Assigned to the Air Service, Campbell learned to fly in a
Curtiss Jenny aircraft and was later trained in a
Nieuport fighter. He was assigned to the famous Pursuit
94th Aero Squadron (the "Hat in the ring" gang) - at this stage flying
Nieuport 28 fighters. He was noted for several firsts in his service. He flew the squadron's first patrol along with two other famous aviators,
Eddie Rickenbacker and
Raoul Lufbery. Due to supply problems, the trio flew their first mission in unarmed planes. His first kill came while flying in an aircraft armed with only one rather than the usual two
machine guns. (l.) and
Kenneth Marr (r.). The aircraft in the background is a
Nieuport 28. He shared credit with Lt. Alan F. Winslow for the squadron's first confirmed victories, which were the first victories by fighter aircraft of an American-trained flying unit in the war. Campbell and Winslow each shot down and captured a pilot from Jasta 64w on April 14, 1918. He became the second Air Service ace and the first by an American-trained aviator when he downed his fifth enemy aircraft over Lironville,
France on May 31, 1918. Campbell was awarded the
Distinguished Service Cross for bravery in aerial combat over Flirey, France on May 19, 1918 and in the next 3 weeks received 4
Oak Leaf Clusters. He was also awarded the
Croix de Guerre avec palme by the French military. He scored his sixth and final victory on June 5, 1918. During this last action, Campbell was wounded by an exploding
artillery shell and was sent back to the
United States to recover from severe
shrapnel injuries to his back. During his recuperation, he made appearances at numerous
war bond rallies. Campbell hoped to return to combat and was reassigned to his squadron in November 1918. By then however the war was winding down and he saw no further frontline action before the
Armistice of November 11, 1918. While leaving active service the following year, he continued to hold a commission in the reserves until 1924. After the war, he took a job for
W.R. Grace and Company. Douglas Campbell began work in April 1919 in New York. Two years later he arrived at the Hacienda Cartavio in
Peru where he worked as an accountant. Cartavio was a farm where sugarcane was grown and where
W. R. Grace & Co. had built the first mill to produce sugar at the end of the nineteenth century. He worked for about eleven years there. After he became the Vice-President of
Pan-American Airways in 1939 and was named the airline's
general manager in 1948. He died in
Greenwich, Connecticut at the age of 94. ==Awards and decorations==