The Blue Guidon The Newsletter of Andover and the Military
180 Main Street Andover MA 01810-4161
Spring 2015
Over There
Andover & the Great War: the Andover Ambulance Unit
Tell Us Your Story! Andover’s Military History Project is an ongoing effort to document the long history of service to the country by Andover students, faculty, alumni, and the school itself. If you are an alumnus or alumna who would like to contribute to this project by researching and writing, please contact Jenny Savino at jsavino@andover. edu. We would love to hear your story!
It is hard to comprehend today the extent of the war-borne fervor that electrically ran through campus as World War I unfolded. The crisis in Europe was a constant topic of discussion, stirred by frequent speakers brought to campus by principal Dr. Alfred Stearns Class of 1890, and Trustee Henry Stimson Class of 1883. Together, they beat the drum to prepare the student body for what might lie ahead.
The End of the Civil War, 150 Years Ago in a trembling voice. Down went one head after another…and the sobbing continued till we were dismissed—the grief was contagious.” A month later, John Lord Taylor, PA’s Treasurer, recorded the moment Andover learned of Jefferson Davis’s capture. “May 14, 1865, Sabbath: telegram announcing the capture of Jeff Davis.—Great sensation. And, the next day: Holiday—bells ringing, flags waving, songs, processions, rockets, torches and huzzas at night…the Arch Traitor is captured”. The Andover Advertiser reported on the great excitement of May 15: “PA adjourned and the boys formed a procession headed by one of their number ringing a dinner bell, while the whole crowd cheered and shouted... They proceeded to the houses of several gentlemen...and finally called upon the ladies of the female Academy. Here Abbot girls celebrate Union victory atop Smith Hall, May 15, 1865. both schools were in the best possible humor, and The spring of 1865 brought with it, for the first time in a long time, seemed to enjoy themselves highly. The ladies sang patriotic hope: Lincoln’s second inauguration! Richmond’s capture! Lee’s songs and practiced their gymnastic exercises in their costumes surrender! Yet suddenly, in the midst of celebrating Fort Sumter upon the flat roof of ‘Smith Hall.’” regaining the national flag on 14 April, tragedy struck that evening, It is estimated that nearly 700 Andover and Abbot alumni parLincoln had been shot by an assassin...he would die the next day. ticipated in the war in some fashion, including at least 581 in Florence Woodbury, a junior at Abbot Academy, recalled learnuniform.Seventy-seven are known to have died, the equivalent of ing of his death. “Miss McKeen tried to speak but could not, so more than two graduating classes. she handed the paper to Miss Phebe, who read the sad news —Amy J.M. Morris
It was Principal Stearns who proposed the idea of donating a Ford Model T ambulance to the Allies. The school raised the needed $2,250 in the fall of 1914, with $750 coming from faculty, trustees, and students alike. With this vehicle, Phillips Academy became the first preparatory school in America to donate an ambulance to the American Volunteer Motor Ambulance Corps, one of three ambulances the school would provide during the war. Andover’s first ambulance, numbered 127, was assigned to the American Ambulance Hospital in Paris. In a letter to Principal Stearns, Mr. Frank Mason at the hospital wrote, “[Number 127] forms part of the section of ten ambulances which was assigned in December last [1914] to duty with the Allied Army at St. Maurice, on the eastern portion of the firing line, where they have transported thousands of wounded.” Number 127’s first driver was Mr. Eustace Adams of St. Lawrence University. Adams and successive drivers sent letters back to Andover describing the ambulance’s adventures throughout its difficult life as it struggled through the mud, snow, and steep mountains of Alsace Lorraine. In 1917, Number 127 was deemed beyond repair and abandoned, its donor’s brass plate returned to Andover in appreciation of the school’s generosity. But ambulances were not enough—men were needed and Principal Stearns called for volunteers. Twenty-two students, alumni, and faculty members stepped forward to form the Phillips Academy Ambulance Unit, becoming the only preparatory school in America to form a complete unit for volunteer service in the Great War. Frederick Daly Class of 1907, the school’s football coach and assistant to Principal Stearns, volunteered to lead the men, much to Stearns’s pleasure. Fellow faculty member
Alexander Bruce Class of 1911 was second in command. Bruce would die in 1918 as an aviator in the U.S. Army. On April 28, 1917, the New York alumni chapter hosted a reception for the unit at the Harvard Club before the men embarked aboard the French ocean liner La Touraine. Debarking at Bordeaux, Daly learned from American Field Service headquarters that drivers were more needed for trucks than ambulances. After much discussion, 18 volunteers formed a motor truck company under Daly’s command and four went off to join the French Army’s aviation service. Dressed in British uniforms and French helmets, carrying gas masks and rifles from the Franco-Prussian War, they marched through Paris and boarded a train to Dommiers, where they were instructed in driving French five-ton trucks. On June 1, 1917, they headed to the front and hauled tons of supplies both day and night for five months. In October 1917, with the U.S. entering the fight, they were presented with the opportunity to join the Army. Two entered the Transportation Corps, several went home to re-enter Phillips Academy or attend college, and the rest joined the U.S. Army Signal Corps’ aviation section and other branches, including the newly formed U.S. Army Tank Corps. Former truck driver Harold Buckley Class of 1917 became a U.S. Army fighter pilot and Andover’s first ace, earning the Distinguished Service Cross in 1918. Of the 22 Andover Ambulance Unit members, four would die in the war in addition to their second in command, Alexander Bruce Class of 1911. Jack Wright Class of 1917, was the first member killed in aviation training on January 24, 1918; Schuyler Lee Class of 1918, of the famed Lafayette Escadrille was next, killed flying his fighter aircraft over enemy terrain on April 12, 1918; William Taylor Class of 1918, was shot down when jumped by three Fokkers in an aerial melee on September 18, 1918; and George Dresser Class of 1917, was killed in his tank on September 26, 1918. —Charlie Dean ’79