Lieutenant Malcolm Plaw MacLeod was a Canadian flying ace.
George Leonard Trapp (July 1894 - November 12, 1917) was a Canadian flying ace during World War I.
Percival flew many sorties accompanying the Canadian ace.
Lieutenant William Myron MacDonald was an American-born Canadian flying ace.
While assigned to 66 Squadron, MacDonald flew as a wingman for William George Barker, the great Canadian ace.
Six days later, on 9 November 1916, he shot down Canadian ace Alan Duncan Bell-Irving's Nieuport 17 fighter to become an ace.
Vimy, as well as the success of the Canadian flying ace Billy Bishop, helped give Canada a new sense of identity.
Billy Bishop, the top Canadian ace of World War I, described a break:
Lieutenant Alfred Michael Koch was a Swiss-born Canadian flying ace credited with ten aerial victories.
The Canadian ace had to shut down the engine and dead-stick to a crashlanding in a Belgian field picketed with hop poles.