William Portwood Erwin

American flying ace
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican flying ace
PlacesUnited States of America
wasFlying ace
Work fieldMilitary
Gender
Male
Birth18 October 1895, Ryan
Death19 August 1927 (aged 31 years)
The details

Biography

Lieutenant William Portwood Erwin was a World War I flying ace credited with eight aerial victories.

Early life

William Portwood Erwin was the son of W. A. Erwin of Chicago. The younger Erwin, born elsewhere, was a Chicago native also.

World War I

Erwin was assigned to 1st Observation Squadron on 19 July 1918. As a Salmson 2A2 pilot, he scored his victories between 15 September and 22 October 1918; half of them were with gunner Arthur Easterbrook.

Postwar

Erwin died during the Dole Air Race between Oakland, California and Hawaii. He flew the Dallas Spirit, a custom aircraft built by the Swallow Airplane Company on credit for the attempt. Erwin failed to return from a search for two other missing competitors, the Miss Doran and The Golden Eagle, and is presumed drowned 19 August 1927.

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