In 1914, at the start of the war, the French military arrived, and the
Royal Naval Air Service stationed some armoured cars here. after hangars were destroyed during heavy bombardment.
Jasta 11 was mobilised at the airfield on 11 October 1916, equipped with
Albatros D.III fighters. Two days after he had been awarded the
Pour le Mérite,
Manfred von Richthofen arrived as commander on 15 January 1917 and scored their first victory on 23 January, shooting down and killing John Hay of
No. 40 Squadron Royal Flying Corps (RFC) in an
F.E.8. Von Richthofen scored 26 victories while based here. The airfield was bombed by RFC night bombers on the nights of the 5/6 and 7/8 April 1917, and Jasta 11 moved to
Roucourt, 26 miles to the north-east on the 13 April 1917.
Jasta 4 was at La Brayelle between 24 February to 31 May 1917, and
Jasta 12 arrived here 18 August 1917. The Germans continued to occupy the airfield, and on 2 May 1918
Roderic Dallas, commander of RAF 40 Squadron, in an
S.E.5, created an unusual incident when he dropped a package with a note taunting the Germans, then bombed and shot up the base, apparently to the amusement of
Field Marshal Haig and
Sir Hugh Trenchard. The Germans left on 17 October 1918, and on 21 October
RAF No. 16 Squadron arrived for a few days stay with their
R.E.8s. On 27 October
No. 25 Squadron RAF moved into the airfield with
DH.4s and
DH.9As, and was still operating here at the date of the
Armistice of 11 November 1918. Other RAF squadrons resident for a few weeks during this period were numbers
18 (DH.9A), and
32 (SE5a). ==Post WWI==