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Frederick Scherger

Air Chief Marshal Sir Frederick Rudolph William Scherger, KBE, CB, DSO, AFC (18 May 1904 – 16 January 1984) was a senior commander in the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF). He served as Chief of the Air Staff, the RAAF's highest-ranking position, from 1957 until 1961, and as Chairman of the Chiefs of Staff Committee, forerunner of the role of Australia's Chief of the Defence Force, from 1961 until 1966. He was the first RAAF officer to hold the rank of air chief marshal.[1]

Sir Frederick Rudolph William Scherger
Air Commodore Fred Scherger, c. 1945
Nickname(s)"Scherg"
Born18 May 1904
Ararat, Victoria
Died16 January 1984(1984-01-16) (aged 79)
Melbourne
AllegianceAustralia
Service/branchRoyal Australian Air Force
Service years1921–1966 (45 years)
RankAir Chief Marshal
Commands heldDirectorate of Training (1938–1940)
No. 2 SFTS (1940–1941)
RAAF Station Darwin (1941–1942)
No. 2 Training Group (1943)
No. 10 Group (1943–1944)
First Tactical Air Force (1945)
RAF AHQ Malaya (1953–1955)
Chief of the Air Staff (1957–1961) Chairman COSC (1961–1966)
Battles/wars
AwardsKnight Commander of the Order of the British Empire
Companion of the Order of the Bath
Distinguished Service Order
Air Force Cross
Other workChairman ANAC (1966–1975)
Chairman CAC (1968–1975)

Born in Victoria of German origins, Scherger graduated from the Royal Military College, Duntroon, before transferring to the Air Force in 1925. He was considered one of the top aviators between the wars, serving as a fighter pilot, test pilot, and flying instructor. He held senior training posts in the late 1930s and the early years of World War II, earning the Air Force Cross in June 1940. Promoted to group captain, Scherger was acting commander of North-Western Area when Darwin suffered its first air raid in February 1942. Praised for his actions in the aftermath of the attack, he went on to lead the RAAF's major mobile strike force in the South West Pacific, No. 10 Operational Group (later the Australian First Tactical Air Force), and was awarded the Distinguished Service Order in September 1944 for his actions during the assaults on Aitape and Noemfoor in New Guinea.

After the war, Scherger served in senior posts, including Deputy Chief of the Air Staff, Head of the Australian Joint Services Staff in Washington, D.C., and commander of Commonwealth air forces during the Malayan Emergency. In 1957, he was promoted to air marshal and became Chief of the Air Staff (CAS), presiding over a significant modernisation of RAAF equipment. Completing his term as CAS in 1961, he was the Air Force's first appointee to the position of Chairman of the Chiefs of Staff Committee (COSC). As Chairman of COSC, Scherger became Australia's first air chief marshal in 1965, and played a leading role in the commitment of troops to the Vietnam War. Leaving the military the following year, he was appointed chairman of the Australian National Airlines Commission and, from 1968, of the Commonwealth Aircraft Corporation. Popularly known as "Scherg",[2] he retired in 1975 and lived in Melbourne until his death in 1984 at the age of seventy-nine.

Early life and career edit

Frederick Rudolph William Scherger was the third child of farmer Frederick Scherger and his wife Sarah Jane, née Chamberlain, both native Victorians.[3] Born on 18 May 1904 in Ararat, young Fred was educated to junior certificate level at his local high school.[4][5] His paternal grandparents were immigrants from Germany, and his family was the object of xenophobia in his childhood during World War I. This carried on into the early part of his military career and beyond; as late as 1941, the author of an anonymous letter from RAAF Station Wagga to Prime Minister Robert Menzies stated that his "blood ran cold" at the notion of someone called "Scherger" commanding trainee Australian pilots.[4]

1920s: Duntroon to Point Cook edit

Scherger entered the Royal Military College, Duntroon, in 1921 and graduated as a lieutenant in 1924, winning the King's Medal.[6] Two days before graduation, he volunteered for an Air Force secondment, which was later made permanent.[1][7] On 21 January 1925, he received a permanent commission in the RAAF as a pilot officer (temporary flying officer), and commenced his flight training at RAAF Point Cook, Victoria.[8][9] He was promoted to flying officer with seniority from 21 January 1926.[9]

Scherger quickly took to the art of flying open-cockpit biplanes and gained a reputation as a skilful if occasionally reckless pilot, being berated early in his career by his flight commander for "inverted and very low flying".[10][11] He was one of the Air Force's first volunteers for parachute instruction, under the tutelage of Flying Officer Ellis Wackett at RAAF Station Richmond, New South Wales, and made the first public freefall descent in Australia, at Essendon, Victoria on 21 August 1926.[12] In February 1927, he was asked by the commanding officer of No. 1 Flying Training School (No. 1 FTS), Wing Commander Adrian "King" Cole, to drop a message to a woman at Port Melbourne before she departed on a steamer. After doing so, Scherger illegally flew his S.E.5 fighter between ship and wharf before heading back to Point Cook, only to be hauled into Cole's office the next morning to find the CO brandishing a photograph taken by a member of the public, catching the young pilot in the act. Sent for a dressing down to the Air Member for Personnel, Group Captain Jimmy Goble, Scherger was forced to admit it was not the first time he had engaged in such stunts. Goble responded, "Good, I'm glad to see we've still got a few in the Air Force with spirit."[13]

1930s: Flying instructor to Director of Training edit

 
Squadron Leader Scherger (left) with Federal Treasurer Richard Casey at Point Cook, 1937

By the 1930s, as a flight instructor and test pilot, Scherger was, according to historian Alan Stephens, "perhaps the RAAF's outstanding aviator".[14] He married Thelma Harrick on 1 June 1929; they had a daughter.[15][16] Promoted to flight lieutenant on 1 June 1929,[17] Scherger became chief flying instructor (CFI) at Point Cook that August.[8] He also flew with Fighter Squadron, a unit of No. 1 FTS operating Bristol Bulldogs. As one of the leading pilots of the Bulldog, then regarded as the peak of military technology, and in what was generally thought of as the RAAF's elite formation, he gained popular exposure that may have helped his later rise to senior leadership.[18] In October 1931, he won an Aero Club derby at Adelaide in a Bulldog, clocking a top speed of 160.98 mph (259.07 km/h).[19]

In August 1934, Scherger was posted to England to study at RAF Staff College, Andover.[8][10] Just prior to departing, he was involved in a notorious incident at RAAF Station Laverton. A squadron leader arrived home early from a mess function to find his wife sleeping with another officer, who escaped by crashing through the bedroom window. The squadron leader then pursued his wife with a loaded revolver, the pair eventually arriving at Scherger's quarters. Faced with the frightened woman and the enraged husband crying that he would "shoot the bitch", Scherger knocked the man down with a poker. The unconscious husband was placed in the guardhouse, and the woman given shelter off the base; the officer she had slept with promptly resigned his commission.[20]

Scherger graduated from Andover in December 1935 and subsequently completed courses at the RAF's School of Air Navigation and Central Flying School.[8][10] He was promoted to squadron leader on 1 July 1936.[21] Returning to Australia, he resumed his position as CFI at Point Cook in May 1937. As directed by the Federal government, he was responsible for training the Treasurer, Richard Casey, to fly; the use of Air Force facilities for his own benefit by an elected official led to adverse publicity when it was revealed by the media.[8][22] In September, Scherger test flew the North American NA-16 at Laverton; the evaluation program led to the design being adapted as the CAC Wirraway the following year.[23] He was appointed Director of Training at RAAF Headquarters, Melbourne, in January 1938, and promoted to wing commander on 1 March 1939.[24][8]

World War II edit

1939–1942: Outbreak of war to raid on Darwin edit

 
Explosion of an oil storage tank during the first air raid on Darwin, 19 February 1942

As Director of Training at the outbreak of World War II, Scherger's main challenge was to expand the RAAF's pool of flying instructors.[25] Central Flying School, Australia's first military aviation unit, was re-formed for this purpose in April 1940.[26] Awarded the Air Force Cross in June 1940 for his "outstanding ability" as a pilot and instructor,[27][28] he took charge of No. 2 Service Flying Training School near Wagga the following month, and was promoted to temporary group captain on 1 September.[8][29][30] In October 1941, he was made commanding officer of RAAF Station Darwin, Northern Territory. Described by Major General Lewis H. Brereton, commander of the US Far East Air Force, as "energetic, efficient and very impatient", Scherger started improving the operational readiness of the base and its surrounds without waiting for specific orders from RAAF Headquarters.[31][32] The following January, he was appointed senior air staff officer to Air Commodore Douglas Wilson, Air Officer Commanding (AOC) of North-Western Area Command (NWA), which administered RAAF Station Darwin and other airfields in the Northern Territory and north-west Western Australia.[10][33]

In Wilson's absence at ABDA Command Headquarters in Java, Scherger was acting AOC NWA on 19 February 1942 when Darwin suffered its first aerial attacks by the Japanese.[5][33] Driving into town to meet Air Marshal Richard Williams, who was in transit on his way to England, Scherger first became aware of the assault after he heard anti-aircraft fire and counted twenty-seven enemy aircraft in the distance. He arrived at the civil airfield to witness a Curtiss P-40 crash land on the runway, before his car was strafed by fighters.[34] In a lull after the initial attack that day, he made contact with Williams before the two men were forced to take shelter in a makeshift trench that was straddled by falling bombs as a second raid got under way. Afterwards, Scherger began to restore order and launched a Hudson light bomber on a reconnaissance mission, though there was no further contact with Japanese forces.[35]

I was unemployed for one month, which isn't very encouraging in the middle of a war.

Fred Scherger on his removal from North-Western Area Command in the wake of the February 1942 air raids [36]

As well as the loss of civil and military infrastructure, twenty-three aircraft and ten ships, and the death of some 250 people, 278 RAAF personnel had deserted Darwin in an exodus that became known as the "Adelaide River Stakes".[31][37] "There was", in Scherger's words, "an awful panic and a lot of men simply went bush".[38] Praised for his "great courage and energy", he was one of the few senior Air Force officers in the region to emerge from Commissioner Charles Lowe's inquiry into the debacle with his long-term career prospects undamaged.[31] In the immediate aftermath, though, his outspoken criticism of the RAAF's state of preparedness alienated members of the Air Board, the service's controlling body that consisted of its most senior officers and which was chaired by the Chief of the Air Staff (CAS).[10][39] He was relieved of his position at NWA by the CAS, Air Chief Marshal Sir Charles Burnett, and shunted through a series of postings for the remainder of the year,[10][36] including commanding officer at RAAF Station Richmond,[40] supernumerary at RAAF Headquarters,[8] Director of Defence at Allied Air Forces Headquarters, South West Pacific Area,[41] and Director of Training at RAAF Headquarters.[8] Seeking restitution, he boldly went over the heads of the Air Board and successfully appealed to the Minister for Air, Arthur Drakeford, supported by Commissioner Lowe.[42]

1943–1945: No. 10 Operational Group and First Tactical Air Force edit

 
Air Commodore Scherger (left) with USAAF Brigadier General Paul Wurtsmith (second left) on 24 April 1944, after the landings at Aitape

Scherger served as Officer Commanding No. 2 Training Group at RAAF Station Wagga from July 1943 until he was appointed AOC of the newly formed No. 10 Operational Group (No. 10 OG) in November.[10] The Air Force's main mobile strike force, No. 10 OG at its formation consisted of No. 77 Wing, operating A-31 Vengeance dive bombers, and No. 78 Wing, operating P-40 Kittyhawk fighters, as well as several ancillary units.[43] Promoted to acting air commodore on 25 January 1944,[44] Scherger established his headquarters at Nadzab, Papua New Guinea, in support of the US Fifth Air Force. Though able to launch No. 78 Wing's first mission that same month, he had to deal with several organisational problems to bring all his squadrons to combat readiness, including lack of training in tropical conditions, and shortcomings in aircraft maintenance and staff rotation that resulted in the RAAF's operational rate of effort being inferior to similar USAAF formations. These issues were overcome later in the year and No. 10 OG units began exceeding the rate of effort of their American counterparts.[45]

By March 1944, No. 77 Wing's Vengeances had been withdrawn from operations due to their inferiority to newer equipment. Three squadrons from No. 9 Operational Group—one each flying Bostons, Beaufighters, and Beauforts—were assigned to the Wing as replacements, but No. 10 OG itself was moved from Nadzab to Cape Gloucester to permit USAAF units with longer-ranged aircraft to occupy vital airfields on the Allied front line.[46] The group's disappointment with its withdrawal from Nadzab was tempered by news that it was to take part in the forthcoming attack on Aitape, New Guinea, codenamed Operation Reckless. Scherger was appointed air commander for the assault, leading US and Australian units.[47] No. 78 Wing's Kittyhawks shadowed the main task force while heavier aircraft from NWA conducted bombing and mining sorties to indirectly support the operation.[48] The landings on 22 April 1944 met little opposition, credited in part to the Allied bombardment in the days leading up to it.[49] With elements of No. 10 OG going ashore on the first day, Aitape airfield was repaired and No. 78 Wing was operating from it within three days.[50] In June, Scherger was named commander of Australian and US air forces for the attack on Noemfoor Island.[51] Over the course of the battle that commenced on 2 July, he controlled Nos. 71, 77, 78 and 81 Wings RAAF, as well as the USAAF's 58th and 348th Fighter Groups and 307th and 417th Bombardment Groups.[52] Scherger was promoted to temporary air commodore on 1 August,[53] and was awarded the Distinguished Service Order for his actions at Aitape and Noemfoor,[54] the citation noting that he "operated his air forces with great skill and success" and praising the way he placed himself "in the forefront of the landing of the ground troops", where "his personal courage and leadership proved an inspiration to all personnel".[51]

 
Scherger (right) with Lieutenant General Leslie Morshead in Labuan, August 1945

A jeep accident in August left Scherger with a fractured pelvis, necessitating his evacuation to Australia for rehabilitation. In his absence, Air Commodore Harry Cobby took command of No. 10 OG; two months later the formation was redesignated the Australian First Tactical Air Force (No. 1 TAF).[10][55] Still recuperating, Scherger acted in the role of Air Member for Personnel at RAAF Headquarters, Melbourne, from January to May 1945.[8][10] On 10 May, he was posted back to the Pacific to resume control of No. 1 TAF following Cobby's dismissal in the wake of the "Morotai Mutiny".[56][57] He returned as Operation Oboe One, the Battle of Tarakan, was under way; No. 1 TAF's airfield construction teams had been tasked with opening the runway on Tarakan Island within a week of Allied landings but extensive pre-invasion damage and adverse environmental conditions delayed this until the end of June.[57] He then led No. 1 TAF in Operation Oboe Six, the invasion of Labuan, going ashore on the afternoon of the landings on 10 June to establish his command post.[58] By July, when the final Allied offensive of the Borneo Campaign took place as Operation Oboe Two in Balikpapan, No. 1 TAF had reached a strength of some 25,000 personnel; by the end of hostilities on 14 August this figure had been reduced with the transfer of units to the recently formed No. 11 Group.[59]

Post-war career edit

1946–1957: Rise to Chief of the Air Staff edit

In October 1945, Scherger led a survey team to Japan to review airfields and other facilities being considered for the British Commonwealth Occupation Force, determining that substantial work was needed to bring them up to the required capacity.[60] The following year, he attended the Imperial Defence College, London. He was promoted to substantive group captain on 1 January 1947,[61] and was appointed Deputy Chief of the Air Staff (DCAS) on 1 July.[62] Scherger was raised to substantive air commodore on 23 September 1948,[63] and promoted to temporary air vice marshal on 1 May 1950.[64][8][10] He was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the King's Birthday Honours the same year.[65] As DCAS, Scherger reported to Air Marshal George Jones, whose ten-year term as CAS would the longest of any incumbent in the position. The pair enjoyed a cordial working relationship, and Jones earmarked the younger officer as a leader of the future.[66] Scherger could not persuade his conservative chief to revamp the Air Force from its wartime area command structure into a more modern service organised along functional lines; this radical change would await Jones' successor, Air Marshal Sir Donald Hardman.[67][68]

You always got a straight answer from Scherger, even when you didn't like it. He was very pro-Australian, and why not?

Major General Sir William Oliver, Chief of Staff to General Sir Gerald Templer, Malaya [69]

After completing his tour as DCAS in July 1951, Scherger was posted to Washington, D.C., to head up the Australian Joint Services Staff. He was promoted to substantive air vice marshal on 1 July 1952.[70] On 1 January 1953 he succeeded Air Vice Marshal George Mills as AOC of RAF Air Headquarters Malaya.[71][72] In this role, Scherger commanded all Commonwealth air forces in the region and was responsible for operations against communist guerrillas during the emergency.[69] Scherger deliberately sited his headquarters, which had been based in Singapore when he took over, next to the offices of the Director of Operations in Kuala Lumpur, to more closely align air tasking with overall military planning. He expanded the use of helicopters for troop delivery and casualty evacuation, and presided over a change in tactics that saw an earlier policy of indiscriminate saturation bombing of jungle areas replaced by one of precision strike against enemy camps.[73] He also pioneered psychological warfare in the form of "voice" aircraft broadcasting propaganda, close cooperation between light aircraft spotters and ground forces to aid bombing missions, and defoliation to clear jungle cover.[69]

Appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath on 30 April 1954 for his service in Malaya,[74][75] Scherger joined the Air Board as Air Member for Personnel in March 1955.[10] During his term he commissioned a review into the effectiveness of the syllabus at RAAF College for meeting the future needs of the Air Force in an age of missiles and nuclear weaponry. This led to a policy of cadets undertaking academic degrees, in line with similar institutions in the other armed services; the College was subsequently renamed RAAF Academy.[76] Promoted air marshal, he became Chief of the Air Staff on 19 March 1957, succeeding Air Marshal Sir John McCauley.[77] Long identified as a strong contender for the RAAF's senior role,[78] Scherger was described by Air Marshal Hardman as "easily the best material on offer".[5] He declared that as an administrator he was "not going to allow myself to be bogged down with minor matters of detail ... Broad policy comes from the top. These decisions have to be implemented in the commands—and that's the way it's going to be."[79]

1957–1961: Chief of the Air Staff edit

As CAS, one of Scherger's first tasks was investigating the feasibility of a nuclear arsenal for the Air Force. During visits to Britain and the US he explored the possibility of weapons being delivered by the RAAF's Sabre fighters or its Canberra bombers.[80] In 1958, he held discussions with the Chief of Staff of the USAF, General Thomas D. White, about storing nuclear weapons in Australia under USAF control. In 1959 and 1960, Scherger had information sent out, including manuals and maintenance instructions, regarding equipping the Canberras with Mark 7 nuclear bombs, the same type that the British Canberras used.[81] For a time, Scherger championed the purchase of a force of British-built Vulcan heavy bombers but excessive cost and a governmental determination to remain "under the shelter of the American nuclear umbrella" put paid to the proposal.[80] Instead, in 1963, the decision was taken to purchase the General Dynamics F-111 swing-wing bomber "on the understanding that it could carry nuclear weapons".[82]

Turning to fighters, Scherger succeeded in reversing a publicly announced decision to purchase the F-104 Starfighter as a replacement for the Sabre, in favour of the Dassault Mirage III, a type better suited for Australia's requirements.[79] During trials he had taken the controls of a Starfighter, reportedly becoming the first Australian to fly at twice the speed of sound.[83] He was appointed Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE) in the 1958 Queen's Birthday Honours.[84]

An advocate of helicopters since his experience in Malaya, Scherger influenced purchase of the UH-1 Iroquois for Australia.[79] He also played a key role in the acquisition of the C-130 Hercules transport in 1958, over the Federal treasury's "bureaucratic hand-wringing"; the type soon proved itself vital to defence force activity in the region, being described as second only to the F-111 as "the most significant aircraft the RAAF has ever operated".[85] The following year, harking back to his experience in 1942, Scherger proposed a second airfield in the Darwin area, which led eventually to the establishment of RAAF Base Tindal near Katherine.[86] He transferred funding already in place for extension of the runway at Laverton to effect this, signalling a fundamental shift in the Air Force's "centre of gravity" to the north of Australia.[79] The first edition of RAAF News (now Air Force News), which had been sponsored by Scherger, appeared in January 1960 and carried a message from the CAS concerning current defence policy, as well as announcing that Sidewinder air-to-air missiles would begin equipping the Air Force's Sabres.[79][87] Scherger also oversaw introduction of Bloodhound surface-to-air missiles to the RAAF's arsenal.[79] Towards the end of his term as CAS, he expressed interest in Britain's supersonic BAC TSR-2 as a replacement for the Canberra, but noted that it was "many years" from production.[88]

1961–1966: Chairman of the Chiefs of Staff Committee edit

Scherger became Chairman of the Chiefs of Staff Committee (COSC), the senior Australian military position at the time, in May 1961, taking over from Vice Admiral Sir Roy Dowling.[89] Keen as ever to see a supersonic bomber replace the Canberra, he visited Britain in April 1963 to investigate progress of the TSR-2. Using back-channel sources of information, he satisfied himself that the RAF's pronouncements on the bomber's development were overly optimistic, and later that year began supporting selection of the F-111 as the aircraft best suited to supplant the Canberra.[88]

 
RAAF Caribous and personnel on arrival in South Vietnam, August 1964

During the Indonesia–Malaysia Konfrontasi, Scherger acted as military liaison between the British and Australian governments. Openly sceptical about the cease-fire announced by President Sukarno on 25 January 1964, he supported British requests for Australian combat forces in Borneo but was in the short term "overruled by 'political cross-currents'".[90] Towards the end of the year, he advocated bombing Indonesian air bases using RAAF Canberras in Malaya, but in this instance the British held back.[91] Although Australia eventually deployed battalions of the Royal Australian Regiment from March 1965, Scherger's earlier optimistic estimation of the speed and level of his government's readiness to commit troops was said to have confused the British.[92]

The latter part of Scherger's tour as Chairman COSC coincided with the beginning of large-scale Australian involvement in the Vietnam War.[93] By mid-1964, the Commonwealth had already sent a small team of military advisors, plus a detachment of newly acquired DHC-4 Caribou transports, to the region at the request of the South Vietnamese government.[94] At a joint US, Australian and New Zealand conference from 30 March to 1 April 1965, and with instructions only to ascertain America's objectives in the conflict, Scherger indicated that Australia would be prepared to commit a sizeable ground force, of around battalion size. Within a week, Prime Minister Robert Menzies' Federal cabinet had ratified the proposal, which was formally announced on 19 April.[93][95] The 1st Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment deployed to Vietnam in May 1965,[93] and two squadrons of the RAAF were committed by mid-1966.[96] With the formation of Australian Forces Vietnam (AFV) at this time, Scherger recommended that Air Force units effectively serve under Army control "to convey an image of all Australian forces fighting together, as one unit". The Minister for Air, Peter Howson, felt that this made Scherger and the Army guilty of "exaggerated national pride".[97]

Promoted to air chief marshal on 25 March 1965,[98] Scherger became not only the first RAAF officer to attain four-star rank,[4][10] but also the first Duntroon graduate to do so.[4][99] Already considered "a particularly assertive Chairman" of COSC,[100] his role was further strengthened by the promotion as he now out-ranked the three service heads. His predecessors in the position had not advanced beyond three-star rank.[101] Scherger remained as chairman until retiring from military life on 18 May 1966,[8] having twice had his term extended by unanimous vote of Federal cabinet.[5]

Later life edit

 
TAA DC-9 at Adelaide Airport, 1967

After leaving the military, Scherger became chairman of the Australian National Airlines Commission (ACAC), the controlling body of the Federal government's domestic carrier Trans Australia Airlines (TAA), on 1 July 1966.[102] Considered as bringing to TAA "the dash and leadership the new air age demanded",[103] he presided over delivery of its first Douglas DC-9 twin-jet transport in 1967. The government's Two Airlines Policy, designed to ensure even competition between TAA and Australia's private domestic carrier, Ansett, meant that the decision of which airline would land the first DC-9 in the country came down to the toss of a coin, which Scherger won.[104] He augmented his role at ACAC with chairmanship of the Commonwealth Aircraft Corporation (CAC) from 1968, and joined an Australian defence industries mission to the US the following year.[10]

Scherger continued to lead ACAC and CAC until retiring to live in Melbourne in 1975.[10] He also served as director on the boards of other firms including electronics companies Plessey Pacific and International Computers (Australia) Limited.[105] His wife Thelma died in a car accident in 1974. On 3 March 1975, at the age of seventy, he married Joy Robertson, a widow he had known three months.[105][106] At the time, he was quoted as saying, "In the Air Force you have to move quickly or someone else will shoot you down".[106] In retirement he attracted some controversy by continuing to advocate for the Australian military to acquire a nuclear capability.[10] Sir Frederick Scherger died in Melbourne on 16 January 1984, having been ill following a stroke the previous year.[10][16]

Legacy edit

Scherger was the first to go to the CAS post with a bit of class; the others approached it in a registered, a pedestrian fashion. There was a strain of ruthlessness in Scherger; he would not spare you if his interests and yours conflicted.

Air Vice Marshal Ellis Wackett [107]

Described by Alan Stephens as one of "the outstanding officers of the post-war era" and "among the RAAF's better chiefs",[108][109] Scherger is credited with helping to shift Australia's defence posture to the north by developing the concept of a series of front-line air bases in the continent's top end, beginning with plans for RAAF Tindal in 1959.[110] From the time of his command of No. 10 Operational Group, he had an easy rapport—and worked to foster relations—with the US military, presaging closer defence ties with the Americans that he pursued as CAS. Among other things this manifested itself in the purchase of more and more US equipment for the Air Force, and far less from the United Kingdom.[67][111] Once elevated to the position of Chairman of COSC, he further severed ties with Britain by removing senior Royal Australian Navy officers from the Royal Navy List, and dropping the words "... and Chief of the Australian Section of the Imperial General Staff" from the title of Chief of the General Staff in the Australian Army List.[112]

As Chairman of COSC, Scherger played a leading role in the large-scale commitment of Australian forces to Vietnam.[113][114] In an address at the Australian War Memorial in 2005, journalist Paul Kelly referred to him as "Australia's most prominent military hawk" at the time, who "exceeded his brief" by promising a battalion to the Americans before a formal request had been made.[115] Historians Peter Edwards and Gregory Pemberton have written that "no official could have done more to press Australia into a military commitment in Vietnam than its most highly ranked serviceman, Air Chief Marshal Scherger".[116] Reflecting later on Australia's involvement in the war, Scherger said "If you want allies, you've got to support allies ... It was never conceivable to us that America could lose—no way."[117]

 
Air Chief Marshal Sir Frederick Scherger KBE, CB, DSO, AFC

Along with Athol Townley, Minister for Defence from 1958 to 1963, Scherger urged the establishment of an Australian Joint Services Staff College (JSSC), to further inter-service knowledge and cooperation against an indigenous background instead of sending officers to overseas colleges; the JSSC opened in 1970 as the Joint Services Wing of a proposed Australian Services Staff College, later being subsumed by the Australian Defence College.[118][119] Scherger was also an early advocate for "one Australian Defence Force" comprising three branches, under one Minister for Defence, rather than three competing services, each with its own minister.[120][121] According to his biographer, Harry Rayner, he bequeathed to his successor as Chairman of COSC, Lieutenant General Sir John Wilton, a position much invigorated and respected by the service chiefs and the government, and contributing to a more cohesive Australian defence organisation.[120] In 1973, the single-service ministries were abolished in favour of an all-encompassing Department of Defence; by 1984, the Chairman COSC position had evolved to become the Chief of the Defence Force, directly commanding all three armed services through their respective chiefs.[122]

Rayner described Scherger as "the most quoted and best known of contemporary military leaders" in Australia from 1957 to 1966, recognised and admired by civilian and soldier alike.[123] Detractors accused him of cunning and excessive politicking, Air Marshal Williams declaring that Scherger favoured his friends in the service and later in TAA and CAC, and Prime Minister John Gorton famously calling him "a politician in uniform".[10][124] Scherger was also labelled a self-publicist, but argued "... you can't sell your ideas unless you can sell yourself, and if you can sell yourself you're half way to selling the ideas that you've got".[5][79] The newest of the northern air bases he proposed while CAS, near Weipa in Cape York, was opened in 1998 and named RAAF Base Scherger in his honour.[110][125] His name is also borne by Sir Frederick Scherger Drive in North Turramurra, New South Wales.[126]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Clark, Dr Chris (19 May 2005). . Air Force News, Volume 47, No. 8. Archived from the original on 8 June 2011. Retrieved 12 October 2007.
  2. ^ Personal correspondence at National Archives of Australia, pp. 6–7
  3. ^ Stephens, Alan (2012). "Scherger, Sir Frederick Rudolph (1904–1984)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol. 18. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISSN 1833-7538. Retrieved 8 April 2023.
  4. ^ a b c d Rayner, The Commanders, pp. 298–299
  5. ^ a b c d e Stephens; Isaacs, High Fliers, pp. 123–126
  6. ^ Stephens, The Royal Australian Air Force, p. 38
  7. ^ Moore, Duntroon, p. 64
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Personnel file at National Archives, pp. 2–4
  9. ^ a b "Royal Australian Air Force – Permanent Air Force". Commonwealth of Australia Gazette. No. 125. 17 November 1927. p. 2532. Retrieved 12 January 2019.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Dennis et al., Oxford Military History of Australia, pp. 530–531
  11. ^ Rayner, The Commanders, p. 304
  12. ^ Coulthard-Clark, The Third Brother, pp. 337–338
  13. ^ Coulthard-Clark, The Third Brother, p. 331
  14. ^ Stephens, Going Solo, p. 254
  15. ^ Legge, Who's Who in Australia 1968, p. 756
  16. ^ a b "Sir Frederick Scherger dies after illness". The Sydney Morning Herald. 18 January 1984. Retrieved 1 September 2009.[permanent dead link]
  17. ^ "Royal Australian Air Force – Permanent Air Force". Commonwealth of Australia Gazette. No. 74. 1 August 1929. p. 1728. Retrieved 12 January 2019.
  18. ^ Coulthard-Clark, The Third Brother, pp. 187–188, 405
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References edit

  • Andrews, Eric (2001). Australian Centenary History of Defence: Volume V – The Department of Defence. London: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-554113-8.
  • Coulthard-Clark, Chris (1995). The RAAF in Vietnam: Australian Air Involvement in the Vietnam War 1962–1975. St Leonards, New South Wales: Allen & Unwin in association with the Australian War Memorial. ISBN 1-86373-305-1.
  • Coulthard-Clark, Chris (1991). The Third Brother. North Sydney: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 0-04-442307-1.
  • Dennis, Peter; Grey, Jeffrey (1996). Emergency and Confrontation: Australian Military Operations in Malaya and Borneo 1950–1966. St Leonards, New South Wales: Allen & Unwin in association with the Australian War Memorial. ISBN 1-86373-302-7.
  • Dennis, Peter; Grey, Jeffrey; Morris, Ewan; Prior, Robin (2008) [1995]. The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History. South Melbourne: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-551784-2.
  • Department of Defence (26 March 1993). "Air Chief Marshal Sir F.R.W. Scherger". Personal Correspondence. Canberra: National Archives of Australia.
  • Department of Defence (30 January 2004). "Scherger, Frederick Rudolph William". Personnel File. Canberra: National Archives of Australia.[permanent dead link]
  • Draper, W.J., ed. (1983). Who's Who in Australia 1983. Melbourne: The Herald and Weekly Times.
  • Edwards, Peter; Pemberton, Gregory (1992). Crises and Commitments: The Politics and Diplomacy of Australia's Involvement in Southeast Asian Conflicts 1948–1965. North Sydney: Allen & Unwin in association with the Australian War Memorial. ISBN 1-86373-184-9.
  • Gillison, Douglas (1962). Australia in the War of 1939–1945: Series Three (Air) Volume I – Royal Australian Air Force 1939–1942. Canberra: Australian War Memorial. OCLC 2000369.
  • Grose, Peter (2009). An Awkward Truth: The Bombing of Darwin, February 1942. Crows Nest, New South Wales: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1-74175-643-2.
  • Gunn, John (1999). Contested Skies: Trans-Australian Airlines, Australian Airlines, 1946–1992. St. Lucia, Queensland: University of Queensland Press. ISBN 0-7022-3073-1.
  • Helson, Peter (2006). Ten Years at the Top (Ph. D thesis). Sydney: University of New South Wales. OCLC 225531223.
  • Horner, David (2002). . Command Papers. Canberra: Centre for Defence Leadership Studies, Australian Defence College. Archived from the original on 9 November 2014.
  • Horner, David (2001). Australian Centenary History of Defence: Volume IV – Making the Australian Defence Force. Melbourne: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-554117-0.
  • Legge, J.S., ed. (1968). Who's Who in Australia 1968. Melbourne: The Herald and Weekly Times.
  • Lockwood, Peter (2005) [1966]. Australia Under Attack: The Bombing of Darwin 1942. Chatswood, New South Wales: New Holland. ISBN 978-1-74110-269-7.
  • McNeill, Ian (1993). To Long Tan: The Australian Army and the Vietnam War 1950–1966. North Sydney: Allen & Unwin in association with the Australian War Memorial. ISBN 1-86373-282-9.
  • Moore, Darren (2001). Duntroon 1911–2001: A History of the Royal Military College of Australia. Canberra: Royal Military College, Duntroon. ISBN 1-876439-97-1.
  • Odgers, George (1968) [1957]. Australia in the War of 1939–1945: Series Three (Air) Volume II – Air War Against Japan 1943–45. Canberra: Australian War Memorial. OCLC 246580191.
  • Odgers, George (1999). 100 Years of Australians at War. Sydney: Landsdowne Publishing. ISBN 1-86302-669-X. OCLC 222721259.
  • RAAF Historical Section (1995). Units of the Royal Australian Air Force: A Concise History. Volume 8: Training Units. Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service. ISBN 0-644-42800-7.
  • Rayner, Harry (1992) [1984]. "Air Chief Marshal Sir Frederick Scherger". In David Horner (ed.). The Commanders: Australian Military Leadership in the Twentieth Century. Sydney: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-86373-190-3.
  • Reynolds, Wayne (2000). Australia's Bid for the Atomic Bomb. Carlton, Victoria: Melbourne University Press. ISBN 0-522-84914-8.
  • Roylance, Derek (1991). Air Base Richmond. RAAF Base Richmond, New South Wales: Royal Australian Air Force. ISBN 0-646-05212-8.
  • Sabey, Ian (1979). Challenge in the Skies: The Founding of T.A.A. Melbourne: Hyland House. ISBN 0-908090-19-6.
  • Stephens, Alan (1995). Going Solo: The Royal Australian Air Force 1946–1971. Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service. ISBN 0-644-42803-1.
  • Stephens, Alan (2006) [2001]. The Royal Australian Air Force: A History. London: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-555541-4.
  • Stephens, Alan; Isaacs, Jeff (1996). High Fliers: Leaders of the Royal Australian Air Force. Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service. ISBN 0-644-45682-5.

Further reading edit

  • Rayner, Harry (1984). Scherger: A Biography of Air Chief Marshal Sir Frederick Scherger. Canberra: Australian War Memorial. ISBN 0-642-87854-4.


Military offices
Preceded by
Squadron Leader John McCauley
Director of Training
1938–1940
Succeeded by
Group Captain George Jones
Preceded by
Air Commodore John McCauley
Deputy Chief of the Air Staff
1947–1951
Succeeded by
Air Vice Marshal Valston Hancock
Preceded by
Air Vice Marshal George Mills
RAF Air Headquarters Malaya
1953–1955
Succeeded by
Air Vice Marshal Wallace Kyle
Preceded by
Air Vice Marshal William Hely
Air Member for Personnel
1955–1957
Succeeded by
Air Commodore Frank Headlam
Preceded by
Air Marshal Sir John McCauley
Chief of the Air Staff
1957–1961
Succeeded by
Air Marshal Sir Valston Hancock
Preceded by
Vice Admiral Sir Roy Dowling
Chairman Chiefs of Staff Committee
1961–1966
Succeeded by
Honours and awards
SOURCE: Personnel file at National Archives, p. 3

frederick, scherger, chief, marshal, frederick, rudolph, william, scherger, 1904, january, 1984, senior, commander, royal, australian, force, raaf, served, chief, staff, raaf, highest, ranking, position, from, 1957, until, 1961, chairman, chiefs, staff, commit. Air Chief Marshal Sir Frederick Rudolph William Scherger KBE CB DSO AFC 18 May 1904 16 January 1984 was a senior commander in the Royal Australian Air Force RAAF He served as Chief of the Air Staff the RAAF s highest ranking position from 1957 until 1961 and as Chairman of the Chiefs of Staff Committee forerunner of the role of Australia s Chief of the Defence Force from 1961 until 1966 He was the first RAAF officer to hold the rank of air chief marshal 1 Sir Frederick Rudolph William SchergerAir Commodore Fred Scherger c 1945Nickname s Scherg Born18 May 1904Ararat VictoriaDied16 January 1984 1984 01 16 aged 79 MelbourneAllegianceAustraliaService wbr branchRoyal Australian Air ForceService years1921 1966 45 years RankAir Chief MarshalCommands heldDirectorate of Training 1938 1940 No 2 SFTS 1940 1941 RAAF Station Darwin 1941 1942 No 2 Training Group 1943 No 10 Group 1943 1944 First Tactical Air Force 1945 RAF AHQ Malaya 1953 1955 Chief of the Air Staff 1957 1961 Chairman COSC 1961 1966 Battles warsWorld War II South West Pacific Theatre Bombing of Darwin New Guinea campaign Operation Reckless Battle of Noemfoor Borneo campaign Battle of Tarakan Operation Oboe Six Malayan Emergency Indonesia Malaysia confrontation Vietnam WarAwardsKnight Commander of the Order of the British EmpireCompanion of the Order of the BathDistinguished Service OrderAir Force CrossOther workChairman ANAC 1966 1975 Chairman CAC 1968 1975 Born in Victoria of German origins Scherger graduated from the Royal Military College Duntroon before transferring to the Air Force in 1925 He was considered one of the top aviators between the wars serving as a fighter pilot test pilot and flying instructor He held senior training posts in the late 1930s and the early years of World War II earning the Air Force Cross in June 1940 Promoted to group captain Scherger was acting commander of North Western Area when Darwin suffered its first air raid in February 1942 Praised for his actions in the aftermath of the attack he went on to lead the RAAF s major mobile strike force in the South West Pacific No 10 Operational Group later the Australian First Tactical Air Force and was awarded the Distinguished Service Order in September 1944 for his actions during the assaults on Aitape and Noemfoor in New Guinea After the war Scherger served in senior posts including Deputy Chief of the Air Staff Head of the Australian Joint Services Staff in Washington D C and commander of Commonwealth air forces during the Malayan Emergency In 1957 he was promoted to air marshal and became Chief of the Air Staff CAS presiding over a significant modernisation of RAAF equipment Completing his term as CAS in 1961 he was the Air Force s first appointee to the position of Chairman of the Chiefs of Staff Committee COSC As Chairman of COSC Scherger became Australia s first air chief marshal in 1965 and played a leading role in the commitment of troops to the Vietnam War Leaving the military the following year he was appointed chairman of the Australian National Airlines Commission and from 1968 of the Commonwealth Aircraft Corporation Popularly known as Scherg 2 he retired in 1975 and lived in Melbourne until his death in 1984 at the age of seventy nine Contents 1 Early life and career 1 1 1920s Duntroon to Point Cook 1 2 1930s Flying instructor to Director of Training 2 World War II 2 1 1939 1942 Outbreak of war to raid on Darwin 2 2 1943 1945 No 10 Operational Group and First Tactical Air Force 3 Post war career 3 1 1946 1957 Rise to Chief of the Air Staff 3 2 1957 1961 Chief of the Air Staff 3 3 1961 1966 Chairman of the Chiefs of Staff Committee 4 Later life 5 Legacy 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further readingEarly life and career editFrederick Rudolph William Scherger was the third child of farmer Frederick Scherger and his wife Sarah Jane nee Chamberlain both native Victorians 3 Born on 18 May 1904 in Ararat young Fred was educated to junior certificate level at his local high school 4 5 His paternal grandparents were immigrants from Germany and his family was the object of xenophobia in his childhood during World War I This carried on into the early part of his military career and beyond as late as 1941 the author of an anonymous letter from RAAF Station Wagga to Prime Minister Robert Menzies stated that his blood ran cold at the notion of someone called Scherger commanding trainee Australian pilots 4 1920s Duntroon to Point Cook edit Scherger entered the Royal Military College Duntroon in 1921 and graduated as a lieutenant in 1924 winning the King s Medal 6 Two days before graduation he volunteered for an Air Force secondment which was later made permanent 1 7 On 21 January 1925 he received a permanent commission in the RAAF as a pilot officer temporary flying officer and commenced his flight training at RAAF Point Cook Victoria 8 9 He was promoted to flying officer with seniority from 21 January 1926 9 Scherger quickly took to the art of flying open cockpit biplanes and gained a reputation as a skilful if occasionally reckless pilot being berated early in his career by his flight commander for inverted and very low flying 10 11 He was one of the Air Force s first volunteers for parachute instruction under the tutelage of Flying Officer Ellis Wackett at RAAF Station Richmond New South Wales and made the first public freefall descent in Australia at Essendon Victoria on 21 August 1926 12 In February 1927 he was asked by the commanding officer of No 1 Flying Training School No 1 FTS Wing Commander Adrian King Cole to drop a message to a woman at Port Melbourne before she departed on a steamer After doing so Scherger illegally flew his S E 5 fighter between ship and wharf before heading back to Point Cook only to be hauled into Cole s office the next morning to find the CO brandishing a photograph taken by a member of the public catching the young pilot in the act Sent for a dressing down to the Air Member for Personnel Group Captain Jimmy Goble Scherger was forced to admit it was not the first time he had engaged in such stunts Goble responded Good I m glad to see we ve still got a few in the Air Force with spirit 13 1930s Flying instructor to Director of Training edit nbsp Squadron Leader Scherger left with Federal Treasurer Richard Casey at Point Cook 1937By the 1930s as a flight instructor and test pilot Scherger was according to historian Alan Stephens perhaps the RAAF s outstanding aviator 14 He married Thelma Harrick on 1 June 1929 they had a daughter 15 16 Promoted to flight lieutenant on 1 June 1929 17 Scherger became chief flying instructor CFI at Point Cook that August 8 He also flew with Fighter Squadron a unit of No 1 FTS operating Bristol Bulldogs As one of the leading pilots of the Bulldog then regarded as the peak of military technology and in what was generally thought of as the RAAF s elite formation he gained popular exposure that may have helped his later rise to senior leadership 18 In October 1931 he won an Aero Club derby at Adelaide in a Bulldog clocking a top speed of 160 98 mph 259 07 km h 19 In August 1934 Scherger was posted to England to study at RAF Staff College Andover 8 10 Just prior to departing he was involved in a notorious incident at RAAF Station Laverton A squadron leader arrived home early from a mess function to find his wife sleeping with another officer who escaped by crashing through the bedroom window The squadron leader then pursued his wife with a loaded revolver the pair eventually arriving at Scherger s quarters Faced with the frightened woman and the enraged husband crying that he would shoot the bitch Scherger knocked the man down with a poker The unconscious husband was placed in the guardhouse and the woman given shelter off the base the officer she had slept with promptly resigned his commission 20 Scherger graduated from Andover in December 1935 and subsequently completed courses at the RAF s School of Air Navigation and Central Flying School 8 10 He was promoted to squadron leader on 1 July 1936 21 Returning to Australia he resumed his position as CFI at Point Cook in May 1937 As directed by the Federal government he was responsible for training the Treasurer Richard Casey to fly the use of Air Force facilities for his own benefit by an elected official led to adverse publicity when it was revealed by the media 8 22 In September Scherger test flew the North American NA 16 at Laverton the evaluation program led to the design being adapted as the CAC Wirraway the following year 23 He was appointed Director of Training at RAAF Headquarters Melbourne in January 1938 and promoted to wing commander on 1 March 1939 24 8 World War II edit1939 1942 Outbreak of war to raid on Darwin edit nbsp Explosion of an oil storage tank during the first air raid on Darwin 19 February 1942As Director of Training at the outbreak of World War II Scherger s main challenge was to expand the RAAF s pool of flying instructors 25 Central Flying School Australia s first military aviation unit was re formed for this purpose in April 1940 26 Awarded the Air Force Cross in June 1940 for his outstanding ability as a pilot and instructor 27 28 he took charge of No 2 Service Flying Training School near Wagga the following month and was promoted to temporary group captain on 1 September 8 29 30 In October 1941 he was made commanding officer of RAAF Station Darwin Northern Territory Described by Major General Lewis H Brereton commander of the US Far East Air Force as energetic efficient and very impatient Scherger started improving the operational readiness of the base and its surrounds without waiting for specific orders from RAAF Headquarters 31 32 The following January he was appointed senior air staff officer to Air Commodore Douglas Wilson Air Officer Commanding AOC of North Western Area Command NWA which administered RAAF Station Darwin and other airfields in the Northern Territory and north west Western Australia 10 33 In Wilson s absence at ABDA Command Headquarters in Java Scherger was acting AOC NWA on 19 February 1942 when Darwin suffered its first aerial attacks by the Japanese 5 33 Driving into town to meet Air Marshal Richard Williams who was in transit on his way to England Scherger first became aware of the assault after he heard anti aircraft fire and counted twenty seven enemy aircraft in the distance He arrived at the civil airfield to witness a Curtiss P 40 crash land on the runway before his car was strafed by fighters 34 In a lull after the initial attack that day he made contact with Williams before the two men were forced to take shelter in a makeshift trench that was straddled by falling bombs as a second raid got under way Afterwards Scherger began to restore order and launched a Hudson light bomber on a reconnaissance mission though there was no further contact with Japanese forces 35 I was unemployed for one month which isn t very encouraging in the middle of a war Fred Scherger on his removal from North Western Area Command in the wake of the February 1942 air raids 36 As well as the loss of civil and military infrastructure twenty three aircraft and ten ships and the death of some 250 people 278 RAAF personnel had deserted Darwin in an exodus that became known as the Adelaide River Stakes 31 37 There was in Scherger s words an awful panic and a lot of men simply went bush 38 Praised for his great courage and energy he was one of the few senior Air Force officers in the region to emerge from Commissioner Charles Lowe s inquiry into the debacle with his long term career prospects undamaged 31 In the immediate aftermath though his outspoken criticism of the RAAF s state of preparedness alienated members of the Air Board the service s controlling body that consisted of its most senior officers and which was chaired by the Chief of the Air Staff CAS 10 39 He was relieved of his position at NWA by the CAS Air Chief Marshal Sir Charles Burnett and shunted through a series of postings for the remainder of the year 10 36 including commanding officer at RAAF Station Richmond 40 supernumerary at RAAF Headquarters 8 Director of Defence at Allied Air Forces Headquarters South West Pacific Area 41 and Director of Training at RAAF Headquarters 8 Seeking restitution he boldly went over the heads of the Air Board and successfully appealed to the Minister for Air Arthur Drakeford supported by Commissioner Lowe 42 1943 1945 No 10 Operational Group and First Tactical Air Force edit nbsp Air Commodore Scherger left with USAAF Brigadier General Paul Wurtsmith second left on 24 April 1944 after the landings at AitapeScherger served as Officer Commanding No 2 Training Group at RAAF Station Wagga from July 1943 until he was appointed AOC of the newly formed No 10 Operational Group No 10 OG in November 10 The Air Force s main mobile strike force No 10 OG at its formation consisted of No 77 Wing operating A 31 Vengeance dive bombers and No 78 Wing operating P 40 Kittyhawk fighters as well as several ancillary units 43 Promoted to acting air commodore on 25 January 1944 44 Scherger established his headquarters at Nadzab Papua New Guinea in support of the US Fifth Air Force Though able to launch No 78 Wing s first mission that same month he had to deal with several organisational problems to bring all his squadrons to combat readiness including lack of training in tropical conditions and shortcomings in aircraft maintenance and staff rotation that resulted in the RAAF s operational rate of effort being inferior to similar USAAF formations These issues were overcome later in the year and No 10 OG units began exceeding the rate of effort of their American counterparts 45 By March 1944 No 77 Wing s Vengeances had been withdrawn from operations due to their inferiority to newer equipment Three squadrons from No 9 Operational Group one each flying Bostons Beaufighters and Beauforts were assigned to the Wing as replacements but No 10 OG itself was moved from Nadzab to Cape Gloucester to permit USAAF units with longer ranged aircraft to occupy vital airfields on the Allied front line 46 The group s disappointment with its withdrawal from Nadzab was tempered by news that it was to take part in the forthcoming attack on Aitape New Guinea codenamed Operation Reckless Scherger was appointed air commander for the assault leading US and Australian units 47 No 78 Wing s Kittyhawks shadowed the main task force while heavier aircraft from NWA conducted bombing and mining sorties to indirectly support the operation 48 The landings on 22 April 1944 met little opposition credited in part to the Allied bombardment in the days leading up to it 49 With elements of No 10 OG going ashore on the first day Aitape airfield was repaired and No 78 Wing was operating from it within three days 50 In June Scherger was named commander of Australian and US air forces for the attack on Noemfoor Island 51 Over the course of the battle that commenced on 2 July he controlled Nos 71 77 78 and 81 Wings RAAF as well as the USAAF s 58th and 348th Fighter Groups and 307th and 417th Bombardment Groups 52 Scherger was promoted to temporary air commodore on 1 August 53 and was awarded the Distinguished Service Order for his actions at Aitape and Noemfoor 54 the citation noting that he operated his air forces with great skill and success and praising the way he placed himself in the forefront of the landing of the ground troops where his personal courage and leadership proved an inspiration to all personnel 51 nbsp Scherger right with Lieutenant General Leslie Morshead in Labuan August 1945A jeep accident in August left Scherger with a fractured pelvis necessitating his evacuation to Australia for rehabilitation In his absence Air Commodore Harry Cobby took command of No 10 OG two months later the formation was redesignated the Australian First Tactical Air Force No 1 TAF 10 55 Still recuperating Scherger acted in the role of Air Member for Personnel at RAAF Headquarters Melbourne from January to May 1945 8 10 On 10 May he was posted back to the Pacific to resume control of No 1 TAF following Cobby s dismissal in the wake of the Morotai Mutiny 56 57 He returned as Operation Oboe One the Battle of Tarakan was under way No 1 TAF s airfield construction teams had been tasked with opening the runway on Tarakan Island within a week of Allied landings but extensive pre invasion damage and adverse environmental conditions delayed this until the end of June 57 He then led No 1 TAF in Operation Oboe Six the invasion of Labuan going ashore on the afternoon of the landings on 10 June to establish his command post 58 By July when the final Allied offensive of the Borneo Campaign took place as Operation Oboe Two in Balikpapan No 1 TAF had reached a strength of some 25 000 personnel by the end of hostilities on 14 August this figure had been reduced with the transfer of units to the recently formed No 11 Group 59 Post war career edit1946 1957 Rise to Chief of the Air Staff edit In October 1945 Scherger led a survey team to Japan to review airfields and other facilities being considered for the British Commonwealth Occupation Force determining that substantial work was needed to bring them up to the required capacity 60 The following year he attended the Imperial Defence College London He was promoted to substantive group captain on 1 January 1947 61 and was appointed Deputy Chief of the Air Staff DCAS on 1 July 62 Scherger was raised to substantive air commodore on 23 September 1948 63 and promoted to temporary air vice marshal on 1 May 1950 64 8 10 He was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire CBE in the King s Birthday Honours the same year 65 As DCAS Scherger reported to Air Marshal George Jones whose ten year term as CAS would the longest of any incumbent in the position The pair enjoyed a cordial working relationship and Jones earmarked the younger officer as a leader of the future 66 Scherger could not persuade his conservative chief to revamp the Air Force from its wartime area command structure into a more modern service organised along functional lines this radical change would await Jones successor Air Marshal Sir Donald Hardman 67 68 You always got a straight answer from Scherger even when you didn t like it He was very pro Australian and why not Major General Sir William Oliver Chief of Staff to General Sir Gerald Templer Malaya 69 After completing his tour as DCAS in July 1951 Scherger was posted to Washington D C to head up the Australian Joint Services Staff He was promoted to substantive air vice marshal on 1 July 1952 70 On 1 January 1953 he succeeded Air Vice Marshal George Mills as AOC of RAF Air Headquarters Malaya 71 72 In this role Scherger commanded all Commonwealth air forces in the region and was responsible for operations against communist guerrillas during the emergency 69 Scherger deliberately sited his headquarters which had been based in Singapore when he took over next to the offices of the Director of Operations in Kuala Lumpur to more closely align air tasking with overall military planning He expanded the use of helicopters for troop delivery and casualty evacuation and presided over a change in tactics that saw an earlier policy of indiscriminate saturation bombing of jungle areas replaced by one of precision strike against enemy camps 73 He also pioneered psychological warfare in the form of voice aircraft broadcasting propaganda close cooperation between light aircraft spotters and ground forces to aid bombing missions and defoliation to clear jungle cover 69 Appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath on 30 April 1954 for his service in Malaya 74 75 Scherger joined the Air Board as Air Member for Personnel in March 1955 10 During his term he commissioned a review into the effectiveness of the syllabus at RAAF College for meeting the future needs of the Air Force in an age of missiles and nuclear weaponry This led to a policy of cadets undertaking academic degrees in line with similar institutions in the other armed services the College was subsequently renamed RAAF Academy 76 Promoted air marshal he became Chief of the Air Staff on 19 March 1957 succeeding Air Marshal Sir John McCauley 77 Long identified as a strong contender for the RAAF s senior role 78 Scherger was described by Air Marshal Hardman as easily the best material on offer 5 He declared that as an administrator he was not going to allow myself to be bogged down with minor matters of detail Broad policy comes from the top These decisions have to be implemented in the commands and that s the way it s going to be 79 1957 1961 Chief of the Air Staff edit As CAS one of Scherger s first tasks was investigating the feasibility of a nuclear arsenal for the Air Force During visits to Britain and the US he explored the possibility of weapons being delivered by the RAAF s Sabre fighters or its Canberra bombers 80 In 1958 he held discussions with the Chief of Staff of the USAF General Thomas D White about storing nuclear weapons in Australia under USAF control In 1959 and 1960 Scherger had information sent out including manuals and maintenance instructions regarding equipping the Canberras with Mark 7 nuclear bombs the same type that the British Canberras used 81 For a time Scherger championed the purchase of a force of British built Vulcan heavy bombers but excessive cost and a governmental determination to remain under the shelter of the American nuclear umbrella put paid to the proposal 80 Instead in 1963 the decision was taken to purchase the General Dynamics F 111 swing wing bomber on the understanding that it could carry nuclear weapons 82 Turning to fighters Scherger succeeded in reversing a publicly announced decision to purchase the F 104 Starfighter as a replacement for the Sabre in favour of the Dassault Mirage III a type better suited for Australia s requirements 79 During trials he had taken the controls of a Starfighter reportedly becoming the first Australian to fly at twice the speed of sound 83 He was appointed Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire KBE in the 1958 Queen s Birthday Honours 84 An advocate of helicopters since his experience in Malaya Scherger influenced purchase of the UH 1 Iroquois for Australia 79 He also played a key role in the acquisition of the C 130 Hercules transport in 1958 over the Federal treasury s bureaucratic hand wringing the type soon proved itself vital to defence force activity in the region being described as second only to the F 111 as the most significant aircraft the RAAF has ever operated 85 The following year harking back to his experience in 1942 Scherger proposed a second airfield in the Darwin area which led eventually to the establishment of RAAF Base Tindal near Katherine 86 He transferred funding already in place for extension of the runway at Laverton to effect this signalling a fundamental shift in the Air Force s centre of gravity to the north of Australia 79 The first edition of RAAF News now Air Force News which had been sponsored by Scherger appeared in January 1960 and carried a message from the CAS concerning current defence policy as well as announcing that Sidewinder air to air missiles would begin equipping the Air Force s Sabres 79 87 Scherger also oversaw introduction of Bloodhound surface to air missiles to the RAAF s arsenal 79 Towards the end of his term as CAS he expressed interest in Britain s supersonic BAC TSR 2 as a replacement for the Canberra but noted that it was many years from production 88 1961 1966 Chairman of the Chiefs of Staff Committee edit Scherger became Chairman of the Chiefs of Staff Committee COSC the senior Australian military position at the time in May 1961 taking over from Vice Admiral Sir Roy Dowling 89 Keen as ever to see a supersonic bomber replace the Canberra he visited Britain in April 1963 to investigate progress of the TSR 2 Using back channel sources of information he satisfied himself that the RAF s pronouncements on the bomber s development were overly optimistic and later that year began supporting selection of the F 111 as the aircraft best suited to supplant the Canberra 88 nbsp RAAF Caribous and personnel on arrival in South Vietnam August 1964During the Indonesia Malaysia Konfrontasi Scherger acted as military liaison between the British and Australian governments Openly sceptical about the cease fire announced by President Sukarno on 25 January 1964 he supported British requests for Australian combat forces in Borneo but was in the short term overruled by political cross currents 90 Towards the end of the year he advocated bombing Indonesian air bases using RAAF Canberras in Malaya but in this instance the British held back 91 Although Australia eventually deployed battalions of the Royal Australian Regiment from March 1965 Scherger s earlier optimistic estimation of the speed and level of his government s readiness to commit troops was said to have confused the British 92 The latter part of Scherger s tour as Chairman COSC coincided with the beginning of large scale Australian involvement in the Vietnam War 93 By mid 1964 the Commonwealth had already sent a small team of military advisors plus a detachment of newly acquired DHC 4 Caribou transports to the region at the request of the South Vietnamese government 94 At a joint US Australian and New Zealand conference from 30 March to 1 April 1965 and with instructions only to ascertain America s objectives in the conflict Scherger indicated that Australia would be prepared to commit a sizeable ground force of around battalion size Within a week Prime Minister Robert Menzies Federal cabinet had ratified the proposal which was formally announced on 19 April 93 95 The 1st Battalion Royal Australian Regiment deployed to Vietnam in May 1965 93 and two squadrons of the RAAF were committed by mid 1966 96 With the formation of Australian Forces Vietnam AFV at this time Scherger recommended that Air Force units effectively serve under Army control to convey an image of all Australian forces fighting together as one unit The Minister for Air Peter Howson felt that this made Scherger and the Army guilty of exaggerated national pride 97 Promoted to air chief marshal on 25 March 1965 98 Scherger became not only the first RAAF officer to attain four star rank 4 10 but also the first Duntroon graduate to do so 4 99 Already considered a particularly assertive Chairman of COSC 100 his role was further strengthened by the promotion as he now out ranked the three service heads His predecessors in the position had not advanced beyond three star rank 101 Scherger remained as chairman until retiring from military life on 18 May 1966 8 having twice had his term extended by unanimous vote of Federal cabinet 5 Later life edit nbsp TAA DC 9 at Adelaide Airport 1967After leaving the military Scherger became chairman of the Australian National Airlines Commission ACAC the controlling body of the Federal government s domestic carrier Trans Australia Airlines TAA on 1 July 1966 102 Considered as bringing to TAA the dash and leadership the new air age demanded 103 he presided over delivery of its first Douglas DC 9 twin jet transport in 1967 The government s Two Airlines Policy designed to ensure even competition between TAA and Australia s private domestic carrier Ansett meant that the decision of which airline would land the first DC 9 in the country came down to the toss of a coin which Scherger won 104 He augmented his role at ACAC with chairmanship of the Commonwealth Aircraft Corporation CAC from 1968 and joined an Australian defence industries mission to the US the following year 10 Scherger continued to lead ACAC and CAC until retiring to live in Melbourne in 1975 10 He also served as director on the boards of other firms including electronics companies Plessey Pacific and International Computers Australia Limited 105 His wife Thelma died in a car accident in 1974 On 3 March 1975 at the age of seventy he married Joy Robertson a widow he had known three months 105 106 At the time he was quoted as saying In the Air Force you have to move quickly or someone else will shoot you down 106 In retirement he attracted some controversy by continuing to advocate for the Australian military to acquire a nuclear capability 10 Sir Frederick Scherger died in Melbourne on 16 January 1984 having been ill following a stroke the previous year 10 16 Legacy editScherger was the first to go to the CAS post with a bit of class the others approached it in a registered a pedestrian fashion There was a strain of ruthlessness in Scherger he would not spare you if his interests and yours conflicted Air Vice Marshal Ellis Wackett 107 Described by Alan Stephens as one of the outstanding officers of the post war era and among the RAAF s better chiefs 108 109 Scherger is credited with helping to shift Australia s defence posture to the north by developing the concept of a series of front line air bases in the continent s top end beginning with plans for RAAF Tindal in 1959 110 From the time of his command of No 10 Operational Group he had an easy rapport and worked to foster relations with the US military presaging closer defence ties with the Americans that he pursued as CAS Among other things this manifested itself in the purchase of more and more US equipment for the Air Force and far less from the United Kingdom 67 111 Once elevated to the position of Chairman of COSC he further severed ties with Britain by removing senior Royal Australian Navy officers from the Royal Navy List and dropping the words and Chief of the Australian Section of the Imperial General Staff from the title of Chief of the General Staff in the Australian Army List 112 As Chairman of COSC Scherger played a leading role in the large scale commitment of Australian forces to Vietnam 113 114 In an address at the Australian War Memorial in 2005 journalist Paul Kelly referred to him as Australia s most prominent military hawk at the time who exceeded his brief by promising a battalion to the Americans before a formal request had been made 115 Historians Peter Edwards and Gregory Pemberton have written that no official could have done more to press Australia into a military commitment in Vietnam than its most highly ranked serviceman Air Chief Marshal Scherger 116 Reflecting later on Australia s involvement in the war Scherger said If you want allies you ve got to support allies It was never conceivable to us that America could lose no way 117 nbsp Air Chief Marshal Sir Frederick Scherger KBE CB DSO AFCAlong with Athol Townley Minister for Defence from 1958 to 1963 Scherger urged the establishment of an Australian Joint Services Staff College JSSC to further inter service knowledge and cooperation against an indigenous background instead of sending officers to overseas colleges the JSSC opened in 1970 as the Joint Services Wing of a proposed Australian Services Staff College later being subsumed by the Australian Defence College 118 119 Scherger was also an early advocate for one Australian Defence Force comprising three branches under one Minister for Defence rather than three competing services each with its own minister 120 121 According to his biographer Harry Rayner he bequeathed to his successor as Chairman of COSC Lieutenant General Sir John Wilton a position much invigorated and respected by the service chiefs and the government and contributing to a more cohesive Australian defence organisation 120 In 1973 the single service ministries were abolished in favour of an all encompassing Department of Defence by 1984 the Chairman COSC position had evolved to become the Chief of the Defence Force directly commanding all three armed services through their respective chiefs 122 Rayner described Scherger as the most quoted and best known of contemporary military leaders in Australia from 1957 to 1966 recognised and admired by civilian and soldier alike 123 Detractors accused him of cunning and excessive politicking Air Marshal Williams declaring that Scherger favoured his friends in the service and later in TAA and CAC and Prime Minister John Gorton famously calling him a politician in uniform 10 124 Scherger was also labelled a self publicist but argued you can t sell your ideas unless you can sell yourself and if you can sell yourself you re half way to selling the ideas that you ve got 5 79 The newest of the northern air bases he proposed while CAS near Weipa in Cape York was opened in 1998 and named RAAF Base Scherger in his honour 110 125 His name is also borne by Sir Frederick Scherger Drive in North Turramurra New South Wales 126 Notes edit a b Clark Dr Chris 19 May 2005 Air Force Defence Chiefs of the Past Air Force News Volume 47 No 8 Archived from the original on 8 June 2011 Retrieved 12 October 2007 Personal correspondence at National Archives of Australia pp 6 7 Stephens Alan 2012 Scherger Sir Frederick Rudolph 1904 1984 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 18 National Centre of Biography Australian National University ISSN 1833 7538 Retrieved 8 April 2023 a b c d Rayner The Commanders pp 298 299 a b c d e Stephens Isaacs High Fliers pp 123 126 Stephens The Royal Australian Air Force p 38 Moore Duntroon p 64 a b c d e f g h i j k l Personnel file at National Archives pp 2 4 a b Royal Australian Air Force Permanent Air Force Commonwealth of Australia Gazette No 125 17 November 1927 p 2532 Retrieved 12 January 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Dennis et al Oxford Military History of Australia pp 530 531 Rayner The Commanders p 304 Coulthard Clark The Third Brother pp 337 338 Coulthard Clark The Third Brother p 331 Stephens Going Solo p 254 Legge Who s Who in Australia 1968 p 756 a b Sir Frederick Scherger dies after illness The Sydney Morning Herald 18 January 1984 Retrieved 1 September 2009 permanent dead link Royal Australian Air Force Permanent Air Force Commonwealth of Australia Gazette No 74 1 August 1929 p 1728 Retrieved 12 January 2019 Coulthard Clark The Third Brother pp 187 188 405 Coulthard Clark The Third Brother p 401 Coulthard Clark The Third Brother pp 123 124 Royal Australian Air Force Permanent Air Force Commonwealth of Australia Gazette No 64 6 August 1936 p 1448 Retrieved 12 January 2019 Coulthard Clark The Third Brother pp 201 202 Coulthard Clark The Third Brother pp 275 281 Royal Australian Air Force Permanent Air Force Commonwealth of Australia Gazette No 24 20 April 1939 p 648 Retrieved 12 January 2019 Gillison Royal Australian Air Force p 71 Archived 3 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine Stephens The Royal Australian Air Force p 68 Personnel file at National Archives pp 203 204 No 34893 The London Gazette Supplement 9 July 1940 p 4269 Royal Australian Air Force Permanent Air Force Commonwealth of Australia Gazette No 190 12 September 1940 p 1960 Retrieved 12 January 2019 RAAF Historical Section Units of the Royal Australian Air Force pp 102 103 a b c Stephens The Royal Australian Air Force pp 136 138 Gillison Royal Australian Air Force p 184 a b Gillison Royal Australian Air Force pp 424 425 Lockwood Australia Under Attack pp 35 36 Lockwood Australia Under Attack pp 128 129 a b Rayner The Commanders p 301 Grose An Awkward Truth pp 225 231 Lockwood Australia Under Attack p 133 Stephens The Royal Australian Air Force p 112 Roylance Air Base Richmond p 113 Gillison Royal Australian Air Force p 473 Archived 22 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine Grose An Awkward Truth pp 213 214 Odgers Air War Against Japan pp 182 183 Royal Australian Air Force Permanent Air Force Commonwealth of Australia Gazette No 34 17 February 1944 p 507 Retrieved 12 January 2019 Odgers Air War Against Japan pp 192 194 Odgers Air War Against Japan pp 196 198 Odgers Air War Against Japan p 206 Odgers Air War Against Japan p 213 Odgers Air War Against Japan p 218 Odgers Air War Against Japan pp 210 211 a b Rayner The Commanders p 302 Odgers Air War Against Japan p 237 Royal Australian Air Force Permanent Air Force Commonwealth of Australia Gazette No 206 19 October 1944 p 1370 Retrieved 12 January 2019 No 36713 The London Gazette Supplement 19 September 1944 p 4393 Odgers Air War Against Japan p 241 Stephens The Royal Australian Air Force pp 123 124 a b Odgers Air War Against Japan pp 459 461 Odgers Air War Against Japan pp 470 471 Odgers Air War Against Japan pp 477 479 Stephens Going Solo p 211 Royal Australian Air Force Permanent Air Force Commonwealth of Australia Gazette No 94 29 May 1947 p 1454 Retrieved 12 January 2019 Royal Australian Air Force Commonwealth of Australia Gazette No 146 7 August 1947 p 2329 Retrieved 12 January 2019 Royal Australian Air Force Commonwealth of Australia Gazette No 139 23 September 1948 p 3386 Retrieved 12 January 2019 Royal Australian Air Force Commonwealth of Australia Gazette No 68 16 November 1950 p 2906 Retrieved 12 January 2019 No 38930 The London Gazette Supplement 2 June 1950 p 2810 Helson Ten Years at the Top pp 264 265 299 a b Rayner The Commanders pp 304 305 Helson Ten Years at the Top pp 253 254 a b c Rayner The Commanders pp 305 307 Royal Australian Air Force Commonwealth of Australia Gazette No 63 18 September 1952 p 3776 Retrieved 12 January 2019 Big air command in Malaya The Sydney Morning Herald 31 July 1952 p 1 Retrieved 16 October 2022 via National Library of Australia Air chief moves into Malaya The Mercury 31 December 1952 p 2 Retrieved 16 October 2022 via National Library of Australia Dennis Grey Emergency and Confrontation pp 39 41 Recommended Companion of the Order of the Bath at Australian War Memorial Retrieved 6 November 2009 No 40163 The London Gazette Supplement 30 April 1954 p 2617 Stephens The Royal Australian Air Force p 188 Royal Australian Air Force Constitution of the Air Board Commonwealth of Australia Gazette No 19 28 March 1957 p 981 Retrieved 12 January 2019 Helson Ten Years at the Top p 291 a b c d e f g Rayner The Commanders pp 307 311 a b Stephens The Royal Australian Air Force pp 224 225 Reynolds Australia s Bid for the Atomic Bomb p 206 Reynolds Australia s Bid for the Atomic Bomb p 210 Personal correspondence at National Archives of Australia p 5 No 41405 The London Gazette Supplement 3 June 1958 p 3550 Stephens Going Solo pp 416 417 Stephens Going Solo pp 55 57 Stephens Going Solo p 114 a b Stephens Going Solo pp 369 374 Chief of the Defence Force Archived 30 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine at Department of Defence Archived 16 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 6 November 2009 Dennis Grey Emergency and Confrontation pp 193 194 Dennis Grey Emergency and Confrontation pp 228 229 Dennis Grey Emergency and Confrontation pp 237 319 a b c Odgers 100 Years of Australians at War pp 310 312 Odgers 100 Years of Australians at War pp 300 306 McNeill To Long Tan pp 63 65 Odgers 100 Years of Australians at War p 318 Coulthard Clark The RAAF in Vietnam pp 78 79 Royal Australian Air Force Permanent Air Force Commonwealth of Australia Gazette No 30 8 April 1965 p 1375 Retrieved 12 January 2019 Moore Duntroon p 70 Coulthard Clark The RAAF in Vietnam pp 28 29 Horner Making the Australian Defence Force p 43 Gunn Contested Skies pp 211 212 Sabey Challenge in the Skies p 122 Gunn Contested Skies pp 200 221 a b Draper Who s Who in Australia 1983 p 761 a b Personnel file at National Archives p 276 Rayner The Commanders p 314 Stephens Going Solo p 173 Stephens The Royal Australian Air Force p 221 a b Stephens The Royal Australian Air Force pp 283 284 Odgers Air War Against Japan pp 184 185 Rayner The Commanders p 300 Edwards Crises and Commitments pp 358 360 Woodward Gary 30 May 2003 Asian alternatives Going to war in the 1960s PDF Frederick Watson Fellowship Papers National Archives of Australia Retrieved 2 March 2012 Kelly Paul 11 November 2005 Vietnam 30 years on Talks and Speeches Australian War Memorial Retrieved 15 September 2009 Edwards Crises and Commitments p 383 Rayner The Commanders p 311 Stephens Going Solo p 143 A History of the Australian Defence College Archived 7 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine at Department of Defence Retrieved 13 November 2009 a b Rayner The Commanders pp 311 313 Andrews The Department of Defence p 183 Horner The Evolution of Australian Higher Command Arrangements pp 24 27 Rayner The Commanders p 313 Rayner The Commanders p 349 Joint Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs Defence and Trade 27 September 1999 Defence Sub Committee Visit to Defence Establishments in Northern Australia 26 29 July 1999 PDF Commonwealth of Australia Archived from the original PDF on 5 October 2009 Retrieved 15 September 2009 Sir Frederick Scherger Drive at Whereis Retrieved 13 November 2009 References editAndrews Eric 2001 Australian Centenary History of Defence Volume V The Department of Defence London Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 554113 8 Coulthard Clark Chris 1995 The RAAF in Vietnam Australian Air Involvement in the Vietnam War 1962 1975 St Leonards New South Wales Allen amp Unwin in association with the Australian War Memorial ISBN 1 86373 305 1 Coulthard Clark Chris 1991 The Third Brother North Sydney Allen amp Unwin ISBN 0 04 442307 1 Dennis Peter Grey Jeffrey 1996 Emergency and Confrontation Australian Military Operations in Malaya and Borneo 1950 1966 St Leonards New South Wales Allen amp Unwin in association with the Australian War Memorial ISBN 1 86373 302 7 Dennis Peter Grey Jeffrey Morris Ewan Prior Robin 2008 1995 The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History South Melbourne Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 551784 2 Department of Defence 26 March 1993 Air Chief Marshal Sir F R W Scherger Personal Correspondence Canberra National Archives of Australia Department of Defence 30 January 2004 Scherger Frederick Rudolph William Personnel File Canberra National Archives of Australia permanent dead link Draper W J ed 1983 Who s Who in Australia 1983 Melbourne The Herald and Weekly Times Edwards Peter Pemberton Gregory 1992 Crises and Commitments The Politics and Diplomacy of Australia s Involvement in Southeast Asian Conflicts 1948 1965 North Sydney Allen amp Unwin in association with the Australian War Memorial ISBN 1 86373 184 9 Gillison Douglas 1962 Australia in the War of 1939 1945 Series Three Air Volume I Royal Australian Air Force 1939 1942 Canberra Australian War Memorial OCLC 2000369 Grose Peter 2009 An Awkward Truth The Bombing of Darwin February 1942 Crows Nest New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 1 74175 643 2 Gunn John 1999 Contested Skies Trans Australian Airlines Australian Airlines 1946 1992 St Lucia Queensland University of Queensland Press ISBN 0 7022 3073 1 Helson Peter 2006 Ten Years at the Top Ph D thesis Sydney University of New South Wales OCLC 225531223 Horner David 2002 The Evolution of Australian Higher Command Arrangements Command Papers Canberra Centre for Defence Leadership Studies Australian Defence College Archived from the original on 9 November 2014 Horner David 2001 Australian Centenary History of Defence Volume IV Making the Australian Defence Force Melbourne Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 554117 0 Legge J S ed 1968 Who s Who in Australia 1968 Melbourne The Herald and Weekly Times Lockwood Peter 2005 1966 Australia Under Attack The Bombing of Darwin 1942 Chatswood New South Wales New Holland ISBN 978 1 74110 269 7 McNeill Ian 1993 To Long Tan The Australian Army and the Vietnam War 1950 1966 North Sydney Allen amp Unwin in association with the Australian War Memorial ISBN 1 86373 282 9 Moore Darren 2001 Duntroon 1911 2001 A History of the Royal Military College of Australia Canberra Royal Military College Duntroon ISBN 1 876439 97 1 Odgers George 1968 1957 Australia in the War of 1939 1945 Series Three Air Volume II Air War Against Japan 1943 45 Canberra Australian War Memorial OCLC 246580191 Odgers George 1999 100 Years of Australians at War Sydney Landsdowne Publishing ISBN 1 86302 669 X OCLC 222721259 RAAF Historical Section 1995 Units of the Royal Australian Air Force A Concise History Volume 8 Training Units Canberra Australian Government Publishing Service ISBN 0 644 42800 7 Rayner Harry 1992 1984 Air Chief Marshal Sir Frederick Scherger In David Horner ed The Commanders Australian Military Leadership in the Twentieth Century Sydney Allen amp Unwin ISBN 1 86373 190 3 Reynolds Wayne 2000 Australia s Bid for the Atomic Bomb Carlton Victoria Melbourne University Press ISBN 0 522 84914 8 Roylance Derek 1991 Air Base Richmond RAAF Base Richmond New South Wales Royal Australian Air Force ISBN 0 646 05212 8 Sabey Ian 1979 Challenge in the Skies The Founding of T A A Melbourne Hyland House ISBN 0 908090 19 6 Stephens Alan 1995 Going Solo The Royal Australian Air Force 1946 1971 Canberra Australian Government Publishing Service ISBN 0 644 42803 1 Stephens Alan 2006 2001 The Royal Australian Air Force A History London Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 555541 4 Stephens Alan Isaacs Jeff 1996 High Fliers Leaders of the Royal Australian Air Force Canberra Australian Government Publishing Service ISBN 0 644 45682 5 Further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Frederick Scherger Rayner Harry 1984 Scherger A Biography of Air Chief Marshal Sir Frederick Scherger Canberra Australian War Memorial ISBN 0 642 87854 4 Military officesPreceded bySquadron Leader John McCauley Director of Training1938 1940 Succeeded byGroup Captain George JonesPreceded byAir Commodore John McCauley Deputy Chief of the Air Staff1947 1951 Succeeded byAir Vice Marshal Valston HancockPreceded byAir Vice Marshal George Mills RAF Air Headquarters Malaya1953 1955 Succeeded byAir Vice Marshal Wallace KylePreceded byAir Vice Marshal William Hely Air Member for Personnel1955 1957 Succeeded byAir Commodore Frank HeadlamPreceded byAir Marshal Sir John McCauley Chief of the Air Staff1957 1961 Succeeded byAir Marshal Sir Valston HancockPreceded byVice Admiral Sir Roy Dowling Chairman Chiefs of Staff Committee1961 1966 Succeeded byGeneral Sir John WiltonHonours and awardsRibbon Description Date nbsp Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire KBE 1958Commander of the Order of the British Empire CBE 1950 nbsp Companion of the Order of the Bath CB 1954 nbsp Distinguished Service Order DSO 1944 nbsp Air Force Cross UK AFC 1940 nbsp 1939 45 Star 1939 1945 nbsp Pacific Star 1939 1945 nbsp Defence Medal 1939 1945 nbsp War Medal 1939 1945 1939 1945 nbsp Australia Service Medal 1939 1945 nbsp General Service Medal Malaya 1952 nbsp Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal 1953SOURCE Personnel file at National Archives p 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frederick Scherger amp oldid 1153554617, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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