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Italo Balbo

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Italo Balbo
Ferrara
Air Marshal Italo Balbo
Place of birth Ferrara
Place of death Skies over Tobruk
Allegiance Italy
Years of service 1915-1940
Rank Air Marshal
Awards - 1 Bronze Medal
- 2 Silver Medals

Italo Balbo (June 6, 1896 - June 28, 1940) was an Italian aviator, blackshirt leader and possible successor of Mussolini.

Balbo was born in Quartesana, near Ferrara (Italy), in 1896. During World War I he served in the Alpine troops, earning one bronze and two silver medals and reaching the rank of captain. After the war he studied in Florence and obtained a degree in Social Sciences, then returned to his hometown to work as a bank clerk.

Eventually he joined the Fascists and soon became a secretary of a local fascist section. He began to organize fascist gangs and formed his own group nicknamed Celibano, after their favorite drink. They broke strikes for local landowners and attacked communists and socialists in Portomaggiore, Ravenna, Modena and Bologna. The group once raided the Estense Castle in Ferrara.

By the time of the 1922 March on Rome, he was a prominent fascist leader. In 1923 he was charged with the murder of anti-fascist parish priest Giuseppe Minzoni in Argenta. He fled to Rome and in 1924 became General Commander of the Fascist militia and undersecretary for National Economy in 1925.

In November 6, 1926, despite the fact that he knew nothing at the time about aviation, he was appointed Secretary of State for Air. He went through a crash course of flying instruction and set up to build the Regia Aeronautica, the Italian air force. In August 19, 1928 he became General of the Air Force and on September 12, 1929 Minister of the Air Force.

Balbo led two trans-Atlantic flights. The first was the 1930 flight of twelve Savoia-Marchetti S.55 flying boats from Orbetello, Italy to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil between December 17, 1930 and January 15, 1931. From July 1 - August 12, 1933 he led a flight of 24 flying boats on a round-trip flight from Rome to Chicago, Illinois; the flight ended on Lake Michigan. In honor of this feat, Mussolini donated a column from Ostia to the city of Chicago; it can still be seen along the Lakefront Trail, a little south of Soldier Field. Seventh Street was also renamed Balbo Drive.

Chicago Tribune columnist Eric Zorn's [March 2, 2006 column][1] called for the city to remove Balbo's name from the street and replace it with a more worthy Italian-American.

Chicago named Balbo Avenue after him and staged a parade in his honor. President Roosevelt invited him to lunch. Back home in Italy, he was promoted Air Marshal. After this, the term Balbo entered common usage to describe any large formation of aircraft.

Later in 1933 Balbo was appointed governor general of Italian-held Libya, where he moved in January, 1934. At that stage he had apparently caused bad blood in the party, possibly because of jealousy and individualist behavior. He began road construction projects, tried to attract Italian immigrants and made efforts to draw Muslims into the fascist cause.

After the German invasion of Poland in 1939, Balbo visited Rome to express his displeasure with Mussolini's support for Hitler. He argued that Italy should side with Britain, but attracted little following. In Libya he continued to lead air patrols over North Africa.

On June 28, 1940 he was killed while on a reconnaissance flight on top of Italian positions in Tobruk, Libya, in a plane without insignia. He was shot down by Italian anti-aircraft fire from an Italian cruiser; the artillery tried to shoot him down but he was too high. The government in Rome maintained that the incident was an accident of friendly fire but Balbo's widow, Emanuela Florio, believed that it was an assassination on Mussolini's orders.

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