1918 in aviation


This is a list of aviation-related events from 1918:

Events

January

February

March

April

May

  • May 9 – French ace René Fonck shoots down six German aircraft in a day.
  • May 9–10 - The German Riesenflugzeug Abteilung 501 attempts the first heavier-than-air raid on England since March, sending four Riesenfluzeuge bombers to bomb Dover. They encounter high winds over the North Sea and are recalled; when they return home, they find their bases shrouded in fog. One lands safely, but the other three are destroyed in crashes, with only one entire crew surviving and only crew member surviving from each of the other two bombers.
  • May 10 - The German Navy Zeppelin L 62 explodes, breaks in half, and crashes in flames over the North Sea with the loss of all hands under mysterious circumstances. The German Naval Airship Service blames her loss on an accident, while the Royal Air Force claims that one of its Felixstowe F.2a flying boats shot her down.
  • May 13 - The United States issues its first air mail stamps to the public. They bear a picture depicting a Curtiss JN-4H "Jenny". One sheet comprises the "Inverted Jenny" error.
  • May 15
  • *Postmaster General of the United States Albert S. Burleson assigns Second Assistant Postmaster General Otto Praeger additional duty as the first chief of the U.S. Airmail Service, telling Praeger, "The airmail once started must not stop, but must be constantly improved and expanded until it would become, like the steamship and the railroad, a permanent transportation feature of the postal service."
  • *The first regular United States air mail service commences, between Washington, D.C., Philadelphia and New York City. The first flight is made by Lieutenant Geoffrey Boyle in a modified Curtiss JN-4H "Jenny".
  • May 16 - The Imperial German Navy recommissions the light cruiser Stuttgart after her conversion into a seaplane carrier. She is the only German seagoing aviation ship capable of working with the fleet commissioned during either World War I or World War II.
  • May 19
  • *Raoul Lufbery, commander of the 94th (Hat in the Ring) Aero Squadron takes off in a Nieuport 28 to attack a German Albatros C.III near his airfield. After the German gunner hits his aircraft over Maron, France, he falls to his death from an altitude of between. A story that he jumped from the plane to avoid burning to death in the air will be contradicted by 1962 research which concludes that he was thrown from his plane, which was not burning, when it flipped over after he unfastened his seat belt to clear a jammed machine gun. World War I will end with him as the second-highest-scoring American ace with 17 victories.
  • *U.S. Army Major Harold M. Clark Jr. and Sergeant Robert P. Gay make the first interisland flight in Hawaii, flying from Fort Kamehameha on Oahu to Maui. They continue on to the island of Hawaii the same day, where they crash on the slopes of Mauna Kea. Uninjured, they wander on foot for a week before finding help.
  • May 19–20 - Germany launches the largest heavier-than-air raid against the United Kingdom of World War I, with 38 Gotha and three Riesenfkugzeug bombers participating. Bombs fall on London for the last time in World War I during the raid. The bombers drop of bombs according to British estimates or according to the Germans, killing 49 people, injuring 177, and inflicting £117,317 in damage. British fighters and antiaircraft guns shoot down six Gothas, and after a protracted engagement a Bristol F.2B Fighter of the Royal Air Force's No. 141 Squadron forces a seventh Gotha to land substantially intact in England; the Bristol Fighter's two-man crew, Lieutenants Edward Eric Turner and Henry Balfour Barwise, each will receive the Distinguished Flying Cross for their achievement. The Germans launch no further heavier-than-air bomber attacks against the United Kingdom during World War I; in the 27 heavier-than-air raids, German bombers have dropped of bombs, killing 835 people, injuring 1,972, and inflicting £1,418,272 of damage in exchange for the loss of 62 bombers either shot down over England or destroyed in crashes while attempting to return to base.
  • May 21 - President Woodrow Wilson creates a Bureau of Aircraft Production responsible for aeronautical equipment.
  • May 23 – The United States Government approves the temporary assignment of United States Army Air Service cadets undergoing training by the Royal Italian Army's Military Aviation Corps to complete their tactical training with assignments to Italian bomber squadrons during combat operations, but reserves the right to transfer them to U.S. Army Air Service units at any time.
  • May 24
  • *József Kiss, Austria-Hungary's fifth-highest-scoring ace, is shot down in combat. He had scored 19 victories.
  • *In Russia, Order No. 385 of the Bolshevik Peoples Commissariat on Military and Naval Affairs creates the Main Directorate of the Workers and Peasants Red Air Fleet, the predecessor of the Soviet Air Forces.
  • *The United States Department of War recognizes the Bureau of Aircraft Production and the Division of Military Aeronautics as constituting the United States Army Air Service.
  • May 31 - Douglas Campbell scores his fifth victory, becoming the first American pilot to become an ace while flying for an American-trained unit.

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

First flights

January

  • BAT F.K.22

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

Entered service

January

February

March

April

June

August

October

November