AggieNetwork.com
Account Benefits

"Find an Aggie" Online Directory

HireAggies Career Services

TX.AG

Roll Call Tribute

Jesse Easterwood 1909 June 7, 2009 2:06 PM updated: June 8, 2017 12:42 PM

This Aggie has passed away.
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________
From findagrave.com

LTJG Jesse Lawrence Easterwood

Birth: Dec. 5, 1890
Wills Point
Van Zandt County
Texas, USA
Death: May 19, 1919, Panama

J. L. Easterwood, USNRF, was designated Naval Aviator #405 in 1917, prior to being commissioned with rank of Ensign in 1918. Served in France during the World War, with the Northern Bomb Group as well as 214 RAF Squadron.

LTJG Easterwood was killed at NAS Coco Solo, Canal Zone, Panama, as result of an aircraft accident.


Burial:
Grove Hill Memorial Park
Dallas
Dallas County
Texas, USA

Created by: Mike Weeks
Record added: May 31, 2010
Find A Grave Memorial# 53094098
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________
From Texas A&M University, University Libraries, Cushing Manuscript Collections Database

Easterwood, Jesse L. (1888-1919) | Cushing Library

Name: Easterwood, Jesse L. (1888-1919)
Variant Name: Red
Fuller Form: Jesse Lawrence Easterwood

Historical Note:
Jesse Lawrence Easterwood (1888-1919), known as "Red,"a veteran World War I aviator, and pioneer in military aviation, was born 5 Dec. 1888 in Wills Point, Tex. In 1905, he enrolled in Texas A & M College, now Texas A & M University, as a member of B Company Infantry. Very popular with the other cadets, Easterwood also played second base on the college baseball team.

Easterwood left college in 1909 to become a businessman in Mexia, Tex. In 1917, however, on the day the United States declared war on Germany, Easterwood sold his business and volunteered as an aviator. He received his early training at Pensacola, Fla., and was one of the very first Americans to qualify as a naval aviator. He served as an instructor at Pensacola briefly, then was transferred to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for engineering training.

On 12 March 1918 Easterwood set sail for Europe with the first group of American pilots going overseas to serve in World War I. During his tour with the Royal Flying Service, flying one of the first ten Handley-Page bombers, Easterwood completed 16 missions deep behind German lines. He also served with the French air force and the Italian air force, ferrying the first Caprioni bomber from Italy to France.

Surviving World War I, after many perilous missions, Easterwood remained with the U. S. Navy, flying experimental airmail flights. By 1919, having achieved the rank of lieutenant, Easterwood was transferred to Coco Solo, in the Panama Canal Zone. Preferring to fly the planes in his unit which had the worst mechanical problems himself, Easterwood was killed 16 May 1919 while attempting the emergency landing of such a plane with severe engine trouble.

Easterwood was awarded the Navy Cross posthumously, for his heroism during World War I.

Texas A & M University also sponsored a tribute paid to Easterwood's memory. At the urging of Easterwood's high school friend from Wills, Tex., Gibb Gilchrist, who had established a Department of Aeronautical Engineering during his first year (1937) as dean of the School of Engineering at the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, the new college flying field in College Station, Tex. was dedicated as the "Jesse L. Easterwood Airport" 22 May 1941. Developed first as a facility for insituting a flight-training program at Texas A & M University, the airport was later expanded to serve major carriers to and from Dallas/Fort Worth, Tex. and Houston, Tex. airports.

Sources:
1) Chapman, David."Jesse Easterwood '09: WWI Hero and Pioneer in Naval Aviation!" Reprint article from Texas Aggie.College Station, Tex.: Association of Former Students, Texas A & M University (June 1994). [Last viewed: 02/05/2003]

2) "Gilchrist, Gibb."The Handbook of Texas Online.[Accessed Wed Feb 5 15:49:41 US/Central 2003 ]

http://archon.library.tamu.edu/?p=creators/creator&id=10



comments powered by Disqus
Address

505 George Bush Drive
College Station, TX 77840

Phone Number

(979) 845-7514

© 2026 The Association of Former Students of Texas A&M University, All Rights Reserved