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Leslie MacDill

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Colonel
Leslie MacDill
Colonel Leslie MacDill
Born(1889-02-18)February 18, 1889
Monmouth, Illinois
DiedNovember 9, 1938(1938-11-09) (aged 49)
Bolling Field, District of Columbia
AllegianceUnited States of America
Service / branch
Years of service1912-1938
RankColonel
Battles / warsWorld War I

Colonel Leslie MacDill was a United States Army Air Corps officer. MacDill Air Force Base near Tampa, Florida is named in his honor. Colonel MacDill was one of aviation’s early pioneers.

Biography

MacDill was born at Monmouth, Illinois, on 18 February 1889. Following his graduation in 1909 from Hanover College with an A.B. degree, and from Indiana University in 1911 with an A.M. degree, he was commissioned from civilian life as a second lieutenant, Coast Artillery Corps, on 13 April 1912.

He served with the 6th Company, Coast Artillery Corps from 10 December 1912, until his detail in 1914 in the Aviation Section, Signal Corps. Upon completion of his flying training at the Signal Corps Aviation School at San Diego, California, he was rated a Junior Military Aviator on 2 July 1915, which automatically advanced him to the rank of first lieutenant. He was promoted to captain on 15 May 1917; he commanded a training group assigned to Foggio Italy in 1917. His second in command was future mayor of New York Fiorello LaGuardia; he was promoted to Major 1 July 1920; to lieutenant colonel 1 August 1935; and to colonel on 26 August 1936.

Death

MacDill died as the result of an airplane crash on the morning of 9 November 1938, in Washington D.C. The accident occurred several minutes after his takeoff from Bolling Field in a BC-1 aircraft.

Accounts pieced together from eyewitnesses indicated that something went wrong with the motor. Colonel MacDill first tried to get back to Bolling Field, and then aimed his plane for a narrow space between two houses. The descending plane cut down telephone and power wires, knocked down a pole, clipped off tree limbs, plunged to the ground and burst into flames. MacDill and his passenger Private Joseph G. Gloxner were killed instantly.

References

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from the United States Air Force

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