I read the article in Air & Space, excellent as always. Was intrigued by referenmce to Knox Burger's interview with the Japanese fireman as referenced in the article. Tried a few searches for that article but so far have not been successful in finding same; as former member of Naval Aviation and FDNY I am interested in its perspective. Any ideas where I might look?
Posted by N.H. Tanner on August 5,2008 | 07:57PM
Great article! I sent the following request to the museum's archive division: There was a good article in the last Air and Space magazine titled Portrait of the Enemy about aerial photography in WWI. It would be great if this book (Notes On The Interpretation Of Aeroplane Photographs) were digitized and available online for close perusing. The pictures in the article were tantalizing, but way too small to be useful. I'm itching to have a full size high resolution scanned version of the book that I can zoom in on and scroll around in to see details. What are the chances? I hope you have a program to put digital versions of all of your printed material online! Bob Gould
Posted by Robert Gould on August 7,2008 | 12:02PM