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Australian Flying Corps

The Australian Flying Corps (AFC) was the branch of the Australian Army responsible for operating aircraft during World War I, and the forerunner of the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF). The AFC was established in 1912, though it was not until 1914 that it began flight training.

Australian Flying Corps
Captain Harry Cobby (centre), Lieutenant Roy King (fourth from right), and other officers of "A" Flight, No. 4 Squadron AFC, with their Sopwith Camels on the Western Front, June 1918
Active1912–20
CountryAustralia
BranchAustralian Army
TypeAir force
RoleAerial warfare
Part ofAustralian Imperial Force
EngagementsWorld War I
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Edgar Reynolds
Richard Williams
Insignia
Unit Colour Patch

In 1911, at the Imperial Conference held in London, it was decided that aviation should be developed by the national armed forces of the British Empire. Australia became the first member of the Empire to follow this policy. By the end of 1911, the Army was advertising for pilots and mechanics.[1] During 1912, pilots and mechanics were appointed, aircraft were ordered, the site of a flying school was chosen and the first squadron was officially raised.[2] On 7 March 1913, the government officially announced formation of the Central Flying School (CFS) and an "Australian Aviation Corps", although that name was never widely used.

AFC units were formed for service overseas with the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) during World War I. They operated initially in the Mesopotamian Campaign. The AFC later saw action in Palestine and France. A training wing was established in the United Kingdom. The corps remained part of the Australian Army until it was disbanded in 1919, after which it was temporarily replaced by the Australian Air Corps. In 1921, that formation was re-established as the independent RAAF.

Establishment edit

On 30 December 1911, the Commonwealth Gazette announced that the Australian military would seek the "...appointment of two competent Mechanists [sic] and Aviators", adding that the government would "accept no liability for accidents".[1] On 3 July 1912, the first "flying machines" were ordered: two Royal Aircraft Factory B.E.2 two-seat tractor biplanes and two British-built Deperdussin single-seat tractor monoplanes. Soon afterward, two pilots were appointed: Henry Petre (6 August) and Eric Harrison (11 August).[1]

On 22 September 1912, the Minister of Defence, Senator George Pearce, officially approved formation of an Australian military air arm.[2] Petre rejected a suggestion by Captain Oswald Watt that a Central Flying School be established in Canberra, near the Royal Military College, Duntroon, because it was too high above sea level.[1] Petre instead recommended several sites in Victoria and one of these was chosen, at Point Cook, Victoria, on 22 October 1912.[1][3] Two days later, on 24 October 1912, the government authorised the raising of a single squadron.[4] Upon establishment the squadron would be equipped with four aircraft and manned by "...four officers, seven warrant officers and sergeants, and 32 mechanics", drawn from volunteers already serving in the Citizen Forces.[4]

On 7 March 1913, the government officially announced formation of the Central Flying School (CFS) and the "Australian Aviation Corps".[2][1] According to the Australian War Memorial, the name "Australian Flying Corps does not appear to have been promulgated officially but seems to have been derived from the term Australian Aviation Corps. The first mention of an Australian Flying Corps appears in Military Orders of 1914."[2] Flying training did not begin immediately; it was not until 1914 that the first class of pilots were accepted.[5] No. 1 Flight of the Australian Flying Corps was raised in the 3rd Military District on 14 July 1914.[6]

In March 1914, a staff officer, Major Edgar Reynolds, was officially appointed General Staff Officer in charge of a branch covering "intelligence, censorship, and aviation" within the Army's Department of Military Operations.[7][8] Following the outbreak of World War I and the expansion of the Army, aviation became a separate branch commanded by Reynolds. AFC operational units were attached and subordinate to Australian ground forces and/or British ground and air commands. Reynolds' role was mostly administrative rather than one that involved operational command.[9][Note 1]

World War I edit

Operations edit

 
Members of the Half Flight gather around a Royal Naval Air Service Short 827

After the outbreak of war in 1914, the Australian Flying Corps sent one aircraft, a B.E.2, to assist in capturing the German colonies in northern New Guinea and the Solomon Islands. German forces in the Pacific surrendered quickly, before the aircraft was even unpacked from its shipping crate.[5]

The first operational flights did not occur until 27 May 1915, when the Mesopotamian Half Flight (MHF), under the command of Captain Henry Petre, was called upon to assist the Indian Army in protecting British oil interests in what is now Iraq. Operating a mixture of aircraft including Caudrons, Maurice Farman Shorthorns, Maurice Farman Longhorns and Martinsydes, the MHF initially undertook unarmed reconnaissance operations, before undertaking light bombing operations later in the year after being attached to No. 30 Squadron RFC. Losses were high and by December, after flying supplies to the besieged garrison at Kut, the MHF was disbanded.[11]

In January 1916, No. 1 Squadron was raised at Point Cook in response to a British request for Australia to raise a full squadron to serve as part of the RFC.[11] Reynolds served as the squadron's commanding officer, prior to its embarkation for overseas service. The squadron, consisting of 12 aircraft organised into three flights, arrived in Egypt in April and was subsequently assigned to the RFC's 5th Wing.[12] In mid-June it began operations against Ottoman Empire (Turkish) and Senussi Arab forces in Egypt and Palestine. It would remain in the Middle East until the end of the war, being reassigned to No. 40 Wing in October 1917,[13] undertaking reconnaissance, ground liaison and close air support operations as the British Empire forces advanced into Syria, initially flying a mixture of aircraft including B.E.2cs, Martinsyde G.100s, B.E.12as and R.E.8s – but later standardising on Bristol Fighters. One of the squadron's pilots, Lieutenant Frank McNamara, received the only Victoria Cross awarded to an Australian airman during the war, receiving the award for rescuing a fellow pilot who had been downed behind Turkish lines in early 1917.[14][15] No. 1 Squadron was credited with the destruction of 29 enemy aircraft.[16]

Three other squadrons – No. 2, No. 3 and No. 4 – were raised in 1917 in Egypt or Australia, and were sent to France. Arriving there between August and December, these squadrons subsequently undertook operations under the operational command of British Royal Flying Corps (RFC) wings along the Western Front.[17] No. 2 Squadron, under the command of Major Oswald Watt, who had previously served in the French Foreign Legion, was the first AFC unit to see action in Europe. Flying DH.5 fighters, the squadron made its debut around St Quentin, fighting a short action with a German patrol and suffering the loss of one aircraft forced down. The following month the squadron took part in the Battle of Cambrai, flying on combat air patrols, and bombing and strafing missions in support of the British Third Army, suffering heavy losses in dangerous low-level attacks that later received high praise from General Hugh Trenchard, commander of the RFC.[18] The squadron's DH.5s were replaced with superior S.E.5a fighters in December 1917, with which the squadron resumed operations shortly afterwards.[19] Operating R.E.8 reconnaissance aircraft, No. 3 Squadron entered the war during final phase of the Battle of Passchendaele, also in November, during which they were employed largely as artillery spotters.[17] No.4 Squadron entered the fighting last. Equipped with Sopwith Camels, the squadron was dispatched to a quiet sector around Lens initially and did not see combat until January 1918.[20]

 
R.E.8s of No 3 Sqn AFC

During the final Allied offensive that eventually brought an end to the war – the Hundred Days Offensive – the AFC squadrons flew reconnaissance and observation missions around Amiens in August, as well as launching raids around Ypres, Arras and Lille. Operations continued until the end of the war, some of the fiercest air-to-air fighting occurring on 29 October, when 15 Sopwith Snipes from No. 4 Squadron fought an engagement with a group of Fokkers that outnumbered them four to one. In the ensuing fighting, the Australians shot down 10 German aircraft for the loss of just one of their own.[17] During their time along the Western Front, the two fighter squadrons – No. 2 and 4 – accounted for 384 German aircraft, No. 4 taking credit for 199 and No. 2 for 185.[21] The squadron were also credited with 33 enemy balloons destroyed or driven down.[16] No. 3 Squadron, operating in the corps reconnaissance role, accounted for another 51 aircraft.[16][22]

Organisation edit

By the end of the war, four squadrons had seen active service, operating alongside and under British Royal Flying Corps (and in 1918 the Royal Air Force) command. For administrative reasons, and to avoid confusion with similarly numbered RFC units, at one stage each AFC squadron was allocated an RFC number – the Australians themselves never used these numbers, and in the end, to avoid further confusion, the original AFC numbers were reinstated. The four operational squadrons of the AFC were:[23]

Operational squadrons of the AFC
Australian designation British designation Established
No.1 Squadron AFC No. 67 (Australian) Squadron RFC 1 January 1916
No.2 Squadron AFC No. 68 (Australian) Squadron RFC 20 September 1916
No.3 Squadron AFC No. 69 (Australian) Squadron RFC 19 September 1916
No.4 Squadron AFC No. 71 (Australian) Squadron RFC 16 October 1916

In the Middle East, No. 1 Squadron was initially assigned to No. 5 Wing after being formed, but was later transferred to No. 40 Wing in late 1917, remaining as part of that formation until the end of the war.[24] In Europe, No. 2 Squadron formed part of No. 51 Wing,[25] but in 1918 it was transferred to No. 80 Wing, joining No. 4 Squadron which had been transferred from No. 11 Wing.[26] No. 3 Squadron trained as part of No. 23 Wing until it was committed to the Western Front in August 1917, when it became a "corps squadron", tasked with supporting the British XIII and Canadian Corps.[27]

As well as the operational squadrons, a training wing was established in the United Kingdom. Designated as the 1st Training Wing, it was made up of four squadrons. The four training squadrons of the AFC were:[15][28]

Training squadrons of the AFC
Australian designation British designation Established
No.5 (Training) Squadron AFC No. 29 (Australian) Squadron, RFC 1 September 1917
No.6 (Training) Squadron AFC No. 30 (Australian) Squadron, RFC 15 June 1917
No.7 (Training) Squadron AFC No. 32 (Australian) Squadron, RFC 24 October 1917
No.8 (Training) Squadron AFC No. 33 (Australian) Squadron, RFC 25 October 1917

As the war progressed, there were plans to increase the AFC's number of operational squadrons from four to fifteen by 1921, but the war came to an end before these could be raised.[29]

Personnel edit

 
Serny, France, November 1918. A score board recording the claims for enemy aircraft destroyed by No. 80 Wing RAF from July–November 1918, including Nos. 2 and 4 Squadron AFC.

The corps remained small throughout the war, and opportunities to serve in its ranks were limited. A total of 880 officers and 2,840 other ranks served in the AFC,[Note 2] of whom only 410 served as pilots and 153 served as observers.[31] A further 200 men served as aircrew in the British flying services – the RFC or the Royal Naval Air Service (RNAS) – including men such as Charles Kingsford Smith and Bert Hinkler, both of whom would have a significant impact upon aviation in Australia after the war.[32][30] Casualties included 175 dead, 111 wounded, 6 gassed and 40 captured.[33] The majority of these casualties were suffered on the Western Front where 78 Australians were killed, 68 were wounded and 33 became prisoners of war.[21] This represented a casualty rate of 44 percent, which was only marginally lower than most Australian infantry battalions that fought in the trenches, who averaged a casualty rate of around 50 percent.[34] Molkentin attributes the high loss rate in part to the policy of not issuing pilots with parachutes, as well as the fact that the bulk of patrols were conducted over enemy lines, both of which were in keeping with British policy.[35]

Pilots from the AFC's four operational squadrons claimed 527 enemy aircraft destroyed or driven down,[34] and the corps produced 57 flying aces.[36] The highest-scoring AFC pilot was Harry Cobby, who was credited with 29 victories. Other leading aces included Roy King (26), Edgar McCloughry (21), Francis Smith (16), and Roy Phillipps (15).[37] Robert Little and Roderic (Stan) Dallas, the highest-scoring Australian aces of the war, credited with 47 and 39 victories respectively, served with the RNAS.[32] Other Australian aces who served in British units included Jerry Pentland (23), Richard Minifie (21), Edgar Johnston (20), Andrew Cowper (19), Cedric Howell (19), Fred Holliday (17), and Allan Hepburn (16).[37] Several officers gained appointment in senior command roles, two commanding wings and nine commanding squadrons. One member of the AFC was awarded the Victoria Cross and another 40 received the Distinguished Flying Cross, including two who received the awarded three times.[36]

Equipment edit

The Australian Flying Corps operated a range of aircraft types. These types were mainly of British origin, although French aircraft were also obtained. Over this period aircraft technology progressed rapidly and designs included relatively fragile and rudimentary types to more advanced single-engined biplanes, as well as one twin-engined bomber.[38] The roles performed by these aircraft evolved during the war and included reconnaissance, observation for artillery, aerial bombing and ground attack, patrolling, and the resupply of ground troops on the battlefield by airdrop.[36]

Aircraft flown by the Australian Flying Corps[39]
Aircraft Origin Role(s)
Airco DH.5 United Kingdom fighter
Airco DH.6 United Kingdom trainer
Armstrong Whitworth F.K.3 United Kingdom trainer
Avro 504 United Kingdom trainer
Bleriot XI France trainer
Bristol Boxkite United Kingdom trainer
Bristol F.2 Fighter United Kingdom fighter/reconnaissance
Bristol Scout United Kingdom reconnaissance/fighter/trainer
Caudron G.3 France trainer
Curtiss JN Jenny United States trainer
Deperdussin France trainer
Grahame-White Type XV Boxkite United Kingdom trainer
Handley Page 0/400 United Kingdom bomber
Martinsyde S.1 United Kingdom reconnaissance
Martinsyde G.100/G.101 United Kingdom single seat reconnaissance/bomber
Maurice Farman MF.7 Longhorn France trainer
Maurice Farman MF.11 Shorthorn France trainer
Maurice Farman Seaplane/Landplane France trainer
Royal Aircraft Factory B.E.2 United Kingdom reconnaissance
Royal Aircraft Factory B.E.12 United Kingdom single seat reconnaissance/bomber
Royal Aircraft Factory F.E.2 United Kingdom fighter/reconnaissance
Royal Aircraft Factory R.E.8 United Kingdom reconnaissance
Royal Aircraft Factory S.E.5a United Kingdom fighter
Sopwith 1½ Strutter United Kingdom trainer (obsolete fighter/reconnaissance)
Sopwith Buffalo United Kingdom ground attack (test only)
Sopwith Camel United Kingdom fighter
Sopwith Pup United Kingdom trainer (obsolete fighter)
Sopwith Snipe United Kingdom fighter

Training edit

The AFC conducted both pilot and mechanic training in Australia at the Central Flying School, which was established at Point Cook, but this was limited in duration due to embarkation schedules,[40] which meant that further training was required overseas before aircrew were posted to operational squadrons.[41] The first course began on 17 August 1914 and lasted three months; two instructors, Henry Petre and Eric Harrison, who had been recruited from the United Kingdom in 1912 to establish the corps,[42] trained the first batch of Australian aircrew.[43] In the end, a total of eight flying training courses were completed at the Central Flying School during the war, the final course commencing in June 1917. The first six courses consisted only of officers, but the last two, both conducted in early and mid-1917 included non-commissioned officers. These courses ranged in size from four on the first course, to eight on the next three, 16 on the fifth, 24 on the sixth, 31 on the seventh and 17 on the last one. There was limited wastage on the early courses, all trainees successfully completing the first six courses, but final two courses run in 1917 suffered heavily from limited resources and bad weather, resulting in less than half the students graduating.[40] To complement the aviators trained by the CFS, the New South Wales government established its own aviation school at Clarendon, at what later became RAAF Base Richmond, which trained pilots, observers and mechanics. A total of 50 pilots graduated from the school,[41] the majority of its graduates went on to serve in the British flying services, although some served in the AFC.[44]

In early 1917, the AFC began training pilots, observers and mechanics in the United Kingdom.[45] Aircrew were selected from volunteers from other arms such as the infantry, light horse, engineers or artillery, many of whom had previously served at the front,[46] who reverted to the rank of cadet and undertook a six-week foundation course at the two Schools of Military Aeronautics in Reading or Oxford. After this, those who passed graduated to flight training at one of the four AFC training squadrons: Nos. 5, 6, 7 and 8, which were based at Minchinhampton and Leighterton in Gloucestershire.[28][45]

Flight training in the UK consisted of a total of three hours dual instruction followed by up to a further 20 hours solo flying – although some pilots, including the AFC's highest-scoring ace, Harry Cobby, received less[44] – after which a pilot had to prove his ability to undertake aerial bombing, photography, formation flying, signalling, dog-fighting and artillery observation.[47] Elementary training was undertaken on types such as Shorthorns, Avro 504s and Pups, followed by operational training on Scouts, Camels and RE8s.[28] Upon completion, pilots received their commission and their "wings", and were allocated to the different squadrons based on their aptitude during training: the best were usually sent to scout squadrons, and the remainder to two-seaters.[45][48]

Initially, the AFC raised its ground staff from volunteer soldiers and civilians who had previous experience or who were trade trained, and when the first AFC squadron was formed these personnel were provided with very limited training that was focused mainly upon basic military skills.[44] As the war progressed, a comprehensive training program was established in which mechanics were trained in nine different trades: welders, blacksmiths, coppersmiths, engine fitters, general fitters, riggers, electricians, magneto-repairers, and machinists. Training was delivered by eight technical sections at Halton Camp.[49] The length of training within each section varied, but was generally between eight and 12 weeks; the more complex trades such as engine fitter required trainees to undertake multiple training courses across several sections. General fitters had the longest training requirements, receiving 32 weeks of instruction.[50]

Post-war legacy edit

Following the armistice that came into effect on 11 November 1918, the AIF returned to Australia in stages, some elements performing reconstruction and military occupation duties in Europe. No. 4 Squadron AFC took part in the occupation of Germany, the only Australian unit to do so; it operated as part of the British Army of Occupation around Cologne between December 1918 and March 1919 before transferring its aircraft to the British and returning to Australia along with the other three squadrons.[17] Reynolds was succeeded by Colonel Richard Williams in 1919.[51]

Most units of the AFC were disbanded during 1919. The AFC was succeeded by the Australian Air Corps, which was itself succeeded by the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) in 1921.[17] Many former members of the AFC such as Cobby, McNamara, Williams, Lawrence Wackett, and Henry Wrigley, went on to play founding roles in the fledgling RAAF.[44][52] Others, such as John Wright, who served with No. 4 Squadron on the Western Front before commanding the 2/15th Field Regiment in Malaya during the fighting against the Japanese in World War II, returned to a ground role.[52][53]

Notes edit

Footnotes

  1. ^ Appointed to command No. 1 Squadron AFC in 1916, Reynolds later took up the position of Staff Officer for Aviation at AIF Headquarters in London.[10]
  2. ^ These figures differ from those provided by Grey: 460 officers and 2,234 other ranks.[30]

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d e f Australian National Aviation Museum.
  2. ^ a b c d Australian Flying Corps.
  3. ^ Australian Military Aviation and World War One.
  4. ^ a b Sydney Morning Herald 1912, p. 11.
  5. ^ a b Dennis et al 1995, p. 67.
  6. ^ Isaacs 1971, p. 11.
  7. ^ Weekly Times 1914, p. 26.
  8. ^ The West Australian 1914, p. 8.
  9. ^ Molkentin 2014, pp. 26–32.
  10. ^ Cutlack 1941, pp. 32 & 35.
  11. ^ a b Dennis et al 1995, p. 68.
  12. ^ Odgers 1994, p. 112.
  13. ^ Molkentin 2010, p. 109.
  14. ^ No. 1 Squadron AFC.
  15. ^ a b Dennis et al 1995, pp. 68–69.
  16. ^ a b c Isaacs 1971, p. 158.
  17. ^ a b c d e Dennis et al 1995, p. 69.
  18. ^ Odgers 1994, p. 128.
  19. ^ No. 2 Squadron AFC.
  20. ^ No. 4 Squadron AFC.
  21. ^ a b Odgers 1994, p. 130.
  22. ^ Eather 1995, p. 12.
  23. ^ Molkentin 2010, p. xi.
  24. ^ Molkentin 2010, p. 57 and 109.
  25. ^ Molkentin 2010, p. 259.
  26. ^ Molkentin 2010, p. 278.
  27. ^ Molkentin 2010, pp. 198–199.
  28. ^ a b c Stephens 2001, p. 17.
  29. ^ Stone 2014, p. 113.
  30. ^ a b Grey 2008, p. 118.
  31. ^ Molkentin 2010, p. 336.
  32. ^ a b Odgers 1994, p. 127.
  33. ^ Beaumont 2001, p. 214.
  34. ^ a b Molkentin 2010, p. 337.
  35. ^ Molkentin 2010, pp. 44–45.
  36. ^ a b c Molkentin 2010, p. ix.
  37. ^ a b Newton 1996, pp. 60–61.
  38. ^ Isaacs 1971, pp. 160–165.
  39. ^ Isaacs 1971, pp. 160–164.
  40. ^ a b Cutlack 1941, p. 426.
  41. ^ a b Molkentin 2010, p. 179.
  42. ^ Stephens 2001, p. 3.
  43. ^ Cutlack 1941, p. 1.
  44. ^ a b c d Stephens 2001, p. 9.
  45. ^ a b c Cutlack 1941, p. 430.
  46. ^ Cutlack 1941, p. xxviii.
  47. ^ Cutlack 1941, pp. 430–431.
  48. ^ Molkentin 2010, p. 182.
  49. ^ Cutlack 1941, pp. 431–432.
  50. ^ Cutlack 1941, pp. 432–433.
  51. ^ Garrisson 1990.
  52. ^ a b Cutlack 1941, p. 239.
  53. ^ Molkentin 2010, pp. 337–238.

References edit

Books

  • Beaumont, Joan (2001). Australian Defence: Sources and Statistics. Australian Centenary History of Defence. Vol. 6. South Melbourne, Victoria: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19554-118-2.
  • Cutlack, Frederic Morley (1941). The Australian Flying Corps in the Western and Eastern Theatres of War, 1914–1918. Official History of Australia in the War of 1914–1918. Vol. VIII (11th ed.). Canberra: Australian War Memorial. OCLC 220900299.
  • Dennis, Peter; et al. (1995). The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History (1st ed.). Melbourne, Victoria: Oxford University Press Australia & New Zealand. ISBN 0-19-553227-9.
  • Eather, Steve (1995). Flying Squadrons of the Australian Defence Force. Weston Creek, Australian Capital Territory: Aerospace Publications. ISBN 1-875671-15-3.
  • Garrisson, A.D. (1990). "Williams, Sir Richard". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol. 12. Carlton, Victoria: Melbourne University Press. ISBN 9780522842364.
  • Grey, Jeffrey (2008). A Military History of Australia (3rd ed.). Port Melbourne, Victoria: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521697910.
  • Isaacs, Keith (1971). Military Aircraft of Australia 1909–1918. Canberra: Australian War Memorial. ISBN 9780642993748.
  • Molkentin, Michael (2010). Fire in the Sky: The Australian Flying Corps in the First World War. Sydney, New South Wales: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1742370729.
  • Molkentin, Michael (2014). Australia and the War in the Air. Centenary History of Australia and the Great War. Vol. I. South Melbourne, Victoria: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195576795.
  • Newton, Dennis (1996). Australian Air Aces: Australian Fighter Pilots in Combat. Fyshwick, Australian Capital Territory: Aerospace Publications. ISBN 1-875671-25-0.
  • Odgers, George (1994). Diggers: The Australian Army, Navy and Air Force in Eleven Wars. Vol. 1: From 1860 to 5 June 1944. Sydney: Lansdowne. ISBN 978-1-86302-385-6.
  • Stephens, Alan (2001). The Royal Australian Air Force. The Australian Centenary History of Defence. Vol. 2. South Melbourne, Victoria: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-554115-4.
  • Stone, Barry (2014). The Desert Anzacs: The Forgotten Conflicts in the Deserts of Mesopotamia, North Africa and Palestine. Richmond, Victoria: Hardie Grant Books. ISBN 978-1742707549.

Websites and newspapers

  • . First World War, 1914–1918 units. Australian War Memorial. Archived from the original on 15 May 2013. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
  • . First World War, 1914–1918 units. Australian War Memorial. Archived from the original on 15 May 2013. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
  • . First World War, 1914–1918 units. Australian War Memorial. Archived from the original on 15 May 2013. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
  • . Australian War Memorial. n.d. Archived from the original on 26 September 2013. Retrieved 24 August 2013.
  • . Royal Australian Air Force. Archived from the original on 23 June 2010. Retrieved 26 December 2011.
  • . Australian National Aviation Museum. 2000–2003. Archived from the original on 27 January 2014. Retrieved 24 August 2013.
  • "Flying Corps: New Citizen Unit". The Sydney Morning Herald. 24 October 1912. p. 11. Retrieved 2 June 2013.
  • "News in Brief". Weekly Times. Melbourne. 7 March 1914. p. 26. Retrieved 25 August 2013.
  • "Eastern Australia: Items By Mail". The West Australian. 16 March 1914. p. 8. Retrieved 25 August 2013.

Further reading edit

  • Eather, Steve (1995). Flying Squadrons of the Australian Defence Force. Weston Creek, Australian Capital Territory: Aerospace Publications. ISBN 1-875671-15-3.

External links edit

  • Warfare in a New Dimension: The Australian Flying Corps in the First World War
  • Australian Flying Corps short documentary, State Library of Queensland

australian, flying, corps, branch, australian, army, responsible, operating, aircraft, during, world, forerunner, royal, australian, force, raaf, established, 1912, though, until, 1914, that, began, flight, training, captain, harry, cobby, centre, lieutenant, . The Australian Flying Corps AFC was the branch of the Australian Army responsible for operating aircraft during World War I and the forerunner of the Royal Australian Air Force RAAF The AFC was established in 1912 though it was not until 1914 that it began flight training Australian Flying CorpsCaptain Harry Cobby centre Lieutenant Roy King fourth from right and other officers of A Flight No 4 Squadron AFC with their Sopwith Camels on the Western Front June 1918Active1912 20CountryAustraliaBranchAustralian ArmyTypeAir forceRoleAerial warfarePart ofAustralian Imperial ForceEngagementsWorld War I Mesopotamian campaign Sinai and Palestine Campaign Western FrontCommandersNotablecommandersEdgar ReynoldsRichard WilliamsInsigniaUnit Colour Patch In 1911 at the Imperial Conference held in London it was decided that aviation should be developed by the national armed forces of the British Empire Australia became the first member of the Empire to follow this policy By the end of 1911 the Army was advertising for pilots and mechanics 1 During 1912 pilots and mechanics were appointed aircraft were ordered the site of a flying school was chosen and the first squadron was officially raised 2 On 7 March 1913 the government officially announced formation of the Central Flying School CFS and an Australian Aviation Corps although that name was never widely used AFC units were formed for service overseas with the Australian Imperial Force AIF during World War I They operated initially in the Mesopotamian Campaign The AFC later saw action in Palestine and France A training wing was established in the United Kingdom The corps remained part of the Australian Army until it was disbanded in 1919 after which it was temporarily replaced by the Australian Air Corps In 1921 that formation was re established as the independent RAAF Contents 1 Establishment 2 World War I 2 1 Operations 2 2 Organisation 3 Personnel 4 Equipment 5 Training 6 Post war legacy 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEstablishment editOn 30 December 1911 the Commonwealth Gazette announced that the Australian military would seek the appointment of two competent Mechanists sic and Aviators adding that the government would accept no liability for accidents 1 On 3 July 1912 the first flying machines were ordered two Royal Aircraft Factory B E 2 two seat tractor biplanes and two British built Deperdussin single seat tractor monoplanes Soon afterward two pilots were appointed Henry Petre 6 August and Eric Harrison 11 August 1 On 22 September 1912 the Minister of Defence Senator George Pearce officially approved formation of an Australian military air arm 2 Petre rejected a suggestion by Captain Oswald Watt that a Central Flying School be established in Canberra near the Royal Military College Duntroon because it was too high above sea level 1 Petre instead recommended several sites in Victoria and one of these was chosen at Point Cook Victoria on 22 October 1912 1 3 Two days later on 24 October 1912 the government authorised the raising of a single squadron 4 Upon establishment the squadron would be equipped with four aircraft and manned by four officers seven warrant officers and sergeants and 32 mechanics drawn from volunteers already serving in the Citizen Forces 4 On 7 March 1913 the government officially announced formation of the Central Flying School CFS and the Australian Aviation Corps 2 1 According to the Australian War Memorial the name Australian Flying Corps does not appear to have been promulgated officially but seems to have been derived from the term Australian Aviation Corps The first mention of an Australian Flying Corps appears in Military Orders of 1914 2 Flying training did not begin immediately it was not until 1914 that the first class of pilots were accepted 5 No 1 Flight of the Australian Flying Corps was raised in the 3rd Military District on 14 July 1914 6 In March 1914 a staff officer Major Edgar Reynolds was officially appointed General Staff Officer in charge of a branch covering intelligence censorship and aviation within the Army s Department of Military Operations 7 8 Following the outbreak of World War I and the expansion of the Army aviation became a separate branch commanded by Reynolds AFC operational units were attached and subordinate to Australian ground forces and or British ground and air commands Reynolds role was mostly administrative rather than one that involved operational command 9 Note 1 World War I editOperations edit nbsp Members of the Half Flight gather around a Royal Naval Air Service Short 827 See also Military history of Australia during World War I After the outbreak of war in 1914 the Australian Flying Corps sent one aircraft a B E 2 to assist in capturing the German colonies in northern New Guinea and the Solomon Islands German forces in the Pacific surrendered quickly before the aircraft was even unpacked from its shipping crate 5 The first operational flights did not occur until 27 May 1915 when the Mesopotamian Half Flight MHF under the command of Captain Henry Petre was called upon to assist the Indian Army in protecting British oil interests in what is now Iraq Operating a mixture of aircraft including Caudrons Maurice Farman Shorthorns Maurice Farman Longhorns and Martinsydes the MHF initially undertook unarmed reconnaissance operations before undertaking light bombing operations later in the year after being attached to No 30 Squadron RFC Losses were high and by December after flying supplies to the besieged garrison at Kut the MHF was disbanded 11 In January 1916 No 1 Squadron was raised at Point Cook in response to a British request for Australia to raise a full squadron to serve as part of the RFC 11 Reynolds served as the squadron s commanding officer prior to its embarkation for overseas service The squadron consisting of 12 aircraft organised into three flights arrived in Egypt in April and was subsequently assigned to the RFC s 5th Wing 12 In mid June it began operations against Ottoman Empire Turkish and Senussi Arab forces in Egypt and Palestine It would remain in the Middle East until the end of the war being reassigned to No 40 Wing in October 1917 13 undertaking reconnaissance ground liaison and close air support operations as the British Empire forces advanced into Syria initially flying a mixture of aircraft including B E 2cs Martinsyde G 100s B E 12as and R E 8s but later standardising on Bristol Fighters One of the squadron s pilots Lieutenant Frank McNamara received the only Victoria Cross awarded to an Australian airman during the war receiving the award for rescuing a fellow pilot who had been downed behind Turkish lines in early 1917 14 15 No 1 Squadron was credited with the destruction of 29 enemy aircraft 16 Three other squadrons No 2 No 3 and No 4 were raised in 1917 in Egypt or Australia and were sent to France Arriving there between August and December these squadrons subsequently undertook operations under the operational command of British Royal Flying Corps RFC wings along the Western Front 17 No 2 Squadron under the command of Major Oswald Watt who had previously served in the French Foreign Legion was the first AFC unit to see action in Europe Flying DH 5 fighters the squadron made its debut around St Quentin fighting a short action with a German patrol and suffering the loss of one aircraft forced down The following month the squadron took part in the Battle of Cambrai flying on combat air patrols and bombing and strafing missions in support of the British Third Army suffering heavy losses in dangerous low level attacks that later received high praise from General Hugh Trenchard commander of the RFC 18 The squadron s DH 5s were replaced with superior S E 5a fighters in December 1917 with which the squadron resumed operations shortly afterwards 19 Operating R E 8 reconnaissance aircraft No 3 Squadron entered the war during final phase of the Battle of Passchendaele also in November during which they were employed largely as artillery spotters 17 No 4 Squadron entered the fighting last Equipped with Sopwith Camels the squadron was dispatched to a quiet sector around Lens initially and did not see combat until January 1918 20 nbsp R E 8s of No 3 Sqn AFC During the final Allied offensive that eventually brought an end to the war the Hundred Days Offensive the AFC squadrons flew reconnaissance and observation missions around Amiens in August as well as launching raids around Ypres Arras and Lille Operations continued until the end of the war some of the fiercest air to air fighting occurring on 29 October when 15 Sopwith Snipes from No 4 Squadron fought an engagement with a group of Fokkers that outnumbered them four to one In the ensuing fighting the Australians shot down 10 German aircraft for the loss of just one of their own 17 During their time along the Western Front the two fighter squadrons No 2 and 4 accounted for 384 German aircraft No 4 taking credit for 199 and No 2 for 185 21 The squadron were also credited with 33 enemy balloons destroyed or driven down 16 No 3 Squadron operating in the corps reconnaissance role accounted for another 51 aircraft 16 22 Organisation edit By the end of the war four squadrons had seen active service operating alongside and under British Royal Flying Corps and in 1918 the Royal Air Force command For administrative reasons and to avoid confusion with similarly numbered RFC units at one stage each AFC squadron was allocated an RFC number the Australians themselves never used these numbers and in the end to avoid further confusion the original AFC numbers were reinstated The four operational squadrons of the AFC were 23 Operational squadrons of the AFC Australian designation British designation Established No 1 Squadron AFC No 67 Australian Squadron RFC 1 January 1916 No 2 Squadron AFC No 68 Australian Squadron RFC 20 September 1916 No 3 Squadron AFC No 69 Australian Squadron RFC 19 September 1916 No 4 Squadron AFC No 71 Australian Squadron RFC 16 October 1916 In the Middle East No 1 Squadron was initially assigned to No 5 Wing after being formed but was later transferred to No 40 Wing in late 1917 remaining as part of that formation until the end of the war 24 In Europe No 2 Squadron formed part of No 51 Wing 25 but in 1918 it was transferred to No 80 Wing joining No 4 Squadron which had been transferred from No 11 Wing 26 No 3 Squadron trained as part of No 23 Wing until it was committed to the Western Front in August 1917 when it became a corps squadron tasked with supporting the British XIII and Canadian Corps 27 As well as the operational squadrons a training wing was established in the United Kingdom Designated as the 1st Training Wing it was made up of four squadrons The four training squadrons of the AFC were 15 28 Training squadrons of the AFC Australian designation British designation Established No 5 Training Squadron AFC No 29 Australian Squadron RFC 1 September 1917 No 6 Training Squadron AFC No 30 Australian Squadron RFC 15 June 1917 No 7 Training Squadron AFC No 32 Australian Squadron RFC 24 October 1917 No 8 Training Squadron AFC No 33 Australian Squadron RFC 25 October 1917 As the war progressed there were plans to increase the AFC s number of operational squadrons from four to fifteen by 1921 but the war came to an end before these could be raised 29 Personnel edit nbsp Serny France November 1918 A score board recording the claims for enemy aircraft destroyed by No 80 Wing RAF from July November 1918 including Nos 2 and 4 Squadron AFC The corps remained small throughout the war and opportunities to serve in its ranks were limited A total of 880 officers and 2 840 other ranks served in the AFC Note 2 of whom only 410 served as pilots and 153 served as observers 31 A further 200 men served as aircrew in the British flying services the RFC or the Royal Naval Air Service RNAS including men such as Charles Kingsford Smith and Bert Hinkler both of whom would have a significant impact upon aviation in Australia after the war 32 30 Casualties included 175 dead 111 wounded 6 gassed and 40 captured 33 The majority of these casualties were suffered on the Western Front where 78 Australians were killed 68 were wounded and 33 became prisoners of war 21 This represented a casualty rate of 44 percent which was only marginally lower than most Australian infantry battalions that fought in the trenches who averaged a casualty rate of around 50 percent 34 Molkentin attributes the high loss rate in part to the policy of not issuing pilots with parachutes as well as the fact that the bulk of patrols were conducted over enemy lines both of which were in keeping with British policy 35 Pilots from the AFC s four operational squadrons claimed 527 enemy aircraft destroyed or driven down 34 and the corps produced 57 flying aces 36 The highest scoring AFC pilot was Harry Cobby who was credited with 29 victories Other leading aces included Roy King 26 Edgar McCloughry 21 Francis Smith 16 and Roy Phillipps 15 37 Robert Little and Roderic Stan Dallas the highest scoring Australian aces of the war credited with 47 and 39 victories respectively served with the RNAS 32 Other Australian aces who served in British units included Jerry Pentland 23 Richard Minifie 21 Edgar Johnston 20 Andrew Cowper 19 Cedric Howell 19 Fred Holliday 17 and Allan Hepburn 16 37 Several officers gained appointment in senior command roles two commanding wings and nine commanding squadrons One member of the AFC was awarded the Victoria Cross and another 40 received the Distinguished Flying Cross including two who received the awarded three times 36 Equipment editSee also Historical weaponry of the Australian Army The Australian Flying Corps operated a range of aircraft types These types were mainly of British origin although French aircraft were also obtained Over this period aircraft technology progressed rapidly and designs included relatively fragile and rudimentary types to more advanced single engined biplanes as well as one twin engined bomber 38 The roles performed by these aircraft evolved during the war and included reconnaissance observation for artillery aerial bombing and ground attack patrolling and the resupply of ground troops on the battlefield by airdrop 36 Aircraft flown by the Australian Flying Corps 39 Aircraft Origin Role s Airco DH 5 United Kingdom fighter Airco DH 6 United Kingdom trainer Armstrong Whitworth F K 3 United Kingdom trainer Avro 504 United Kingdom trainer Bleriot XI France trainer Bristol Boxkite United Kingdom trainer Bristol F 2 Fighter United Kingdom fighter reconnaissance Bristol Scout United Kingdom reconnaissance fighter trainer Caudron G 3 France trainer Curtiss JN Jenny United States trainer Deperdussin France trainer Grahame White Type XV Boxkite United Kingdom trainer Handley Page 0 400 United Kingdom bomber Martinsyde S 1 United Kingdom reconnaissance Martinsyde G 100 G 101 United Kingdom single seat reconnaissance bomber Maurice Farman MF 7 Longhorn France trainer Maurice Farman MF 11 Shorthorn France trainer Maurice Farman Seaplane Landplane France trainer Royal Aircraft Factory B E 2 United Kingdom reconnaissance Royal Aircraft Factory B E 12 United Kingdom single seat reconnaissance bomber Royal Aircraft Factory F E 2 United Kingdom fighter reconnaissance Royal Aircraft Factory R E 8 United Kingdom reconnaissance Royal Aircraft Factory S E 5a United Kingdom fighter Sopwith 1 Strutter United Kingdom trainer obsolete fighter reconnaissance Sopwith Buffalo United Kingdom ground attack test only Sopwith Camel United Kingdom fighter Sopwith Pup United Kingdom trainer obsolete fighter Sopwith Snipe United Kingdom fighterTraining editThe AFC conducted both pilot and mechanic training in Australia at the Central Flying School which was established at Point Cook but this was limited in duration due to embarkation schedules 40 which meant that further training was required overseas before aircrew were posted to operational squadrons 41 The first course began on 17 August 1914 and lasted three months two instructors Henry Petre and Eric Harrison who had been recruited from the United Kingdom in 1912 to establish the corps 42 trained the first batch of Australian aircrew 43 In the end a total of eight flying training courses were completed at the Central Flying School during the war the final course commencing in June 1917 The first six courses consisted only of officers but the last two both conducted in early and mid 1917 included non commissioned officers These courses ranged in size from four on the first course to eight on the next three 16 on the fifth 24 on the sixth 31 on the seventh and 17 on the last one There was limited wastage on the early courses all trainees successfully completing the first six courses but final two courses run in 1917 suffered heavily from limited resources and bad weather resulting in less than half the students graduating 40 To complement the aviators trained by the CFS the New South Wales government established its own aviation school at Clarendon at what later became RAAF Base Richmond which trained pilots observers and mechanics A total of 50 pilots graduated from the school 41 the majority of its graduates went on to serve in the British flying services although some served in the AFC 44 In early 1917 the AFC began training pilots observers and mechanics in the United Kingdom 45 Aircrew were selected from volunteers from other arms such as the infantry light horse engineers or artillery many of whom had previously served at the front 46 who reverted to the rank of cadet and undertook a six week foundation course at the two Schools of Military Aeronautics in Reading or Oxford After this those who passed graduated to flight training at one of the four AFC training squadrons Nos 5 6 7 and 8 which were based at Minchinhampton and Leighterton in Gloucestershire 28 45 Flight training in the UK consisted of a total of three hours dual instruction followed by up to a further 20 hours solo flying although some pilots including the AFC s highest scoring ace Harry Cobby received less 44 after which a pilot had to prove his ability to undertake aerial bombing photography formation flying signalling dog fighting and artillery observation 47 Elementary training was undertaken on types such as Shorthorns Avro 504s and Pups followed by operational training on Scouts Camels and RE8s 28 Upon completion pilots received their commission and their wings and were allocated to the different squadrons based on their aptitude during training the best were usually sent to scout squadrons and the remainder to two seaters 45 48 Initially the AFC raised its ground staff from volunteer soldiers and civilians who had previous experience or who were trade trained and when the first AFC squadron was formed these personnel were provided with very limited training that was focused mainly upon basic military skills 44 As the war progressed a comprehensive training program was established in which mechanics were trained in nine different trades welders blacksmiths coppersmiths engine fitters general fitters riggers electricians magneto repairers and machinists Training was delivered by eight technical sections at Halton Camp 49 The length of training within each section varied but was generally between eight and 12 weeks the more complex trades such as engine fitter required trainees to undertake multiple training courses across several sections General fitters had the longest training requirements receiving 32 weeks of instruction 50 Post war legacy editFollowing the armistice that came into effect on 11 November 1918 the AIF returned to Australia in stages some elements performing reconstruction and military occupation duties in Europe No 4 Squadron AFC took part in the occupation of Germany the only Australian unit to do so it operated as part of the British Army of Occupation around Cologne between December 1918 and March 1919 before transferring its aircraft to the British and returning to Australia along with the other three squadrons 17 Reynolds was succeeded by Colonel Richard Williams in 1919 51 Most units of the AFC were disbanded during 1919 The AFC was succeeded by the Australian Air Corps which was itself succeeded by the Royal Australian Air Force RAAF in 1921 17 Many former members of the AFC such as Cobby McNamara Williams Lawrence Wackett and Henry Wrigley went on to play founding roles in the fledgling RAAF 44 52 Others such as John Wright who served with No 4 Squadron on the Western Front before commanding the 2 15th Field Regiment in Malaya during the fighting against the Japanese in World War II returned to a ground role 52 53 Notes edit nbsp Military history of Australia portal Footnotes Appointed to command No 1 Squadron AFC in 1916 Reynolds later took up the position of Staff Officer for Aviation at AIF Headquarters in London 10 These figures differ from those provided by Grey 460 officers and 2 234 other ranks 30 Citations a b c d e f Australian National Aviation Museum a b c d Australian Flying Corps Australian Military Aviation and World War One a b Sydney Morning Herald 1912 p 11 a b Dennis et al 1995 p 67 Isaacs 1971 p 11 Weekly Times 1914 p 26 The West Australian 1914 p 8 Molkentin 2014 pp 26 32 Cutlack 1941 pp 32 amp 35 a b Dennis et al 1995 p 68 Odgers 1994 p 112 Molkentin 2010 p 109 No 1 Squadron AFC a b Dennis et al 1995 pp 68 69 a b c Isaacs 1971 p 158 a b c d e Dennis et al 1995 p 69 Odgers 1994 p 128 No 2 Squadron AFC No 4 Squadron AFC a b Odgers 1994 p 130 Eather 1995 p 12 Molkentin 2010 p xi Molkentin 2010 p 57 and 109 Molkentin 2010 p 259 Molkentin 2010 p 278 Molkentin 2010 pp 198 199 a b c Stephens 2001 p 17 Stone 2014 p 113 a b Grey 2008 p 118 Molkentin 2010 p 336 a b Odgers 1994 p 127 Beaumont 2001 p 214 a b Molkentin 2010 p 337 Molkentin 2010 pp 44 45 a b c Molkentin 2010 p ix a b Newton 1996 pp 60 61 Isaacs 1971 pp 160 165 Isaacs 1971 pp 160 164 a b Cutlack 1941 p 426 a b Molkentin 2010 p 179 Stephens 2001 p 3 Cutlack 1941 p 1 a b c d Stephens 2001 p 9 a b c Cutlack 1941 p 430 Cutlack 1941 p xxviii Cutlack 1941 pp 430 431 Molkentin 2010 p 182 Cutlack 1941 pp 431 432 Cutlack 1941 pp 432 433 Garrisson 1990 a b Cutlack 1941 p 239 Molkentin 2010 pp 337 238 References editBooks Beaumont Joan 2001 Australian Defence Sources and Statistics Australian Centenary History of Defence Vol 6 South Melbourne Victoria Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19554 118 2 Cutlack Frederic Morley 1941 The Australian Flying Corps in the Western and Eastern Theatres of War 1914 1918 Official History of Australia in the War of 1914 1918 Vol VIII 11th ed Canberra Australian War Memorial OCLC 220900299 Dennis Peter et al 1995 The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History 1st ed Melbourne Victoria Oxford University Press Australia amp New Zealand ISBN 0 19 553227 9 Eather Steve 1995 Flying Squadrons of the Australian Defence Force Weston Creek Australian Capital Territory Aerospace Publications ISBN 1 875671 15 3 Garrisson A D 1990 Williams Sir Richard Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 12 Carlton Victoria Melbourne University Press ISBN 9780522842364 Grey Jeffrey 2008 A Military History of Australia 3rd ed Port Melbourne Victoria Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521697910 Isaacs Keith 1971 Military Aircraft of Australia 1909 1918 Canberra Australian War Memorial ISBN 9780642993748 Molkentin Michael 2010 Fire in the Sky The Australian Flying Corps in the First World War Sydney New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 1742370729 Molkentin Michael 2014 Australia and the War in the Air Centenary History of Australia and the Great War Vol I South Melbourne Victoria Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195576795 Newton Dennis 1996 Australian Air Aces Australian Fighter Pilots in Combat Fyshwick Australian Capital Territory Aerospace Publications ISBN 1 875671 25 0 Odgers George 1994 Diggers The Australian Army Navy and Air Force in Eleven Wars Vol 1 From 1860 to 5 June 1944 Sydney Lansdowne ISBN 978 1 86302 385 6 Stephens Alan 2001 The Royal Australian Air Force The Australian Centenary History of Defence Vol 2 South Melbourne Victoria Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 554115 4 Stone Barry 2014 The Desert Anzacs The Forgotten Conflicts in the Deserts of Mesopotamia North Africa and Palestine Richmond Victoria Hardie Grant Books ISBN 978 1742707549 Websites and newspapers 1 Squadron AFC First World War 1914 1918 units Australian War Memorial Archived from the original on 15 May 2013 Retrieved 10 February 2013 2 Squadron AFC First World War 1914 1918 units Australian War Memorial Archived from the original on 15 May 2013 Retrieved 10 February 2013 4 Squadron AFC First World War 1914 1918 units Australian War Memorial Archived from the original on 15 May 2013 Retrieved 11 February 2013 Australian Flying Corps Australian War Memorial n d Archived from the original on 26 September 2013 Retrieved 24 August 2013 Australian Military Aviation and World War One Royal Australian Air Force Archived from the original on 23 June 2010 Retrieved 26 December 2011 Early Military Aviation Australian National Aviation Museum 2000 2003 Archived from the original on 27 January 2014 Retrieved 24 August 2013 Flying Corps New Citizen Unit The Sydney Morning Herald 24 October 1912 p 11 Retrieved 2 June 2013 News in Brief Weekly Times Melbourne 7 March 1914 p 26 Retrieved 25 August 2013 Eastern Australia Items By Mail The West Australian 16 March 1914 p 8 Retrieved 25 August 2013 Further reading editEather Steve 1995 Flying Squadrons of the Australian Defence Force Weston Creek Australian Capital Territory Aerospace Publications ISBN 1 875671 15 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Australian Flying Corps Warfare in a New Dimension The Australian Flying Corps in the First World War Australian Flying Corps short documentary State Library of Queensland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Australian Flying Corps amp oldid 1205757620, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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