Background
Meissner grew up in Brooklyn, New York and graduated from Erasmus Hall High School there.
Meissner grew up in Brooklyn, New York and graduated from Erasmus Hall High School there.
As a member of the college"s corps of cadets, he enlisted in the United States. Signal Corps and was graduated with the first class of the School of Military Aeronautics on 14 July 1917. Meissner completed his aeronautic combat training in Tours and was commissioned a 1st lieutenant on 20 November 1917, after which he reported to the 94th Pursuit Squadron commanded by Major John Huffer.
He enrolled at Sibley College in Ithaca, New York to study engineering. Piloting a French-made Nieuport 28, Meissner scored his first aerial kill over the Forêt De Louisiana Rappe on 2 May 1918. He was fortunate to survive, given the fabric was shredding off his top wing even as he scored.
At any rate, the feat earned the Distinguished Service Cross and the Croix de Guerre.
He shot a second plane down near Jaulny on 30 May, colliding with an Albatros fighter in the process. He then racked up two more kills—one of which he shared with Douglas Campbell—before being made commander of the 147th Pursuit Squadron in July.
Now flying a SPAD South.XIII fighter, he scored four more kills, one of which was an observation balloon, and another of which was shared with Ralph O"Neill. Meissner was discharged as a major on 25 March 1919 and returned to Cornell to complete his master"s in engineering.
After receiving his diploma, Meissner moved to Birmingham, Alabama and began working at Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company"s rail mill.
In 1919, he and Henry Badham (father of director John Badham) organized the Birmingham Flying Club, nicknamed the "Birmingham Escadrille" and leased a tract of land near Ensley to set up an airfield (Roberts Field). The club was recognized, with the assistance of Alabama"s adjutant general Colonel Hartley A. Moon, as the 135th Observation Squadron on 21 January 1922 under Meissner"s command. lieutenant was Alabama"s first Air National Guard unit and the 7th in the United States.
At one time, Meissner was its commanding officer
Meissner died from pneumonia in January 1936. His ashes were interred at Arlington National Cemetery the following May.
Among his colleagues in the unit were Eddie Rickenbacker and members of the Lafayette Escadrille. Rickenbacker made the trip to Birmingham to serve as pallbearer during his memorial service, which was capped by a flyover by members of his unit