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Cecil Arthur Lewis

Cecil Arthur Lewis MC (29 March 1898 – 27 January 1997) was a British fighter ace who flew with No. 56 Squadron RAF in the First World War, and was credited with destroying eight enemy aircraft. He went on to be a founding executive of the British Broadcasting Company and to enjoy a long career as a writer, notably of the aviation classic Sagittarius Rising, some scenes from which were represented in the film Aces High.[1][better source needed]

Squadron Leader

Cecil Arthur Lewis

Cecil Arthur Lewis c. 1916
Born(1898-03-29)29 March 1898
Birkenhead, United Kingdom
Died27 January 1997(1997-01-27) (aged 98)
London, United Kingdom
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service/branch British Army Royal Air Force
Years of service1915–1919
1939–1945
Rank Squadron Leader
Unit
Battles/warsWorld War I

World War II

Awards Military Cross
Spouse(s)Evdekia Dmitrievna Horvath
Children2
Other workFlight instructor
A founding executive of the British Broadcasting Company
Journalist for the Daily Mail
Author

Biography edit

Early life edit

Lewis was born on 29 March 1898 at 11, Radnor Place, Birkenhead, then in Cheshire, the only child of Edward Williams Lewis, a Congregational minister, by his marriage to Alice Rigby.[2] His parents had been married at Runcorn in 1896.[3] After a short time at Dulwich College,[2] the young Lewis was educated at University College School and Oundle,[4][5] leaving school at the age of seventeen.[2]

First World War edit

Lewis joined the Royal Flying Corps in 1915 after lying about his age, and learned to fly at Brooklands in Surrey.[6] In 1916, he flew the Morane Parasol on operations with No. 3 Squadron and was awarded the Military Cross for his actions during the Battle of the Somme.[7][8] Flying over the battlefield on the First day on the Somme (1 July 1916) to report on British troop movements, Lewis witnessed the blowing of the mines at La Boiselle. He later described the early morning scene in his book Sagittarius Rising.

We were to watch the opening of the attack, coordinate the infantry flare (the job we have been rehearsing for months) and stay over the lines for two and a half hours.

It had been arranged that continuous overlapping patrols would fly throughout the day. Lewis's patrol was ordered "to keep clear of La Boiselle" because of the mines that were to be blown. As he watched from above the village of Thiepval, almost two miles from where the mines exploded, Lewis saw a remarkable sight,

At Boiselle the earth heaved and flashed, a tremendous and magnificent column rose up into the sky. There was an ear-spitting roar, drowning all the guns flinging the machine sideways in the repercussing air. The earthly column rose, higher and higher to almost four thousand feet.

Lewis's aircraft was hit by lumps of mud thrown out by the explosion.[9]

During May and June 1917, when he was flying the S.E.5a with the elite 56 Squadron, Lewis was credited with eight victories.[10] Back in England, Lewis served with 44 and 61 Squadrons on Home Defence before returning to France in late 1918 with 152 (Night-Fighter) Squadron, flying the Sopwith Camel, as a flight commander with the rank of captain.[11]
A forty-minute interview with Lewis, describing his experiences as a First World War pilot, was recorded by the BBC in 1963–64 and later made available online as part of the centenary commemorations of the war.[12] In it, Lewis describes how on his first flight he had the most unusual experience of seeing 9-inch howitzer shells turning over in flight at 8,000 feet before descending to the target. He also described his most frightening experience of the war: a reconnaissance flight at 1,000 feet during the initial bombardment before the battle of the Somme. This entailed flying along the line of fire of shells. Close passing shells caused severe turbulence to his aircraft and a number of his friends were killed.[12]

Flying instructor, journalist, broadcaster edit

After the war, Lewis was hired by the Vickers company to teach Chinese pilots to fly and to establish a Peking–Shanghai air service using Vickers Commercials, the civilian version of the Vickers Vimy bomber. In Peking in 1921 Lewis married Evdekia Dmitrievna Horvath, known as Doushka (1902–2005), the daughter of a Russian general.[13] He returned to England when the air service project was abandoned by Vickers after a couple of years. With his first wife, he had one son and one daughter.[4]

Through a friend, the Russian singer Vladimir Rosing, Lewis met the artist Charles Ricketts, who became his artistic mentor and sponsor. After Ricketts's death in 1931, Lewis edited his letters and journals for publication. Some of Ricketts' ashes were buried in the park of Lewis's villa at Arolo [it] on Lake Maggiore,[14] which Ricketts had given him £300 to buy.[5]

In 1922 Lewis was one of the five young founding executives of the British Broadcasting Company, precursor of the British Broadcasting Corporation, where he was a writer, producer and director.[15] The other four were John Reith, Arthur Burrows, Stanton Jefferies and Peter Eckersley. In 1927 he participated in the BBC's first sports broadcasts, assisting commentator Teddy Wakelam. In 1931, he co-wrote and directed a short film adaptation of the George Bernard Shaw play How He Lied to Her Husband. In late 1936 – early 1937 he was a producer and presenter for the infant BBC Television Service at Alexandra Palace.[16] At the 1938 Academy Awards ceremony, Lewis, Shaw, Ian Dalrymple and W. P. Lipscomb were awarded Oscars for their screen adaptation of Pygmalion.[17]

Second World War edit

Lewis joined the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve in early 1939 as a pilot officer and served in the Mediterranean and Middle East theatre of World War II, rising to the rank of squadron leader.[18][19] Bernard Shaw wrote of Lewis: "This prince of pilots has had a charmed life in every sense of the word. He is a thinker, a master of words and a bit of a poet.".[20]

Later life edit

During the late 1940s Lewis became enamoured with the teachings of the Greek-Armenian mystic Gurdjieff. In 1947 he flew a Miles Gemini to South Africa, where he spent the next three years on a farm he established, but the farm was not a success, and in 1950 he returned to England. He joined the Daily Mail in 1956 as a journalist, formally retiring in 1966.[5]

After his last job, Lewis moved to Corfu, where he spent the rest of his life, continuing to write until well into his nineties. He became the last surviving British flying ace of the Great War.

Private life edit

In Peking in 1921 Lewis married Evdekia Dmitrievna Horvath, known as Doushka (1902–2005), the eighteen-year-old daughter of Dmitri Horvath, an Imperial Russian general, and brought her home to England the next year. On arrival in London, Doushka spoke little English, and the couple began by speaking to each other in French. They had a son, Ivor, in 1923, and a daughter, Celia, in 1924, and settled in Chelsea while Lewis was working for the BBC.[13][21] Through Shaw, who became Lewis's mentor, the Lewises met T. E. Lawrence, Noël Coward, Paul Robeson, Sybil Thorndike, and H. G. Wells. The marriage struggled, as, according to Doushka, Lewis was "a compulsive philanderer". On the strength of the success of Sagittarius Rising (1936), Lewis moved to Hollywood but Doushka returned to Peking, to stay with her mother.[13] After Hollywood, Lewis went to Tahiti to find a simpler life, which he recorded in The Trumpet is Mine (1938), then to Italy to write Challenge of the Night (1938). In 1939 he came back to England to join the RAF as a flying instructor.[5] Doushka stayed in Peking for almost three years. Lewis met her on her return to England but there was no reconciliation. They were divorced in 1940. Doushka married Cedric Williams and they had a daughter but later divorced.[13]

In 1942, at Holborn, London, Lewis married Olga H. Burnett but they had no children and were divorced in 1950.[22] In 1960, he married Frances Lowe, known as Fanny.[4] In 1970, they bought a 26-foot boat and together sailed it to Corfu, a story told in Turn Right for Corfu (1972). The couple settled there until Lewis's death in 1997.[5] In 1996, when Lewis and Doushka were in their nineties, he published his last book, So Long Ago, So Far Away.[13]

Bibliography edit

Works by Lewis edit

  • Broadcasting From Within (1924)
  • The Unknown Warrior (1928) (a translation of French playwright Paul Raynal's 1924 play Le tombeau sous l'arc de Triomphe)
  • Sagittarius Rising (1936) ISBN 1-85367-143-6
  • The Trumpet Is Mine (1938)
  • Challenge to the Night (1939)
  • Pathfinders (1944)
  • Yesterday's Evening (1946)
  • Farewell to Wings (1964)
  • Turn Right For Corfu (1972)
  • Never Look Back; an Attempt at Autobiography (1974)
  • Gemini to Joburg (1984)
  • Five Conversations about Gurdjieff (1984)
  • Sagittarius Surviving (1991)
  • All My Yesterdays (1993)
  • A Wish to Be: A Voyage of Self-Discovery (1994)
  • So Long Ago, So Far Away: Memory of Old Peking (1996)

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Cecil Arthur Lewis". The Aerodrome. 2015. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  2. ^ a b c James Owen, "Lewis, Cecil Arthur (1898–1997), airman and radio and television broadcaster", in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004)
  3. ^ Marriages Dec 1896: "RIGBY, Alice, & LEWIS, Edward Williams" in Register of Marrisges for Runcorn Registration District, vol. 8a (1896), p. 392
  4. ^ a b c "Lewis, Cecil Arthur", in Who Was Who 1996–2000 (London: A. & C. Black, 2001, ISBN 0-7136-5439-2), p. 347
  5. ^ a b c d e T. H. Bridgewater, Obituary: Cecil Lewis in The Independent dated 29 January 1997, accessed 6 March 2019
  6. ^ Lewis, Cecil (1936). Sagittarius Rising. p. 10. ... How old are you?' 'Almost eighteen, sir.' (Liar! You were seventeen last month.) ...
  7. ^ "No. 29824". The London Gazette (Supplement). 14 November 1916. p. 11058. "For conspicuous skill and gallantry. He has done fine work in photography, with artillery and on contact patrols. On one occasion he came down very low and attacked a column of horsed limbers, causing casualties and scattering the limbers."
  8. ^ Shores, Christopher F.; Franks, Norman & Guest, Russell F. (1990). Above the Trenches: a Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915–1920. London, UK: Grub Street. ISBN 978-0-948817-19-9.
  9. ^ Martin Gilbert, Somme: The Heroism and Horror of War, London (John Murray) 2007, p. 54
  10. ^ Shores, Christopher F.; Franks, Norman & Guest, Russell F. (1990). Above the Trenches: a Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915–1920. London, UK: Grub Street. ISBN 978-0-948817-19-9.
  11. ^ "No. 30286". The London Gazette (Supplement). 14 September 1917. p. 9540.
  12. ^ a b "The Great War interviews". BBC IPlayer. 10 March 2014. Retrieved 15 September 2015.
  13. ^ a b c d e "Obituary: Doushka Williams". The Independent. London. 4 August 2005. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  14. ^ "213. A Summer Miscellany: La Peste". Charles Ricketts & Charles Shannon. Retrieved 24 March 2018.
  15. ^ . BBC Timeline. 2015. Archived from the original on 11 May 2015. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  16. ^ "Cecil Lewis". BBC Genome Project: Radio Times 1923-2009. 2015. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  17. ^ "The 11th Academy Awards (1938)". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. 2015. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  18. ^ "No. 34603". The London Gazette. 28 February 1939. p. 1396.
  19. ^ "No. 36930". The London Gazette (Supplement). 6 February 1945. p. 814.
  20. ^ "The Week-end Review". New Statesman and Nation. 12 (284). 1 August 1936.
  21. ^ Births June Quarter 1923: "Lewis Ivor B. V. H.", mother's maiden name Harvath, in Register of Births for Hampstead Registration district, vol. 1a (1923) p. 919; Births June Quarter 1924: "Lewis, Celia", mother's maiden name Horvath, in Register of Births for St George's Hanover Square Registration district, vol. 1a (1924), p. 624
  22. ^ Marriages Dec 1942: "Burnett, Olga H and Lewis, Cecil A" in Register of Marriages for Holburn Registration District, vol 1b (1942), p. 790

External links edit

  • 1964 BBC Interview with Cecil Lewis
  • Cecil Arthur Lewis at IMDb
  • Bridgewater, T. H. (29 January 1997). "Obituary: Cecil Lewis". The Independent. London. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  • "Cecil Lewis, 98, Pilot in Wartime, Writer And Oscar Winner". The New York Times. New York. 2 February 1997. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  • "Desert Island Discs, Cecil Lewis". BBC Radio 4. 17 May 1991.

cecil, arthur, lewis, march, 1898, january, 1997, british, fighter, flew, with, squadron, first, world, credited, with, destroying, eight, enemy, aircraft, went, founding, executive, british, broadcasting, company, enjoy, long, career, writer, notably, aviatio. Cecil Arthur Lewis MC 29 March 1898 27 January 1997 was a British fighter ace who flew with No 56 Squadron RAF in the First World War and was credited with destroying eight enemy aircraft He went on to be a founding executive of the British Broadcasting Company and to enjoy a long career as a writer notably of the aviation classic Sagittarius Rising some scenes from which were represented in the film Aces High 1 better source needed Squadron LeaderCecil Arthur LewisMCCecil Arthur Lewis c 1916Born 1898 03 29 29 March 1898Birkenhead United KingdomDied27 January 1997 1997 01 27 aged 98 London United KingdomAllegiance United KingdomService wbr branch British Army Royal Flying Corps Royal Air ForceYears of service1915 19191939 1945RankSquadron LeaderUnitNo 3 Squadron No 9 Squadron No 23 Squadron No 44 Squadron No 56 Squadron No 61 Squadron No 152 SquadronBattles warsWorld War I Western Front Battle of the Somme World War II Mediterranean and Middle Eastern TheatreAwardsMilitary CrossSpouse s Evdekia Dmitrievna HorvathChildren2Other workFlight instructorA founding executive of the British Broadcasting CompanyJournalist for the Daily MailAuthor Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 First World War 1 3 Flying instructor journalist broadcaster 1 4 Second World War 1 5 Later life 2 Private life 3 Bibliography 3 1 Works by Lewis 4 Notes 5 External linksBiography editEarly life edit Lewis was born on 29 March 1898 at 11 Radnor Place Birkenhead then in Cheshire the only child of Edward Williams Lewis a Congregational minister by his marriage to Alice Rigby 2 His parents had been married at Runcorn in 1896 3 After a short time at Dulwich College 2 the young Lewis was educated at University College School and Oundle 4 5 leaving school at the age of seventeen 2 First World War edit Lewis joined the Royal Flying Corps in 1915 after lying about his age and learned to fly at Brooklands in Surrey 6 In 1916 he flew the Morane Parasol on operations with No 3 Squadron and was awarded the Military Cross for his actions during the Battle of the Somme 7 8 Flying over the battlefield on the First day on the Somme 1 July 1916 to report on British troop movements Lewis witnessed the blowing of the mines at La Boiselle He later described the early morning scene in his book Sagittarius Rising We were to watch the opening of the attack coordinate the infantry flare the job we have been rehearsing for months and stay over the lines for two and a half hours It had been arranged that continuous overlapping patrols would fly throughout the day Lewis s patrol was ordered to keep clear of La Boiselle because of the mines that were to be blown As he watched from above the village of Thiepval almost two miles from where the mines exploded Lewis saw a remarkable sight At Boiselle the earth heaved and flashed a tremendous and magnificent column rose up into the sky There was an ear spitting roar drowning all the guns flinging the machine sideways in the repercussing air The earthly column rose higher and higher to almost four thousand feet Lewis s aircraft was hit by lumps of mud thrown out by the explosion 9 During May and June 1917 when he was flying the S E 5a with the elite 56 Squadron Lewis was credited with eight victories 10 Back in England Lewis served with 44 and 61 Squadrons on Home Defence before returning to France in late 1918 with 152 Night Fighter Squadron flying the Sopwith Camel as a flight commander with the rank of captain 11 A forty minute interview with Lewis describing his experiences as a First World War pilot was recorded by the BBC in 1963 64 and later made available online as part of the centenary commemorations of the war 12 In it Lewis describes how on his first flight he had the most unusual experience of seeing 9 inch howitzer shells turning over in flight at 8 000 feet before descending to the target He also described his most frightening experience of the war a reconnaissance flight at 1 000 feet during the initial bombardment before the battle of the Somme This entailed flying along the line of fire of shells Close passing shells caused severe turbulence to his aircraft and a number of his friends were killed 12 Flying instructor journalist broadcaster edit After the war Lewis was hired by the Vickers company to teach Chinese pilots to fly and to establish a Peking Shanghai air service using Vickers Commercials the civilian version of the Vickers Vimy bomber In Peking in 1921 Lewis married Evdekia Dmitrievna Horvath known as Doushka 1902 2005 the daughter of a Russian general 13 He returned to England when the air service project was abandoned by Vickers after a couple of years With his first wife he had one son and one daughter 4 Through a friend the Russian singer Vladimir Rosing Lewis met the artist Charles Ricketts who became his artistic mentor and sponsor After Ricketts s death in 1931 Lewis edited his letters and journals for publication Some of Ricketts ashes were buried in the park of Lewis s villa at Arolo it on Lake Maggiore 14 which Ricketts had given him 300 to buy 5 In 1922 Lewis was one of the five young founding executives of the British Broadcasting Company precursor of the British Broadcasting Corporation where he was a writer producer and director 15 The other four were John Reith Arthur Burrows Stanton Jefferies and Peter Eckersley In 1927 he participated in the BBC s first sports broadcasts assisting commentator Teddy Wakelam In 1931 he co wrote and directed a short film adaptation of the George Bernard Shaw play How He Lied to Her Husband In late 1936 early 1937 he was a producer and presenter for the infant BBC Television Service at Alexandra Palace 16 At the 1938 Academy Awards ceremony Lewis Shaw Ian Dalrymple and W P Lipscomb were awarded Oscars for their screen adaptation of Pygmalion 17 Second World War edit Lewis joined the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve in early 1939 as a pilot officer and served in the Mediterranean and Middle East theatre of World War II rising to the rank of squadron leader 18 19 Bernard Shaw wrote of Lewis This prince of pilots has had a charmed life in every sense of the word He is a thinker a master of words and a bit of a poet 20 Later life edit During the late 1940s Lewis became enamoured with the teachings of the Greek Armenian mystic Gurdjieff In 1947 he flew a Miles Gemini to South Africa where he spent the next three years on a farm he established but the farm was not a success and in 1950 he returned to England He joined the Daily Mail in 1956 as a journalist formally retiring in 1966 5 After his last job Lewis moved to Corfu where he spent the rest of his life continuing to write until well into his nineties He became the last surviving British flying ace of the Great War Private life editIn Peking in 1921 Lewis married Evdekia Dmitrievna Horvath known as Doushka 1902 2005 the eighteen year old daughter of Dmitri Horvath an Imperial Russian general and brought her home to England the next year On arrival in London Doushka spoke little English and the couple began by speaking to each other in French They had a son Ivor in 1923 and a daughter Celia in 1924 and settled in Chelsea while Lewis was working for the BBC 13 21 Through Shaw who became Lewis s mentor the Lewises met T E Lawrence Noel Coward Paul Robeson Sybil Thorndike and H G Wells The marriage struggled as according to Doushka Lewis was a compulsive philanderer On the strength of the success of Sagittarius Rising 1936 Lewis moved to Hollywood but Doushka returned to Peking to stay with her mother 13 After Hollywood Lewis went to Tahiti to find a simpler life which he recorded in The Trumpet is Mine 1938 then to Italy to write Challenge of the Night 1938 In 1939 he came back to England to join the RAF as a flying instructor 5 Doushka stayed in Peking for almost three years Lewis met her on her return to England but there was no reconciliation They were divorced in 1940 Doushka married Cedric Williams and they had a daughter but later divorced 13 In 1942 at Holborn London Lewis married Olga H Burnett but they had no children and were divorced in 1950 22 In 1960 he married Frances Lowe known as Fanny 4 In 1970 they bought a 26 foot boat and together sailed it to Corfu a story told in Turn Right for Corfu 1972 The couple settled there until Lewis s death in 1997 5 In 1996 when Lewis and Doushka were in their nineties he published his last book So Long Ago So Far Away 13 Bibliography editWorks by Lewis edit Broadcasting From Within 1924 The Unknown Warrior 1928 a translation of French playwright Paul Raynal s 1924 play Le tombeau sous l arc de Triomphe Sagittarius Rising 1936 ISBN 1 85367 143 6 The Trumpet Is Mine 1938 Challenge to the Night 1939 Pathfinders 1944 Yesterday s Evening 1946 Farewell to Wings 1964 Turn Right For Corfu 1972 Never Look Back an Attempt at Autobiography 1974 Gemini to Joburg 1984 Five Conversations about Gurdjieff 1984 Sagittarius Surviving 1991 All My Yesterdays 1993 A Wish to Be A Voyage of Self Discovery 1994 So Long Ago So Far Away Memory of Old Peking 1996 Notes edit Cecil Arthur Lewis The Aerodrome 2015 Retrieved 9 May 2015 a b c James Owen Lewis Cecil Arthur 1898 1997 airman and radio and television broadcaster in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 2004 Marriages Dec 1896 RIGBY Alice amp LEWIS Edward Williams in Register of Marrisges for Runcorn Registration District vol 8a 1896 p 392 a b c Lewis Cecil Arthur in Who Was Who 1996 2000 London A amp C Black 2001 ISBN 0 7136 5439 2 p 347 a b c d e T H Bridgewater Obituary Cecil Lewis in The Independent dated 29 January 1997 accessed 6 March 2019 Lewis Cecil 1936 Sagittarius Rising p 10 How old are you Almost eighteen sir Liar You were seventeen last month No 29824 The London Gazette Supplement 14 November 1916 p 11058 For conspicuous skill and gallantry He has done fine work in photography with artillery and on contact patrols On one occasion he came down very low and attacked a column of horsed limbers causing casualties and scattering the limbers Shores Christopher F Franks Norman amp Guest Russell F 1990 Above the Trenches a Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915 1920 London UK Grub Street ISBN 978 0 948817 19 9 Martin Gilbert Somme The Heroism and Horror of War London John Murray 2007 p 54 Shores Christopher F Franks Norman amp Guest Russell F 1990 Above the Trenches a Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915 1920 London UK Grub Street ISBN 978 0 948817 19 9 No 30286 The London Gazette Supplement 14 September 1917 p 9540 a b The Great War interviews BBC IPlayer 10 March 2014 Retrieved 15 September 2015 a b c d e Obituary Doushka Williams The Independent London 4 August 2005 Retrieved 9 May 2015 213 A Summer Miscellany La Peste Charles Ricketts amp Charles Shannon Retrieved 24 March 2018 British Broadcasting Company Ltd Formed BBC Timeline 2015 Archived from the original on 11 May 2015 Retrieved 9 May 2015 Cecil Lewis BBC Genome Project Radio Times 1923 2009 2015 Retrieved 9 May 2015 The 11th Academy Awards 1938 Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences 2015 Retrieved 9 May 2015 No 34603 The London Gazette 28 February 1939 p 1396 No 36930 The London Gazette Supplement 6 February 1945 p 814 The Week end Review New Statesman and Nation 12 284 1 August 1936 Births June Quarter 1923 Lewis Ivor B V H mother s maiden name Harvath in Register of Births for Hampstead Registration district vol 1a 1923 p 919 Births June Quarter 1924 Lewis Celia mother s maiden name Horvath in Register of Births for St George s Hanover Square Registration district vol 1a 1924 p 624 Marriages Dec 1942 Burnett Olga H and Lewis Cecil A in Register of Marriages for Holburn Registration District vol 1b 1942 p 790External links edit1964 BBC Interview with Cecil Lewis Cecil Arthur Lewis at IMDb Bridgewater T H 29 January 1997 Obituary Cecil Lewis The Independent London Retrieved 9 May 2015 Cecil Lewis 98 Pilot in Wartime Writer And Oscar Winner The New York Times New York 2 February 1997 Retrieved 9 May 2015 Desert Island Discs Cecil Lewis BBC Radio 4 17 May 1991 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cecil Arthur Lewis amp oldid 1216910259, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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