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Edward Whitehead Reid

Edward Douglas Whitehead Reid (22 June 1883 – 20 October 1930) was a British general practitioner and surgeon who pioneered the use of private aircraft after the First World War. He was commonly known as Dr E.D. Whitehead Reid but sometimes, particularly in military contexts, as Dr E.D.W. Reid.

Edward Douglas Whitehead Reid
Born(1883-06-22)22 June 1883
Died20 October 1930(1930-10-20) (aged 47)
Cause of deathFractured skull
NationalityBritish
Education
Known forPioneer of British private aviation
SpouseMary Dixon Harrison (1880 – 1935)
Relatives
  • Kathleen Sibyl Reid (sister)
  • Thomas Roscow Reid (brother)
Aviation career
Air forceRAF
RankFlight lieutenant

Early life edit

Edward Douglas Whitehead Reid was born in Canterbury, Kent on 22 June 1883. His parents were Thomas Whitehead Reid (1850 - 31 March 1910), a general practitioner, and Emily Eliza (née Munns) (ca 1857 - 1941). He had two younger siblings, Kathleen Sibyl Reid (1889 - ) and Thomas Roscow Reid (1896 - 1982).[1]

He attended Tonbridge School, then on 19 October 1901 was admitted to Christ's College, Cambridge. As a medical student, he gained his BA in 1905. He moved to St Bartholomew's Hospital (Barts) and in 1909 he was appointed a house physician there.[2] On the death of his father in 1910, he moved back to Canterbury to take over the family practice.[3]

He was an excellent sportsman, his activities including rowing, shooting, high jump, hurdling and sprinting, becoming captain of Barts Athletic Club, and winning many prizes at the London Athletic Club.[4] He also became an Honorary Surgeon to Kent and Canterbury Hospital, a medical officer at The King's School, Canterbury and lecturer in surgery at St Augustine's College, Canterbury.[2] He specialised in radiography and electrotherapy.[4]

He married Mary Dixon Harrison (1880 – 1935) on 15 August 1910 in her birth town of Berwick-on-Tweed, Northumberland.[1] They had no children.[5]

Military career edit

Whitehead Reid joined the British Army on 23 March 1915 as a captain in the Royal Army Medical Corps.[6] His first main posting was as senior surgeon at The Duchess of Westminster's Hospital, titled No.1 BRCS - British Red Cross Society Hospital at Le Touquet, France,[7] which operated from 30 October 1914 to July 1918 in a former casino fitted out for up to 250 patients, with an X-ray room.[8]

He was later assigned to the Egyptian Expeditionary Force as an RAF medical officer to a school of artillery observation[9] at Heliopolis.[10]

Aviation edit

During his time in Egypt, Whitehead Reid started to persuade any flying instructors he could find to give him lessons, and he soon became very enthusiastic about the activity, developing into a very proficient pilot.[11]

On leaving the RAF in 1919, he returned to Canterbury as a GP and gained the use of Bekesbourne Aerodrome, previously an RAF airfield, and its large hangar. He quickly obtained an Airco DH.6 biplane, which was registered to him on 2 December 1919. This made him the very first private aircraft owner in Britain after WWI. He gained his Royal Aero Club (RAeC) certificate (No 7883) on 27 July 1920.[9] Very unusually, and to the envy of many, the doctor employed a full-time mechanic to care for his aircraft, whom he credited for never having had to do a forced landing throughout his flying career.[11]

His next aircraft was an Avro 504K, a training aircraft which had been modified into a three-seat Avro 548 'Tourist' for pleasure flights, but which Whitehead Reid converted back a two-seater.[12]

 
RAF SE5a G-EBIB, possibly from the same batch as those of Whithead Reid

This was followed by a Royal Aircraft Factory S.E.5a, which was damaged beyond repair in a taxiing accident within a year, to be replaced by another. Whitehead Reid told the story of their acquisition as follows. After WWI, many SE5as were surplus to the RAF's requirements and were sold off straight from the factory for spares or scrapping, because official policy barred their sale as functioning aircraft. A worker at a factory anonymously bid for five at auction, obtaining them all for £5. Instead of destroying them, he dismantled them carefully, assembling the parts in what appeared to be a scrapheap, which he then removed. The worker, possibly named G Wigglesworth, then reassembled them to full flying condition and sold them for £30 each, with two going to Whitehead Reid, and two going to a skywriting company, possibly Savage Skywriting.[3][11]

Often being alone at the airport, Whitehead Reid developed an unusual way of getting his aircraft out of the hangar by himself. He would chock the wheels, start the engine and set it to idle, then, removing the chocks, would lift the tail and guide it out under its own power.

The doctor used his aircraft for his own pleasure, but was happy to give joy rides, often supporting local charities in the process. He also used them for visiting patients who had a handy nearby field, for occasional aerobatic displays, and for visiting air meetings and races.

In 1927 the government introduced subsidies for flying clubs to train new pilots, and several new clubs were set up to take advantage. One was the East Kent Flying Club, established at Lympne, and soon renamed the Cinque Ports Flying Club in honour of its president, Earl Beauchamp, who was Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports.[10] Whitehead Reid was a founding director.[13]

Air racing edit

He took part ins some of the earliest post-war aerial events, particularly at the nearby Lympne Airport which was the centre of light aircraft activity in Britain at the time. He attended some events anonymously, as his wife Mary was unhappy about him taking part in air racing.[14] Events in which he participated include:

  • 17 April 1922 Second Croydon Aviation Race Meeting at London Terminal Aerodrome, Croydon. The doctor entered the Club Handicap race and 2nd Croydon Handicap race in G-EAPW.[15]
  • 23 June 1923 Grosvenor Challenge Cup starting and finishing at Lympne. An out-and-back touring race via Croydon, Birmingham, Bristol, and Croydon again.[16] Whitehead Reid, in G-EBCA,[17] retired at Birmingham deciding that his machine was just too slow, and returned directly to Lympne via Croydon.[16]
  • 6 August 1923 Aerial Derby at Waddon Aerodrome (Croydon Airport) consisting of two circuits of London. The doctor, entered under the name 'A T Renno', flying SE5a G-EBCA, came in 9th, out of a field of 12.[18]
  • 3 August 1925 RAeC August Meeting at Lympne. Whitehead Reid came 2nd in a field of nine in the Private Owners' Handicap (International) race in G-EBCA.[14][17][19]
  • 18 September 1926 Lympne Light Aeroplane Trials: Whitehead Reid entered the Lympne Open Handicap (a 50-mile race) in SE5a G-EBCA but was not placed.[17]
  • 31 March 1929 Cinque Ports Flying Club meeting at Lympne. The doctor flew Westland Widgeon II G-EBJT to 4th place out of six in the Private Owners race.[20]
  • 26 May 1929 Desprez Challenge Cup at Filton Aerodrome, Bristol. Whitehead Reid came 2nd in Widgeon II G-EBJT.[21]

List of aircraft edit

  • G-EAPW Airco DH.6 ex C6503. Registered to Whitehead Reid on 2 December 1919. Some registers report the registration was not taken up, possibly because a Certificate of Airworthiness was not required at the time.[3] Built by Morgan & Co, Leighton Buzzard, Bedfordshire.[22] Fate unknown.[23]
  • G-EAFH Avro 504K cn ATC14 ex K-147. Converted by Avro at Hamble to an Avro 548 'Tourist' - a three-seater with a large double cockpit behind the pilot and powered by a Renault 80 hp engine. It was delivered to Whitehead Reid on 31 March 1922. He paid £12 10s (£12.50) for it and converted it to a two-seater with the passenger ahead of the pilot. The doctor sold it in 1928, and it crashed in Southport on 31 May 1935.[12]
  • G-EAZT SE5a ex E6013 bought by the doctor on 4 August 1922 from G Wigglesworth.[A] Built by Air Navigation and Engineering Company (ANEC), Addlestone, Surrey and powered by an RAF 1a engine of 108 horsepower (81 kW). It was damaged beyond repair in a taxiing accident at Bekesbourne in the summer of 1923.[3]
  • G-EBCA SE5a ex E5956 delivered to Whitehead Reid on 20 August 1923 from G Wigglesworth. Built by ANEC, and powered by a Renault 80hp (60 kW) engine. Withdrawn from use on 24 July 1928.[3]
  • G-EBJT Westland Widgeon II. This had been the first prototype of the Widgeon I which was damaged at Lympne trials in 1926. Rebuilt as the Mk.II,[25] it was delivered to Whitehead Reid from the Westland factory at Yeovil by their pilot, Harald Penrose on 5 January 1928.[3] The doctor named the aircraft Wendy after his dog.[21] The aircraft crashed on 19 October 1930 killing the doctor and his passenger (see below).

Auxiliary Air Force edit

On 11 May 1926 Whitehead Reid joined 601 (County of London) Bomber (B) Squadron[26] which had been formed on 14 October 1925. This was known as "The Millionaires' Squadron" because at one time there were reported to be six millionaire members.[27] He was promoted to Flying Officer on 12 January 1928, then Flight Lieutenant on 20 November 1928.[26]

The squadron was formed at RAF Northolt, Middlesex on 14 October 1925, moving to RAF Hendon in January 1927. Equipped with the Airco DH.9 and, from November 1929, the Westland Wapiti they specialised in performing exercise bombing raids on London to test their own abilities and those of the defenders.[27] They held annual training summer camps at Lympne.[28]

Gliding edit

In the late 1920s Whitehead Reid took an interest in gliding. The Kent Gliding Club was founded on 4 January 1930[29] and the doctor was a member. Some of the club's activities took place at Bekesbourne aerodrome, and in the same year the doctor became the club's president.[30]

He was also involved with the British Gliding Association (BGA), which was formed on 27 March 1930.[31] With several senior members, including Sir Sefton Brancker, Col. the Master of Sempill, Sir Gilbert Walker, Mr Eric Gordon England and Capt. C.H. Latimer-Needham, he visited the Rhön gliding competition at Wasserkuppe, Germany. This was a hotbed of German aeronautical design and development at the time. Whitehead Reid arrived in his Widgeon on 20 August 1930, leaving for Frankfurt the next day,[32]

The doctor gained his 'A' certificate at the BGA Gliding Meeting at Ditchling Beacon, Sussex, held on 18–19 October 1930.[30] The doctor and his passenger were killed on the return flight to Bekesbourne.

Death edit

On the afternoon of 19 October 1930, Whitehead Reid was returning in his Westland Widgeon G-EBJT from Shoreham, where he had been attending the BGA meeting at Ditchling Beacon.[30] He was carrying a passenger, Miss Annie Irene Burnside, aged 27, an enthusiastic airwoman. She was the daughter of Annie and Canon Walter Fletcher Burnside who was headmaster of St. Edmund's School, Canterbury.[6]

The weather started to close in, and the doctor undid his harness so that he could see better through the windscreen. At East Sutton Park near Maidstone, he circled the mansion of Mrs Stanley Wilson, and found a field in which to land. As he drew nearer, he realised that it was ploughed, so was unsuitable for landing. He applied full power to go around, and pulled up steeply to avoid trees at the edge of the field; however, a wing hit some branches, tearing it off and causing the aircraft to crash into a further tree. Miss Burnside was killed instantly, and the doctor rendered unconscious, seriously hurt with a fractured skull and other injuries. He was rushed to West Kent Hospital in Maidstone, where he died the following day, never having regained consciousness.[3]

His funeral was held on 24 October at Canterbury Cathedral[33] which was attended by 3,000 people. One of the floral tributes was from Amy Johnson.[3] Miss Burnside's funeral was at Harbledown, near Canterbury, on the same day. Whitehead Reid's sister Kathleen, now Mrs Reginald H Lucas,[1] attended.[6]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ G Wigglesworth had another aircraft registered in his name, RAF B.E.2c G-EAQR which was apparently also kept at Bekesbourne.[24]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c . Graeme Wall. Archived from the original on 14 March 2016. Retrieved 6 February 2020.
  2. ^ a b Peile, John (1913). Biographical Register of Christ's College, 1505–1905. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. p. 855. ISBN 978-1-107-42606-1. Retrieved 6 February 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Viner, John; Riding, Richard (December 1984). "Doctor in the Sky". Aeroplane Monthly. 12 (12): 660–664.
  4. ^ a b Gordon-Watson, Sir Charles (1 November 1930). "Obituary - The Late Dr. E.D. Whitehead Reid". The British Medical Journal. 2 (3643): 759. doi:10.1136/bmj.2.3643.759-b. PMC 2451577. PMID 20775809.
  5. ^ "Gloucester Citizen 20 October 1930 quoted". Sussex History Forum. Retrieved 5 February 2020.
  6. ^ a b c "Westland Widgeon (G-EBJT) crash, nr Maidstone, October 1930". Sussex History Forum. Retrieved 6 February 2020.
  7. ^ "Officers, N.C.O.s and Men of the 1st Battalion, Buried in Le Touquet-Paris Plage Cemetery". Grandad's War. Retrieved 5 February 2020.
  8. ^ "Service scrapbooks Immortalising the lives of nurses in the Great War". Royal College of Nursing. May 2018. Retrieved 5 February 2020.
  9. ^ a b "Dr. Whitehead Reid Killed". Flight: 1166. 24 October 1930.
  10. ^ a b Boughton, Terence (1963). The Story of the British Light Aeroplane. London, UK: John Murray.
  11. ^ a b c "Dr. Whitehead Reid The First Post-War Private Owner". Flight: 397–399. 16 June 1927.
  12. ^ a b Jackson, AJ; Jackson, RT (1990). Avro Aircraft since 1908 (2nd ed.). London, UK: Putnam Aeronautical Books. p. 188. ISBN 0-85177-834-8.
  13. ^ "Cinque Ports Flying Club". Flight: 1193. 31 October 1930. Retrieved 7 February 2020.
  14. ^ a b Collyer, David G (1992). Lympne Airport in old photographs. Stroud, UK: Alan Sutton Publishing. p. 60. ISBN 0-7509-0169-1.
  15. ^ "Second Croydon Aviation Race Meeting". Flight: 214. 13 April 1922.
  16. ^ a b "The Grosvenor Challenge Cup". Flight: 342–346. 28 June 1923.
  17. ^ a b c Lewis, Peter (1970). British Racing and Record-Breaking Aircraft. London, UK: Putnam and Co. ISBN 0-370-00067-6.
  18. ^ "The Eighth Aerial Derby". A Fleeting Peace. Retrieved 2 March 2023.
  19. ^ "RAeC 1925 August Meeting at Lympne". Flight: 477–480. 30 July 1925.
  20. ^ "Cinque Ports Flying Club's Excellent Easter Programme". Flight: 275–280. 4 April 1929.
  21. ^ a b "The Desprez Cup Competition". Flight: 447–449. 30 May 1929.
  22. ^ Robertson, Bruce (1966). British Military Aircraft Serials 1912 – 1966. Shepperton, UK: Ian Allan.
  23. ^ "Civil Aircraft Register - Great Britain". Golden Years of Aviation. Retrieved 7 February 2020.
  24. ^ "Register GB G-EA". A Fleeting Peace. Retrieved 3 March 2023.
  25. ^ James, Derek N (1995). Westland Aircraft since 1915 (2nd ed.). London, UK: Putnam Aeronautical Books. pp. 110–112. ISBN 0-85177-847-X.
  26. ^ a b "Reid, Edward Douglas Whitehead". The National Archives. Retrieved 7 February 2020.
  27. ^ a b Moyes, Philip (1976). Bomber Squadrons of the RAF and their aircraft (2nd ed.). Abingdon, UK: Purnell Book Services.
  28. ^ "The Royal Air Force". Flight: 929. 29 August 1929.
  29. ^ . Kent Gliding Club. Archived from the original on 25 October 2019. Retrieved 7 February 2020.
  30. ^ a b c "Dr. Whitehead Reid" (PDF). The Sailplane and Glider. 1 (8): 62. 24 October 1930. Retrieved 7 February 2020.
  31. ^ "About the BGA". British Gliding Association. Retrieved 7 February 2020.
  32. ^ Ashwell-Cooke, JR (5 September 1930). "Gliding - The Rhön Competitions". Flight: 997–999.
  33. ^ "News from the Clubs - The Kent Gliding Club (PDF)". The Sailplane and Glider. 1 (10): 82. 7 November 1930. Retrieved 7 February 2020.

edward, whitehead, reid, edward, douglas, whitehead, reid, june, 1883, october, 1930, british, general, practitioner, surgeon, pioneered, private, aircraft, after, first, world, commonly, known, whitehead, reid, sometimes, particularly, military, contexts, rei. Edward Douglas Whitehead Reid 22 June 1883 20 October 1930 was a British general practitioner and surgeon who pioneered the use of private aircraft after the First World War He was commonly known as Dr E D Whitehead Reid but sometimes particularly in military contexts as Dr E D W Reid Edward Douglas Whitehead ReidBorn 1883 06 22 22 June 1883Canterbury KentDied20 October 1930 1930 10 20 aged 47 West Kent Hospital Maidstone KentCause of deathFractured skullNationalityBritishEducationTonbridge School Christ s College CambridgeKnown forPioneer of British private aviationSpouseMary Dixon Harrison 1880 1935 RelativesKathleen Sibyl Reid sister Thomas Roscow Reid brother Aviation careerAir forceRAFRankFlight lieutenant Contents 1 Early life 2 Military career 3 Aviation 3 1 Air racing 3 2 List of aircraft 3 3 Auxiliary Air Force 3 4 Gliding 4 Death 5 Footnotes 6 ReferencesEarly life editEdward Douglas Whitehead Reid was born in Canterbury Kent on 22 June 1883 His parents were Thomas Whitehead Reid 1850 31 March 1910 a general practitioner and Emily Eliza nee Munns ca 1857 1941 He had two younger siblings Kathleen Sibyl Reid 1889 and Thomas Roscow Reid 1896 1982 1 He attended Tonbridge School then on 19 October 1901 was admitted to Christ s College Cambridge As a medical student he gained his BA in 1905 He moved to St Bartholomew s Hospital Barts and in 1909 he was appointed a house physician there 2 On the death of his father in 1910 he moved back to Canterbury to take over the family practice 3 He was an excellent sportsman his activities including rowing shooting high jump hurdling and sprinting becoming captain of Barts Athletic Club and winning many prizes at the London Athletic Club 4 He also became an Honorary Surgeon to Kent and Canterbury Hospital a medical officer at The King s School Canterbury and lecturer in surgery at St Augustine s College Canterbury 2 He specialised in radiography and electrotherapy 4 He married Mary Dixon Harrison 1880 1935 on 15 August 1910 in her birth town of Berwick on Tweed Northumberland 1 They had no children 5 Military career editWhitehead Reid joined the British Army on 23 March 1915 as a captain in the Royal Army Medical Corps 6 His first main posting was as senior surgeon at The Duchess of Westminster s Hospital titled No 1 BRCS British Red Cross Society Hospital at Le Touquet France 7 which operated from 30 October 1914 to July 1918 in a former casino fitted out for up to 250 patients with an X ray room 8 He was later assigned to the Egyptian Expeditionary Force as an RAF medical officer to a school of artillery observation 9 at Heliopolis 10 Aviation editDuring his time in Egypt Whitehead Reid started to persuade any flying instructors he could find to give him lessons and he soon became very enthusiastic about the activity developing into a very proficient pilot 11 On leaving the RAF in 1919 he returned to Canterbury as a GP and gained the use of Bekesbourne Aerodrome previously an RAF airfield and its large hangar He quickly obtained an Airco DH 6 biplane which was registered to him on 2 December 1919 This made him the very first private aircraft owner in Britain after WWI He gained his Royal Aero Club RAeC certificate No 7883 on 27 July 1920 9 Very unusually and to the envy of many the doctor employed a full time mechanic to care for his aircraft whom he credited for never having had to do a forced landing throughout his flying career 11 His next aircraft was an Avro 504K a training aircraft which had been modified into a three seat Avro 548 Tourist for pleasure flights but which Whitehead Reid converted back a two seater 12 nbsp RAF SE5a G EBIB possibly from the same batch as those of Whithead Reid This was followed by a Royal Aircraft Factory S E 5a which was damaged beyond repair in a taxiing accident within a year to be replaced by another Whitehead Reid told the story of their acquisition as follows After WWI many SE5as were surplus to the RAF s requirements and were sold off straight from the factory for spares or scrapping because official policy barred their sale as functioning aircraft A worker at a factory anonymously bid for five at auction obtaining them all for 5 Instead of destroying them he dismantled them carefully assembling the parts in what appeared to be a scrapheap which he then removed The worker possibly named G Wigglesworth then reassembled them to full flying condition and sold them for 30 each with two going to Whitehead Reid and two going to a skywriting company possibly Savage Skywriting 3 11 Often being alone at the airport Whitehead Reid developed an unusual way of getting his aircraft out of the hangar by himself He would chock the wheels start the engine and set it to idle then removing the chocks would lift the tail and guide it out under its own power The doctor used his aircraft for his own pleasure but was happy to give joy rides often supporting local charities in the process He also used them for visiting patients who had a handy nearby field for occasional aerobatic displays and for visiting air meetings and races In 1927 the government introduced subsidies for flying clubs to train new pilots and several new clubs were set up to take advantage One was the East Kent Flying Club established at Lympne and soon renamed the Cinque Ports Flying Club in honour of its president Earl Beauchamp who was Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports 10 Whitehead Reid was a founding director 13 Air racing edit He took part ins some of the earliest post war aerial events particularly at the nearby Lympne Airport which was the centre of light aircraft activity in Britain at the time He attended some events anonymously as his wife Mary was unhappy about him taking part in air racing 14 Events in which he participated include 17 April 1922 Second Croydon Aviation Race Meeting at London Terminal Aerodrome Croydon The doctor entered the Club Handicap race and 2nd Croydon Handicap race in G EAPW 15 23 June 1923 Grosvenor Challenge Cup starting and finishing at Lympne An out and back touring race via Croydon Birmingham Bristol and Croydon again 16 Whitehead Reid in G EBCA 17 retired at Birmingham deciding that his machine was just too slow and returned directly to Lympne via Croydon 16 6 August 1923 Aerial Derby at Waddon Aerodrome Croydon Airport consisting of two circuits of London The doctor entered under the name A T Renno flying SE5a G EBCA came in 9th out of a field of 12 18 3 August 1925 RAeC August Meeting at Lympne Whitehead Reid came 2nd in a field of nine in the Private Owners Handicap International race in G EBCA 14 17 19 18 September 1926 Lympne Light Aeroplane Trials Whitehead Reid entered the Lympne Open Handicap a 50 mile race in SE5a G EBCA but was not placed 17 31 March 1929 Cinque Ports Flying Club meeting at Lympne The doctor flew Westland Widgeon II G EBJT to 4th place out of six in the Private Owners race 20 26 May 1929 Desprez Challenge Cup at Filton Aerodrome Bristol Whitehead Reid came 2nd in Widgeon II G EBJT 21 List of aircraft edit G EAPW Airco DH 6 ex C6503 Registered to Whitehead Reid on 2 December 1919 Some registers report the registration was not taken up possibly because a Certificate of Airworthiness was not required at the time 3 Built by Morgan amp Co Leighton Buzzard Bedfordshire 22 Fate unknown 23 G EAFH Avro 504K cn ATC14 ex K 147 Converted by Avro at Hamble to an Avro 548 Tourist a three seater with a large double cockpit behind the pilot and powered by a Renault 80 hp engine It was delivered to Whitehead Reid on 31 March 1922 He paid 12 10s 12 50 for it and converted it to a two seater with the passenger ahead of the pilot The doctor sold it in 1928 and it crashed in Southport on 31 May 1935 12 G EAZT SE5a ex E6013 bought by the doctor on 4 August 1922 from G Wigglesworth A Built by Air Navigation and Engineering Company ANEC Addlestone Surrey and powered by an RAF 1a engine of 108 horsepower 81 kW It was damaged beyond repair in a taxiing accident at Bekesbourne in the summer of 1923 3 G EBCA SE5a ex E5956 delivered to Whitehead Reid on 20 August 1923 from G Wigglesworth Built by ANEC and powered by a Renault 80hp 60 kW engine Withdrawn from use on 24 July 1928 3 G EBJT Westland Widgeon II This had been the first prototype of the Widgeon I which was damaged at Lympne trials in 1926 Rebuilt as the Mk II 25 it was delivered to Whitehead Reid from the Westland factory at Yeovil by their pilot Harald Penrose on 5 January 1928 3 The doctor named the aircraft Wendy after his dog 21 The aircraft crashed on 19 October 1930 killing the doctor and his passenger see below Auxiliary Air Force edit On 11 May 1926 Whitehead Reid joined 601 County of London Bomber B Squadron 26 which had been formed on 14 October 1925 This was known as The Millionaires Squadron because at one time there were reported to be six millionaire members 27 He was promoted to Flying Officer on 12 January 1928 then Flight Lieutenant on 20 November 1928 26 The squadron was formed at RAF Northolt Middlesex on 14 October 1925 moving to RAF Hendon in January 1927 Equipped with the Airco DH 9 and from November 1929 the Westland Wapiti they specialised in performing exercise bombing raids on London to test their own abilities and those of the defenders 27 They held annual training summer camps at Lympne 28 Gliding edit In the late 1920s Whitehead Reid took an interest in gliding The Kent Gliding Club was founded on 4 January 1930 29 and the doctor was a member Some of the club s activities took place at Bekesbourne aerodrome and in the same year the doctor became the club s president 30 He was also involved with the British Gliding Association BGA which was formed on 27 March 1930 31 With several senior members including Sir Sefton Brancker Col the Master of Sempill Sir Gilbert Walker Mr Eric Gordon England and Capt C H Latimer Needham he visited the Rhon gliding competition at Wasserkuppe Germany This was a hotbed of German aeronautical design and development at the time Whitehead Reid arrived in his Widgeon on 20 August 1930 leaving for Frankfurt the next day 32 The doctor gained his A certificate at the BGA Gliding Meeting at Ditchling Beacon Sussex held on 18 19 October 1930 30 The doctor and his passenger were killed on the return flight to Bekesbourne Death editOn the afternoon of 19 October 1930 Whitehead Reid was returning in his Westland Widgeon G EBJT from Shoreham where he had been attending the BGA meeting at Ditchling Beacon 30 He was carrying a passenger Miss Annie Irene Burnside aged 27 an enthusiastic airwoman She was the daughter of Annie and Canon Walter Fletcher Burnside who was headmaster of St Edmund s School Canterbury 6 The weather started to close in and the doctor undid his harness so that he could see better through the windscreen At East Sutton Park near Maidstone he circled the mansion of Mrs Stanley Wilson and found a field in which to land As he drew nearer he realised that it was ploughed so was unsuitable for landing He applied full power to go around and pulled up steeply to avoid trees at the edge of the field however a wing hit some branches tearing it off and causing the aircraft to crash into a further tree Miss Burnside was killed instantly and the doctor rendered unconscious seriously hurt with a fractured skull and other injuries He was rushed to West Kent Hospital in Maidstone where he died the following day never having regained consciousness 3 His funeral was held on 24 October at Canterbury Cathedral 33 which was attended by 3 000 people One of the floral tributes was from Amy Johnson 3 Miss Burnside s funeral was at Harbledown near Canterbury on the same day Whitehead Reid s sister Kathleen now Mrs Reginald H Lucas 1 attended 6 Footnotes edit G Wigglesworth had another aircraft registered in his name RAF B E 2c G EAQR which was apparently also kept at Bekesbourne 24 References edit a b c Descendants of Rev Timothy Kenrick Graeme Wall Archived from the original on 14 March 2016 Retrieved 6 February 2020 a b Peile John 1913 Biographical Register of Christ s College 1505 1905 Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press p 855 ISBN 978 1 107 42606 1 Retrieved 6 February 2020 a b c d e f g h Viner John Riding Richard December 1984 Doctor in the Sky Aeroplane Monthly 12 12 660 664 a b Gordon Watson Sir Charles 1 November 1930 Obituary The Late Dr E D Whitehead Reid The British Medical Journal 2 3643 759 doi 10 1136 bmj 2 3643 759 b PMC 2451577 PMID 20775809 Gloucester Citizen 20 October 1930 quoted Sussex History Forum Retrieved 5 February 2020 a b c Westland Widgeon G EBJT crash nr Maidstone October 1930 Sussex History Forum Retrieved 6 February 2020 Officers N C O s and Men of the 1st Battalion Buried in Le Touquet Paris Plage Cemetery Grandad s War Retrieved 5 February 2020 Service scrapbooks Immortalising the lives of nurses in the Great War Royal College of Nursing May 2018 Retrieved 5 February 2020 a b Dr Whitehead Reid Killed Flight 1166 24 October 1930 a b Boughton Terence 1963 The Story of the British Light Aeroplane London UK John Murray a b c Dr Whitehead Reid The First Post War Private Owner Flight 397 399 16 June 1927 a b Jackson AJ Jackson RT 1990 Avro Aircraft since 1908 2nd ed London UK Putnam Aeronautical Books p 188 ISBN 0 85177 834 8 Cinque Ports Flying Club Flight 1193 31 October 1930 Retrieved 7 February 2020 a b Collyer David G 1992 Lympne Airport in old photographs Stroud UK Alan Sutton Publishing p 60 ISBN 0 7509 0169 1 Second Croydon Aviation Race Meeting Flight 214 13 April 1922 a b The Grosvenor Challenge Cup Flight 342 346 28 June 1923 a b c Lewis Peter 1970 British Racing and Record Breaking Aircraft London UK Putnam and Co ISBN 0 370 00067 6 The Eighth Aerial Derby A Fleeting Peace Retrieved 2 March 2023 RAeC 1925 August Meeting at Lympne Flight 477 480 30 July 1925 Cinque Ports Flying Club s Excellent Easter Programme Flight 275 280 4 April 1929 a b The Desprez Cup Competition Flight 447 449 30 May 1929 Robertson Bruce 1966 British Military Aircraft Serials 1912 1966 Shepperton UK Ian Allan Civil Aircraft Register Great Britain Golden Years of Aviation Retrieved 7 February 2020 Register GB G EA A Fleeting Peace Retrieved 3 March 2023 James Derek N 1995 Westland Aircraft since 1915 2nd ed London UK Putnam Aeronautical Books pp 110 112 ISBN 0 85177 847 X a b Reid Edward Douglas Whitehead The National Archives Retrieved 7 February 2020 a b Moyes Philip 1976 Bomber Squadrons of the RAF and their aircraft 2nd ed Abingdon UK Purnell Book Services The Royal Air Force Flight 929 29 August 1929 About Our Flying Club Kent Gliding Club Archived from the original on 25 October 2019 Retrieved 7 February 2020 a b c Dr Whitehead Reid PDF The Sailplane and Glider 1 8 62 24 October 1930 Retrieved 7 February 2020 About the BGA British Gliding Association Retrieved 7 February 2020 Ashwell Cooke JR 5 September 1930 Gliding The Rhon Competitions Flight 997 999 News from the Clubs The Kent Gliding Club PDF The Sailplane and Glider 1 10 82 7 November 1930 Retrieved 7 February 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edward Whitehead Reid amp oldid 1210579086, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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