British pilot Captain Albert Ball from an insert to the French magazine Guerre Aerienne No. 23, April 19, 1917. He died weeks later, on May 7, with 44 victories, fourth highest of British pilots in the war.
Captain Albert Ball
"Several of our aeroplanes came over, making for hangars, many miles behind, and tales were told of gallant deeds and especially of the prowess of a young fellow, named Albert Ball, who has just brought down his thirtieth Boche aeroplane, is aged nineteen, and lives to tell the tale. We stood for a long while riveted by the strange Satanic scene — but, at last, it was a relief to turn away. The ground which we were treading, the shell-holes we avoided, are broken patches of the battlefield of only a short month ago. It was here and then that Raymond Asquith's brilliant promise was extinguished and my dear nephew, Charles Feversham, was killed, and on the grey horizon beyond Albert there are, at this moment, thousands of fellow-countrymen, their trenches the playground for shells . . ."
Excerpt from the diary of Viscountess D'Abernon, quoted in Martin Gilbert's The First World War, who had visited the Somme battlefront from Pozières to Thiepval. British pilot Captain Albert Ball eventually had 44 victories, fourth highest of British pilots in the war. He died on May 7, 1917 during a dogfight, but possibly of engine failure.
The First World War, a Complete History by Martin Gilbert, page 293, copyright © 1994 by Martin Gilbert, publisher: Henry Holt and Company, publication date: 1994
1916-10-11, 1916, October, Ball, Albert Ball, Battle of the Somme, Somme