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Jerry Pentland

Alexander Augustus Norman Dudley "Jerry" Pentland, MC, DFC, AFC (5 August 1894 – 3 November 1983) was an Australian fighter ace in World War I. Born in Maitland, New South Wales, he commenced service as a Lighthorseman with the Australian Imperial Force in 1915, and saw action at Gallipoli. He transferred to the Royal Flying Corps the following year, rising to captain. Credited with twenty-three aerial victories, Pentland became the fifth highest-scoring Australian ace of the war, after Robert Little, Stan Dallas, Harry Cobby and Roy King. He was awarded the Military Cross in January 1918 for "conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty" on a mission attacking an aerodrome behind enemy lines, and the Distinguished Flying Cross that August for engaging four hostile aircraft single-handedly.

Jerry Pentland
Squadron Leader Pentland in New Guinea, c. 1943
Birth nameAlexander Augustus Norman Dudley Pentland
Nickname(s)Jerry
Born5 August 1894
Maitland, New South Wales
Died3 November 1983(1983-11-03) (aged 89)
Collaroy, New South Wales
AllegianceAustralia
Service/branch
Years of service
  • 1915–1918
  • 1921–1926
  • 1940–1945
RankSquadron leader
Unit
Commands heldNo. 1 Rescue and Communication Flight (1942–1943)
Battles/wars
  • World War I
  • World War II
Awards
Other work
  • Businessman
  • Commercial pilot and instructor

Pentland served in the fledgling Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF), and later the Royal Air Force, before going into business in 1927. His ventures included commercial flying around the goldfields of New Guinea, aircraft design and manufacture, flight instruction, and charter work. In the early 1930s, he was employed as a pilot with Australian National Airways, and also spent time as a dairy farmer. Soon after the outbreak of World War II, he re-enlisted in the RAAF, attaining the rank of squadron leader and commanding rescue and communications units in the South West Pacific. Perhaps the oldest operational pilot in the wartime RAAF, Pentland was responsible for rescuing airmen, soldiers and civilians, and earned the Air Force Cross for his "outstanding courage, initiative and skill". He became a trader in New Guinea when the war ended in 1945, and later a coffee planter. Retiring in 1959, he died in 1983 at the age of eighty-nine.

Early life edit

Alexander Augustus Norman Dudley Pentland was born in Maitland, New South Wales, on 5 August 1894.[1][2] His father Alexander was Irish, and his mother Annie Norma (née Farquhar) was Scottish.[3] Educated at The King's School, Sydney, and Brighton Grammar, Melbourne, Pentland went on to study dairy farming at Hawkesbury Agricultural College, and later worked as a jackaroo.[2][4] His father was a physician who joined the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) during World War I and served as a major in the Australian Army Medical Corps.[4][5]

World War I edit

Pentland enlisted as a private in the AIF on 5 March 1915, sailing for Egypt with the 12th Light Horse Regiment aboard HMAT A29 Suevic on 13 June.[1][5] In August, his unit deployed to Gallipoli,[6] where he fought as a machine gunner before being hospitalised the following month, suffering from typhoid fever; he was evacuated to England in December.[7][8] Determined to leave the trenches behind after recovering, he volunteered for the Royal Flying Corps (RFC) and was discharged from the AIF on 21 February 1916 to take up his commission as a temporary second lieutenant in the RFC.[5][9] His first solo flight in a Maurice Farman Longhorn at Brooklands, after two hours of dual instruction, ended with him overshooting the runway and crashing in a sewage farm, but he was unhurt and immediately undertook a second solo attempt, landing successfully.[10] It was at Brooklands that he was first nicknamed "Jerry".[3] After completing pilot training, he was posted to France in June, flying B.E.2s with No. 16 Squadron. Though the slow and vulnerable B.E.2 was considered "Fokker fodder" by its crews, Pentland and his observer quickly managed to score the former's first aerial victory, bringing down a German Eindecker over Habourdin on 9 June.[1][11] He was then posted to No. 29 Squadron and was converting to DH.2 "pusher" fighters when he broke his leg playing rugby. After recovering, he instructed at London Colney until June 1917, when he joined No. 19 Squadron, flying SPAD S.VIIs. This would become Pentland's favourite type due to its strength and manoeuvrability, even though it had to be 'flown' constantly and was unforgiving at low speed.[7][11]

 
SPAD S.VII of the Royal Flying Corps

On 20 July 1917, soon after arriving at his new unit in France, Pentland achieved his first victory in the SPAD when he shared in the destruction of an Albatros two-seater. He followed this up with a solo "kill" on 12 August.[11] Four days later, after stopping an enemy truck convoy in its tracks by crippling its lead vehicle with machine-gun fire, he reportedly engaged ten Albatros fighters single-handedly; by the time he had driven them off, four bullets had penetrated his leather flying suit without injuring him, and his plane had absorbed so much punishment that it had to be scrapped when he got back to base.[7][11] After sharing another Albatros two-seater on 20 August, Pentland led a raid on Marcke aerodrome, home of Baron von Richthofen's Jasta 11, on 26 August. On the way, he helped bring down a DFW C.V, then achieved complete surprise at the airfield, which he and his flight proceeded to shoot up. On the return journey, he strafed an enemy train until his guns jammed and then, having managed to clear them, engaged two more German scouts. His part in the raid earned him the Military Cross, promulgated in The London Gazette on 9 January 1918:[11][12]

For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty. On a recent occasion he flew to an aerodrome fifteen miles behind the enemy lines, descended to within twenty feet of the ground, and fired into eight hostile machines. On his return journey he attacked a train with considerable effect from a low altitude. He has in addition brought down several enemy machines, and has always set a splendid example of fearlessness and devotion to duty in attacking enemy balloons and troops on the ground.

 
Captain Pentland, c. 1918

Credited with one more victory during August 1917, and another four the following month, Pentland's score stood at ten when he was injured on 26 September after an artillery shell struck his SPAD and forced him to crash land. Following his recovery, he again spent time instructing before being posted back to a front-line unit, this time No. 87 Squadron, operating Sopwith Dolphins.[7][11] Promoted captain, he returned to France in April 1918, having transferred the same month with the rest of the RFC to the newly formed Royal Air Force (RAF).[13] Pentland went on to achieve thirteen victories with No. 87 Squadron, where his aggressive tactics saw him dubbed the "Wild Australian" by colleagues. Appointed commander of 'B' Flight, he also frequently acted as a "lone wolf", actively seeking dogfights with enemy aircraft on his own.[7][14] On 18 June, he was alone on patrol when he engaged a flight of four Rumpler high-altitude reconnaissance aircraft, forcing down three of them. This action earned him the Distinguished Flying Cross, gazetted on 3 August:[13][15]

A gallant flight commander, who in the last three months has destroyed two enemy machines and driven down four out of control. Recently, whilst on special patrol, he, single-handed, attacked four enemy aeroplanes; having driven down one out of control, he engaged the leader, damaged his engine, and compelled him to glide to his lines. One of the remaining machines followed the leader, but he attacked the other and drove it down in a steep dive.

On 25 August, Pentland attacked and destroyed two German planes, a DFW two-seater and Fokker D.VII, before himself being shot down and wounded in the foot.[1][14] These would be his last victories; his grand total of twenty-three included eleven destroyed, one of which was shared, and twelve out of control, three of them shared.[14][16] This score ranked him fifth among the Australian aces of the war after Robert Little, Stan Dallas, Harry Cobby and Roy King.[17]

Interwar period edit

Pentland relinquished his RAF commission and returned to Australia at the end of the war, earning money by giving joyrides in an Avro 504K. Looking for a more secure future, he joined the newly established Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) in August 1921, following an interview with Wing Commander Stanley Goble, a wartime acquaintance through the RAF. Ranked flight lieutenant, Pentland was put in charge of the RAAF's complement of S.E.5 fighters at Point Cook, Victoria, part of the Imperial Gift recently donated by Great Britain.[7][18] The young Air Force had the atmosphere of a flying club, where everyone knew everyone else. Tensions sometimes arose between those who had served with British forces during the war, and those who had belonged to the Australian Flying Corps (AFC); the former considered that they were discriminated against when it came to filling senior positions, and came the day Pentland and fellow ex-RAF member Hippolyte De La Rue threw an "uppity" AFC man into a mess fireplace.[19] Deciding that his RAAF career was not progressing, Pentland applied for a short-service commission as a flying officer with the RAF in 1923, which was granted as of 23 April.[20][21] He journeyed to Britain with new wife Madge (née Moffat), whom he married on 5 March, just before departing Australia; they had one daughter, Carleen, the following year.[3][20] Pentland completed the course at Central Flying School, Uphavon, and became an instructor there, gaining promotion to flight lieutenant before leaving the RAF on 20 July 1926 and returning to Australia.[22][23]

 
One of the DH.60 Moths operated by Jerry Pentland between the wars, c. 1929

In 1927, Pentland formed Mandated Territory Airways with entrepreneur Albert Royal to fly freight to and from the goldfields of New Guinea. The pair bought a DH.60 Moth biplane, which Pentland ferried to the firm's base at Lae in February 1928.[24] The business prospered in the short term, to the extent that the partners took on another Moth and more pilots. By the end of the year, Pentland was suffering from malaria and had to abandon the venture, selling one of the planes to Guinea Airways and returning to Australia with the other.[25] After recovering in the new year, he embarked on a series of new enterprises, including aircraft manufacture, a flying school, and charter work. In February 1929, he formed the General Aircraft Company with Royal and another partner to produce an Australian-designed aeroplane, the Genairco, of which eight were eventually sold. With the Moth from Mandated Territory Airways, he established Pentland's Flying School at Mascot, New South Wales. He also flew charters with a Moth owned by The Sun newspaper, using the same aircraft that September to compete in the East-West Air Race from Sydney to Perth, as part of the celebrations for the Western Australia Centenary. The event attracted several veteran aviators of World War I, including Horrie Miller—the eventual winner on handicap—and Charles "Moth" Eaton, whom Pentland beat into fifth place across the line.[26][27]

Lack of patronage led to Pentland folding his businesses and taking a job in 1930 as a pilot with Australian National Airways (ANA), a new airline founded by Charles Kingsford Smith and Charles Ulm.[7][28] By 1932, ANA was in trouble as well, and Pentland left to set up as a dairy farmer on a property he bought at Singleton. Within two years, drought forced him to sell the land and he returned to earning his living as a pilot, instructing at aero clubs in Queensland and New South Wales.[29] By late 1937, he was again employed as a transport pilot in New Guinea, where he was known as a practical joker who liked to hold a map in front of his face in apparent short-sightedness and ask his passengers if they could see a landing ground anywhere. He returned to Australia after war was declared in September 1939.[30]

World War II edit

 
Squadron Leader Pentland in New Guinea, August 1943

Having offered his services to the Australian government on his return from New Guinea, Pentland rejoined the RAAF on 17 June 1940. He undertook the flying instructors' course at Central Flying School in Camden, New South Wales, and was posted as an instructor to elementary flying training schools in eastern Australia, including Brisbane, Tamworth, Temora, Bundaberg, and Lowood. Addressed by a young pilot at one school as "Pop", Pentland responded in front of the large audience, "I'm sorry son, but I don't remember sleeping with your mother".[31] He was promoted to flight lieutenant in October 1941, and joined No. 1 Communication Flight in June 1942.[3][8] Based in Victoria at Laverton and, later, Essendon, it was primarily engaged in army and naval cooperation, and operated as far afield as the Northern Territory and New Guinea.[32]

Promoted to squadron leader, in November 1942 Pentland was posted to Port Moresby, New Guinea, as commanding officer (CO) of No. 1 Rescue and Communication Squadron, better known as "Pentland's Flying Circus".[33][34] The official history of Australia in the war described this as the RAAF's "most unusual operational unit", asserting that its "strange assortment of light aircraft was as varied and as appropriate to its task as was the flying record of its commander ...".[35] Its inventory included such types as the de Havilland Tiger Moth, DH.84 Dragon, Fox Moth, Dragon Rapide, and Avro Anson.[36] Perhaps the RAAF's oldest pilot in any theatre of operations, Pentland was responsible for the rescue of downed US airmen, as well as the evacuation of civilians and soldiers. He also organised aerial surveys around Daru and Milne Bay, developing new bases and emergency airfields at locales such as Bena Bena, Abau, Kulpi, and Port Moresby.[35]

Posted back to Australia after relinquishing command of No. 1 Rescue and Communication Squadron in June 1943, Pentland received radar training and helped to set up the RAAF's early warning grid in northern Australia.[33][37] He returned to New Guinea in March 1944 as CO of No. 8 Communication Unit, Goodenough Island, which had been formed in November 1943 from Pentland's old Rescue and Communications Squadron. Operating Tiger Moth, Supermarine Walrus, Consolidated PBY Catalina, Dornier Do 24, Bristol Beaufort, CAC Boomerang, Bristol Beaufighter, and Vultee Vengeance aircraft, the unit performed reconnaissance and bombing sorties over New Britain and north-eastern New Guinea, as well as rescue and survey missions.[38] In July 1945, Pentland was posted to Mascot as CO of No. 3 Communication Unit, serving until September.[39] His achievements in New Guinea earned him the Air Force Cross, the citation being promulgated on 22 February 1946 and concluding:[8][40]

Squadron Leader PENTLAND has, at all times, displayed outstanding courage, initiative and skill, and these qualities, together with his excellent knowledge of New Guinea and its climatic conditions, have made his services invaluable, not only to the R.A.A.F., but to the U.S. Army Air Forces and the New Guinea Forces as well.

Later life edit

With the end of hostilities in the Pacific, Pentland was discharged from the RAAF on 2 November 1945.[8] He took the opportunity to purchase surplus military equipment in New Guinea and established himself as a trader in Finschhafen, later expanding to Lae and Wau. In 1948, he went into business as a coffee planter in Goroka, and also recruited labour from the highlands for industries on the coast. Prospering as a planter, he contributed to development of the region by building Goroka's original constant-flowing water supply and encouraging other businesses to set up there. His ongoing commitments in New Guinea meant that he was not invested with his Air Force Cross until 1950. In 1959, he sold his interests in Goroka and retired with Madge to their seaside home in Bayview, New South Wales.[7][41] Madge Pentland died in 1982, and Jerry eighteen months later, on 3 November 1983, at the War Veterans Home in Collaroy. He was survived by daughter Carleen, and cremated on 7 November.[2][3]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Newton, Australian Air Aces, pp. 52–53
  2. ^ a b c "Veteran of Western Front dogfights". The Sydney Morning Herald. 8 November 1983. p. 14. Retrieved 6 July 2016.
  3. ^ a b c d e Lax, Mark. "Pentland, Alexander Augustus (1894–1983)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISSN 1833-7538. Retrieved 6 July 2016.
  4. ^ a b Schaedel, Australian Air Ace, p. 13
  5. ^ a b c "Alexander Augustus Norman Dudley Pentland". The AIF Project. Retrieved 6 July 2016.
  6. ^ "12th Light Horse Regiment". Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 6 July 2016.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Garrisson, Australian Fighter Aces, p. 98
  8. ^ a b c d . Australian War Memorial. Archived from the original on 20 August 2012. Retrieved 6 July 2016.
  9. ^ Schaedel, Australian Air Ace, pp. 15–17
  10. ^ Hernan, Forgotten Flyer, p. 18
  11. ^ a b c d e f Guttman, SPAD VII Aces of World War 1, pp. 42–45
  12. ^ "No. 30466". The London Gazette (Supplement). 9 January 1918. p. 635.
  13. ^ a b Schaedel, Australian Air Ace, pp. 51–56
  14. ^ a b c Franks, Dolphin and Snipe Aces of World War 1, pp. 53–54
  15. ^ "No. 30827". The London Gazette (Supplement). 3 August 1918. p. 9202.
  16. ^ Shores, British and Empire Aces of World War 1, p. 83
  17. ^ Garrisson, Australian Fighter Aces, p. 27
  18. ^ Schaedel, Australian Air Ace, pp. 62–70
  19. ^ Schaedel, Australian Air Ace, p. 73
  20. ^ a b Schaedel, Australian Air Ace, pp. 73–77
  21. ^ "No. 32819". The London Gazette. 1 May 1923. p. 3150.
  22. ^ Schaedel, Australian Air Ace, pp. 77–78
  23. ^ "No. 33184". The London Gazette. 20 July 1926. p. 4802.
  24. ^ Schaedel, Australian Air Ace, pp. 82–83
  25. ^ Schaedel, Australian Air Ace, p. 86
  26. ^ Schaedel, Australian Air Ace, pp. 87–96
  27. ^ . The Age. 7 October 1929. Archived from the original on 15 September 2009. Retrieved 8 July 2016.
  28. ^ Schaedel, Australian Air Ace, pp. 96–97
  29. ^ Schaedel, Australian Air Ace, pp. 102–103
  30. ^ Schaedel, Australian Air Ace, pp. 108–114, 157–158
  31. ^ Schaedel, Australian Air Ace, pp. 114–115
  32. ^ RAAF Historical Section, Units of the Royal Australian Air Force, pp. 117–118
  33. ^ a b RAAF Historical Section, Units of the Royal Australian Air Force, p. 186
  34. ^ Schaedel, Australian Air Ace, pp. 121, 134
  35. ^ a b Gillison, Royal Australian Air Force, p. 634 24 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  36. ^ No. 1 Rescue and Communication Unit (1942–1943). "Operations Record Book". RAAF Unit History sheets (Form A50). Retrieved 8 July 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  37. ^ Schaedel, Australian Air Ace, pp. 135–137
  38. ^ RAAF Historical Section, Units of the Royal Australian Air Force, pp. 137–140
  39. ^ RAAF Historical Section, Units of the Royal Australian Air Force, pp. 121–122
  40. ^ "No. 37479". The London Gazette (Supplement). 22 February 1946. p. 1076.
  41. ^ Schaedel, Australian Air Ace, pp. 153–157

References edit

  • Franks, Norman (2002). Dolphin and Snipe Aces of World War 1. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 1-84176-317-9.
  • Garrisson, A. D. (1999). . Fairbairn, Australian Capital Territory: Air Power Studies Centre. ISBN 0-642-26540-2. Archived from the original on 24 November 2016.
  • 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.
  • Guttman, Jon (2001). SPAD VII Aces of World War 1. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 1-84176-222-9.
  • Hernan, Brian H. (2007). Forgotten Flyer. Kalamunda, Western Australia: Tangee Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9757936-2-6.
  • Newton, Dennis (1996). Australian Air Aces. Fyshwyck, Australian Capital Territory: Aerospace Publications. ISBN 1-875671-25-0.
  • RAAF Historical Section (1995). Units of the Royal Australian Air Force: A Concise History. Volume 4: Maritime and Transport Units. Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service. ISBN 0-644-42796-5.
  • Schaedel, Charles (1979). Australian Air Ace: The Exploits of "Jerry" Pentland MC, DFC, AFC. Adelaide: Rigby. ISBN 0-7270-1057-3.
  • Shores, Christopher (2001). British and Empire Aces of World War 1. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 1-84176-377-2.

jerry, pentland, alexander, augustus, norman, dudley, jerry, pentland, august, 1894, november, 1983, australian, fighter, world, born, maitland, south, wales, commenced, service, lighthorseman, with, australian, imperial, force, 1915, action, gallipoli, transf. Alexander Augustus Norman Dudley Jerry Pentland MC DFC AFC 5 August 1894 3 November 1983 was an Australian fighter ace in World War I Born in Maitland New South Wales he commenced service as a Lighthorseman with the Australian Imperial Force in 1915 and saw action at Gallipoli He transferred to the Royal Flying Corps the following year rising to captain Credited with twenty three aerial victories Pentland became the fifth highest scoring Australian ace of the war after Robert Little Stan Dallas Harry Cobby and Roy King He was awarded the Military Cross in January 1918 for conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty on a mission attacking an aerodrome behind enemy lines and the Distinguished Flying Cross that August for engaging four hostile aircraft single handedly Jerry PentlandSquadron Leader Pentland in New Guinea c 1943Birth nameAlexander Augustus Norman Dudley PentlandNickname s JerryBorn5 August 1894Maitland New South WalesDied3 November 1983 1983 11 03 aged 89 Collaroy New South WalesAllegianceAustraliaService wbr branchAustralian Imperial Force 1915 1916 Royal Flying Corps 1916 1918 Royal Air Force 1918 1923 1926 Royal Australian Air Force 1921 1923 1940 1945 Years of service1915 19181921 19261940 1945RankSquadron leaderUnit12th Light Horse 1915 1916 No 19 Squadron RFC 1916 1917 No 87 Squadron RAF 1918 Commands heldNo 1 Rescue and Communication Flight 1942 1943 Battles warsWorld War IWorld War IIAwardsMilitary CrossDistinguished Flying CrossAir Force CrossOther workBusinessmanCommercial pilot and instructor Pentland served in the fledgling Royal Australian Air Force RAAF and later the Royal Air Force before going into business in 1927 His ventures included commercial flying around the goldfields of New Guinea aircraft design and manufacture flight instruction and charter work In the early 1930s he was employed as a pilot with Australian National Airways and also spent time as a dairy farmer Soon after the outbreak of World War II he re enlisted in the RAAF attaining the rank of squadron leader and commanding rescue and communications units in the South West Pacific Perhaps the oldest operational pilot in the wartime RAAF Pentland was responsible for rescuing airmen soldiers and civilians and earned the Air Force Cross for his outstanding courage initiative and skill He became a trader in New Guinea when the war ended in 1945 and later a coffee planter Retiring in 1959 he died in 1983 at the age of eighty nine Contents 1 Early life 2 World War I 3 Interwar period 4 World War II 5 Later life 6 Notes 7 ReferencesEarly life editAlexander Augustus Norman Dudley Pentland was born in Maitland New South Wales on 5 August 1894 1 2 His father Alexander was Irish and his mother Annie Norma nee Farquhar was Scottish 3 Educated at The King s School Sydney and Brighton Grammar Melbourne Pentland went on to study dairy farming at Hawkesbury Agricultural College and later worked as a jackaroo 2 4 His father was a physician who joined the Australian Imperial Force AIF during World War I and served as a major in the Australian Army Medical Corps 4 5 World War I editPentland enlisted as a private in the AIF on 5 March 1915 sailing for Egypt with the 12th Light Horse Regiment aboard HMAT A29 Suevic on 13 June 1 5 In August his unit deployed to Gallipoli 6 where he fought as a machine gunner before being hospitalised the following month suffering from typhoid fever he was evacuated to England in December 7 8 Determined to leave the trenches behind after recovering he volunteered for the Royal Flying Corps RFC and was discharged from the AIF on 21 February 1916 to take up his commission as a temporary second lieutenant in the RFC 5 9 His first solo flight in a Maurice Farman Longhorn at Brooklands after two hours of dual instruction ended with him overshooting the runway and crashing in a sewage farm but he was unhurt and immediately undertook a second solo attempt landing successfully 10 It was at Brooklands that he was first nicknamed Jerry 3 After completing pilot training he was posted to France in June flying B E 2s with No 16 Squadron Though the slow and vulnerable B E 2 was considered Fokker fodder by its crews Pentland and his observer quickly managed to score the former s first aerial victory bringing down a German Eindecker over Habourdin on 9 June 1 11 He was then posted to No 29 Squadron and was converting to DH 2 pusher fighters when he broke his leg playing rugby After recovering he instructed at London Colney until June 1917 when he joined No 19 Squadron flying SPAD S VIIs This would become Pentland s favourite type due to its strength and manoeuvrability even though it had to be flown constantly and was unforgiving at low speed 7 11 nbsp SPAD S VII of the Royal Flying Corps On 20 July 1917 soon after arriving at his new unit in France Pentland achieved his first victory in the SPAD when he shared in the destruction of an Albatros two seater He followed this up with a solo kill on 12 August 11 Four days later after stopping an enemy truck convoy in its tracks by crippling its lead vehicle with machine gun fire he reportedly engaged ten Albatros fighters single handedly by the time he had driven them off four bullets had penetrated his leather flying suit without injuring him and his plane had absorbed so much punishment that it had to be scrapped when he got back to base 7 11 After sharing another Albatros two seater on 20 August Pentland led a raid on Marcke aerodrome home of Baron von Richthofen s Jasta 11 on 26 August On the way he helped bring down a DFW C V then achieved complete surprise at the airfield which he and his flight proceeded to shoot up On the return journey he strafed an enemy train until his guns jammed and then having managed to clear them engaged two more German scouts His part in the raid earned him the Military Cross promulgated in The London Gazette on 9 January 1918 11 12 For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty On a recent occasion he flew to an aerodrome fifteen miles behind the enemy lines descended to within twenty feet of the ground and fired into eight hostile machines On his return journey he attacked a train with considerable effect from a low altitude He has in addition brought down several enemy machines and has always set a splendid example of fearlessness and devotion to duty in attacking enemy balloons and troops on the ground nbsp Captain Pentland c 1918 Credited with one more victory during August 1917 and another four the following month Pentland s score stood at ten when he was injured on 26 September after an artillery shell struck his SPAD and forced him to crash land Following his recovery he again spent time instructing before being posted back to a front line unit this time No 87 Squadron operating Sopwith Dolphins 7 11 Promoted captain he returned to France in April 1918 having transferred the same month with the rest of the RFC to the newly formed Royal Air Force RAF 13 Pentland went on to achieve thirteen victories with No 87 Squadron where his aggressive tactics saw him dubbed the Wild Australian by colleagues Appointed commander of B Flight he also frequently acted as a lone wolf actively seeking dogfights with enemy aircraft on his own 7 14 On 18 June he was alone on patrol when he engaged a flight of four Rumpler high altitude reconnaissance aircraft forcing down three of them This action earned him the Distinguished Flying Cross gazetted on 3 August 13 15 A gallant flight commander who in the last three months has destroyed two enemy machines and driven down four out of control Recently whilst on special patrol he single handed attacked four enemy aeroplanes having driven down one out of control he engaged the leader damaged his engine and compelled him to glide to his lines One of the remaining machines followed the leader but he attacked the other and drove it down in a steep dive On 25 August Pentland attacked and destroyed two German planes a DFW two seater and Fokker D VII before himself being shot down and wounded in the foot 1 14 These would be his last victories his grand total of twenty three included eleven destroyed one of which was shared and twelve out of control three of them shared 14 16 This score ranked him fifth among the Australian aces of the war after Robert Little Stan Dallas Harry Cobby and Roy King 17 Interwar period editPentland relinquished his RAF commission and returned to Australia at the end of the war earning money by giving joyrides in an Avro 504K Looking for a more secure future he joined the newly established Royal Australian Air Force RAAF in August 1921 following an interview with Wing Commander Stanley Goble a wartime acquaintance through the RAF Ranked flight lieutenant Pentland was put in charge of the RAAF s complement of S E 5 fighters at Point Cook Victoria part of the Imperial Gift recently donated by Great Britain 7 18 The young Air Force had the atmosphere of a flying club where everyone knew everyone else Tensions sometimes arose between those who had served with British forces during the war and those who had belonged to the Australian Flying Corps AFC the former considered that they were discriminated against when it came to filling senior positions and came the day Pentland and fellow ex RAF member Hippolyte De La Rue threw an uppity AFC man into a mess fireplace 19 Deciding that his RAAF career was not progressing Pentland applied for a short service commission as a flying officer with the RAF in 1923 which was granted as of 23 April 20 21 He journeyed to Britain with new wife Madge nee Moffat whom he married on 5 March just before departing Australia they had one daughter Carleen the following year 3 20 Pentland completed the course at Central Flying School Uphavon and became an instructor there gaining promotion to flight lieutenant before leaving the RAF on 20 July 1926 and returning to Australia 22 23 nbsp One of the DH 60 Moths operated by Jerry Pentland between the wars c 1929 In 1927 Pentland formed Mandated Territory Airways with entrepreneur Albert Royal to fly freight to and from the goldfields of New Guinea The pair bought a DH 60 Moth biplane which Pentland ferried to the firm s base at Lae in February 1928 24 The business prospered in the short term to the extent that the partners took on another Moth and more pilots By the end of the year Pentland was suffering from malaria and had to abandon the venture selling one of the planes to Guinea Airways and returning to Australia with the other 25 After recovering in the new year he embarked on a series of new enterprises including aircraft manufacture a flying school and charter work In February 1929 he formed the General Aircraft Company with Royal and another partner to produce an Australian designed aeroplane the Genairco of which eight were eventually sold With the Moth from Mandated Territory Airways he established Pentland s Flying School at Mascot New South Wales He also flew charters with a Moth owned by The Sun newspaper using the same aircraft that September to compete in the East West Air Race from Sydney to Perth as part of the celebrations for the Western Australia Centenary The event attracted several veteran aviators of World War I including Horrie Miller the eventual winner on handicap and Charles Moth Eaton whom Pentland beat into fifth place across the line 26 27 Lack of patronage led to Pentland folding his businesses and taking a job in 1930 as a pilot with Australian National Airways ANA a new airline founded by Charles Kingsford Smith and Charles Ulm 7 28 By 1932 ANA was in trouble as well and Pentland left to set up as a dairy farmer on a property he bought at Singleton Within two years drought forced him to sell the land and he returned to earning his living as a pilot instructing at aero clubs in Queensland and New South Wales 29 By late 1937 he was again employed as a transport pilot in New Guinea where he was known as a practical joker who liked to hold a map in front of his face in apparent short sightedness and ask his passengers if they could see a landing ground anywhere He returned to Australia after war was declared in September 1939 30 World War II edit nbsp Squadron Leader Pentland in New Guinea August 1943 Having offered his services to the Australian government on his return from New Guinea Pentland rejoined the RAAF on 17 June 1940 He undertook the flying instructors course at Central Flying School in Camden New South Wales and was posted as an instructor to elementary flying training schools in eastern Australia including Brisbane Tamworth Temora Bundaberg and Lowood Addressed by a young pilot at one school as Pop Pentland responded in front of the large audience I m sorry son but I don t remember sleeping with your mother 31 He was promoted to flight lieutenant in October 1941 and joined No 1 Communication Flight in June 1942 3 8 Based in Victoria at Laverton and later Essendon it was primarily engaged in army and naval cooperation and operated as far afield as the Northern Territory and New Guinea 32 Promoted to squadron leader in November 1942 Pentland was posted to Port Moresby New Guinea as commanding officer CO of No 1 Rescue and Communication Squadron better known as Pentland s Flying Circus 33 34 The official history of Australia in the war described this as the RAAF s most unusual operational unit asserting that its strange assortment of light aircraft was as varied and as appropriate to its task as was the flying record of its commander 35 Its inventory included such types as the de Havilland Tiger Moth DH 84 Dragon Fox Moth Dragon Rapide and Avro Anson 36 Perhaps the RAAF s oldest pilot in any theatre of operations Pentland was responsible for the rescue of downed US airmen as well as the evacuation of civilians and soldiers He also organised aerial surveys around Daru and Milne Bay developing new bases and emergency airfields at locales such as Bena Bena Abau Kulpi and Port Moresby 35 Posted back to Australia after relinquishing command of No 1 Rescue and Communication Squadron in June 1943 Pentland received radar training and helped to set up the RAAF s early warning grid in northern Australia 33 37 He returned to New Guinea in March 1944 as CO of No 8 Communication Unit Goodenough Island which had been formed in November 1943 from Pentland s old Rescue and Communications Squadron Operating Tiger Moth Supermarine Walrus Consolidated PBY Catalina Dornier Do 24 Bristol Beaufort CAC Boomerang Bristol Beaufighter and Vultee Vengeance aircraft the unit performed reconnaissance and bombing sorties over New Britain and north eastern New Guinea as well as rescue and survey missions 38 In July 1945 Pentland was posted to Mascot as CO of No 3 Communication Unit serving until September 39 His achievements in New Guinea earned him the Air Force Cross the citation being promulgated on 22 February 1946 and concluding 8 40 Squadron Leader PENTLAND has at all times displayed outstanding courage initiative and skill and these qualities together with his excellent knowledge of New Guinea and its climatic conditions have made his services invaluable not only to the R A A F but to the U S Army Air Forces and the New Guinea Forces as well Later life editWith the end of hostilities in the Pacific Pentland was discharged from the RAAF on 2 November 1945 8 He took the opportunity to purchase surplus military equipment in New Guinea and established himself as a trader in Finschhafen later expanding to Lae and Wau In 1948 he went into business as a coffee planter in Goroka and also recruited labour from the highlands for industries on the coast Prospering as a planter he contributed to development of the region by building Goroka s original constant flowing water supply and encouraging other businesses to set up there His ongoing commitments in New Guinea meant that he was not invested with his Air Force Cross until 1950 In 1959 he sold his interests in Goroka and retired with Madge to their seaside home in Bayview New South Wales 7 41 Madge Pentland died in 1982 and Jerry eighteen months later on 3 November 1983 at the War Veterans Home in Collaroy He was survived by daughter Carleen and cremated on 7 November 2 3 Notes edit a b c d Newton Australian Air Aces pp 52 53 a b c Veteran of Western Front dogfights The Sydney Morning Herald 8 November 1983 p 14 Retrieved 6 July 2016 a b c d e Lax Mark Pentland Alexander Augustus 1894 1983 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University ISSN 1833 7538 Retrieved 6 July 2016 a b Schaedel Australian Air Ace p 13 a b c Alexander Augustus Norman Dudley Pentland The AIF Project Retrieved 6 July 2016 12th Light Horse Regiment Australian War Memorial Retrieved 6 July 2016 a b c d e f g h Garrisson Australian Fighter Aces p 98 a b c d Air Force Cross Squadron Leader A A N D Pentland Australian War Memorial Archived from the original on 20 August 2012 Retrieved 6 July 2016 Schaedel Australian Air Ace pp 15 17 Hernan Forgotten Flyer p 18 a b c d e f Guttman SPAD VII Aces of World War 1 pp 42 45 No 30466 The London Gazette Supplement 9 January 1918 p 635 a b Schaedel Australian Air Ace pp 51 56 a b c Franks Dolphin and Snipe Aces of World War 1 pp 53 54 No 30827 The London Gazette Supplement 3 August 1918 p 9202 Shores British and Empire Aces of World War 1 p 83 Garrisson Australian Fighter Aces p 27 Schaedel Australian Air Ace pp 62 70 Schaedel Australian Air Ace p 73 a b Schaedel Australian Air Ace pp 73 77 No 32819 The London Gazette 1 May 1923 p 3150 Schaedel Australian Air Ace pp 77 78 No 33184 The London Gazette 20 July 1926 p 4802 Schaedel Australian Air Ace pp 82 83 Schaedel Australian Air Ace p 86 Schaedel Australian Air Ace pp 87 96 East west air race ends The Age 7 October 1929 Archived from the original on 15 September 2009 Retrieved 8 July 2016 Schaedel Australian Air Ace pp 96 97 Schaedel Australian Air Ace pp 102 103 Schaedel Australian Air Ace pp 108 114 157 158 Schaedel Australian Air Ace pp 114 115 RAAF Historical Section Units of the Royal Australian Air Force pp 117 118 a b RAAF Historical Section Units of the Royal Australian Air Force p 186 Schaedel Australian Air Ace pp 121 134 a b Gillison Royal Australian Air Force p 634 Archived 24 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine No 1 Rescue and Communication Unit 1942 1943 Operations Record Book RAAF Unit History sheets Form A50 Retrieved 8 July 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Schaedel Australian Air Ace pp 135 137 RAAF Historical Section Units of the Royal Australian Air Force pp 137 140 RAAF Historical Section Units of the Royal Australian Air Force pp 121 122 No 37479 The London Gazette Supplement 22 February 1946 p 1076 Schaedel Australian Air Ace pp 153 157References editFranks Norman 2002 Dolphin and Snipe Aces of World War 1 Oxford Osprey ISBN 1 84176 317 9 Garrisson A D 1999 Australian Fighter Aces 1914 1953 Fairbairn Australian Capital Territory Air Power Studies Centre ISBN 0 642 26540 2 Archived from the original on 24 November 2016 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 Guttman Jon 2001 SPAD VII Aces of World War 1 Oxford Osprey ISBN 1 84176 222 9 Hernan Brian H 2007 Forgotten Flyer Kalamunda Western Australia Tangee Publishing ISBN 978 0 9757936 2 6 Newton Dennis 1996 Australian Air Aces Fyshwyck Australian Capital Territory Aerospace Publications ISBN 1 875671 25 0 RAAF Historical Section 1995 Units of the Royal Australian Air Force A Concise History Volume 4 Maritime and Transport Units Canberra Australian Government Publishing Service ISBN 0 644 42796 5 Schaedel Charles 1979 Australian Air Ace The Exploits of Jerry Pentland MC DFC AFC Adelaide Rigby ISBN 0 7270 1057 3 Shores Christopher 2001 British and Empire Aces of World War 1 Oxford Osprey ISBN 1 84176 377 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jerry Pentland amp oldid 1202173840, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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