Grand Duke Mikhail Alexandrovich
Whereas the prewar
Russian military has generally been depicted as being technologically backward
compared with the other great powers, this was not entirely true when it came
to air power. After Louis Blériot’s flight across the English Channel in 1909,
Tsar Nicholas II’s cousin, Grand Duke Mikhail Alexandrovich, played an
instrumental role in promoting aviation in Russia and was named the first
commander of the Department of the Air Fleet, soon known as the Russian
Imperial Air Service. In addition to raising funds for the purchase of French
Blériots and Farmans, Grand Duke Mikhail sent Russian military officers to
France for pilot training. By 1911, the Volkov Field Balloon School outside St.
Petersburg had been expanded to include airplanes. Because harsh Russian winter
conditions restricted the length of training, Grand Duke Mikhail saw the need
to relocate to the warmer climate of the Crimea, opening the Sevastopol School
of Aeronautics for army and navy officers. More significant, Russia possessed
an innovative aircraft designer of its own in Igor Sikorsky, who prior to the
First World War had designed one of the world’s first successful, large
multiengine aircraft, the four-engine Ilya Muromet, which in June 1914
successfully completed a 1,600-mile round-trip flight from St. Petersburg to
Kiev. As will be indicated later, however, Russia unfortunately lacked the
industrial infrastructure needed to fulfill its own aircraft needs once the war
began.
With the exception
of Sikorsky’s Ilya Muromet, Russia’s aircraft were qualitatively inferior
because most were older aircraft of foreign design that had already been
decommissioned elsewhere, and the great variety of aircraft employed by the
Russians created a logistical nightmare in terms of procuring parts and
engines.
Although possessing
an excellent aircraft in the Ilya Muromets, relied heavily upon imported French
motors for its domestically produced aircraft as well as on French aircraft
that had become obsolete on the Western Front.
Aircraft
Fighters
- Morane-Saulnier L
- Morane-Saulnier N
- Sikorsky S-16
- Sikorsky S-20
- Nieuport 10
- Nieuport 11
- Nieuport 17
- Nieuport 24
- Nieuport 27
- SPAD A.2
- SPAD S.VII
- SPAD S.XIII
- Sopwith Camel
- Sopwith Snipe
- Sopwith Triplane
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