Background
His father, an agronomist and reserve officer in the French army, was killed at the front in May 1940.
His father, an agronomist and reserve officer in the French army, was killed at the front in May 1940.
He finished his training in March 1940, shortly before the German invasion of France.
Aged 19 years old in August 1939 de la Poype enrolled in the French air force and began training as a pilot. With comrades from the fighter training school of Etampes, he managed to flee to Saint-Jean-de-Luz to board a ship to England. After serving in French Equatorial Africa from July 1940 to January 1941 with the Free French Air Force, he joined the Royal Air Force as a Sergeant and was assigned to No 602 Squadron, flying Supermarine Spitfires in July 1941.
An indication of his flying abilities, he was selected as wingman by the squadron's commanding officer, 32-victory Irish ace, Squadron Leader Paddy Finucane. He claimed his first aircraft destroyed, a Messerschmitt Bf 109, on 22 August 1942 over Gravelines, and flew more than 60 combat missions. Upon learning that a group of French volunteers was to be sent to the Soviet front, he joined the Normandie fighter group and was part of the first batch of 12 French pilots who, via transfers through Lebanon and Iraq, arrived in Ivanovo in the Soviet Union on 28 November 1942.
The two squadrons, initially called the Normandie Group, were assigned the Yak-1B fighter and attached to the 303rd Fighter Aviation Division of the 1st Air Army. On 31 August 1943 he shot down a Ju 87 Stuka dive-bomber. This was his second aerial victory and his first on the Soviet front.
After leaving the Soviet Union on 20 June 1945 he became an air attaché in Belgium and later Yugoslavia before retiring from the air force in 1947. An inventor, de La Poype understood that plastics and disposable packaging would become very important. As head of the Société d'Etudes et d'Applications du Plastique, he set up his first plastics factory in May 1947.
He is also the designer of the Citroen Mehari. De la Poype created the in 1970 in order to educate the public about marine life. He retired in 1985 but retained ownernership until 2006.
He was also mayor of Champigné and was the owner of a golf course near Angers.