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John Everard Gurdon

John Everard Gurdon, DFC (24 May 1898 – 14 April 1973), was a British flying ace in the First World War credited with twenty-eight victories.[1]

John Everard Gurdon

DFC
Born(1898-05-24)24 May 1898
Balham, Surrey, England
Died14 April 1973(1973-04-14) (aged 74)
Alassio, Italy
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
Service/branchBritish Army
Royal Air Force
Years of service1917–1918
1940–1941
RankPilot Officer
Service number86019
UnitSuffolk Regiment
No. 22 Squadron
Battles/warsFirst World War
Second World War
AwardsDistinguished Flying Cross
Other workJournalist and author

Early life and background edit

Gurdon was born in Balham, Surrey,[1] the son of John Gurdon and Mary Gray Rattray,[2] and attended Tonbridge School in Kent. From September 1916 he attended the Royal Military College, Sandhurst,[3] as a "Gentlemen Cadet", and after passing out (graduating), he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Suffolk Regiment on 1 May 1917.[4]

First World War service edit

Gurdon was seconded to the Royal Flying Corps in May 1917, and was confirmed in his rank of the General List on 10 August 1917.[5] He completed his pilot training at Central Flying School and was sent to No. 22 Squadron in 1918, flying Bristol F.2 Fighters.

 
The Shuttleworth Collection's Bristol F.2B Fighter

Gurdon achieved all twenty-eight of his victories between 2 April and 13 August 1918 while flying the Bristol Fighter aircraft, seventeen of them using the front gun. On 7 May he was involved in an historic engagement known as the "Two versus Twenty". Gurdon, together with his observer 2nd Lt. John Thornton, in partnership with one other Bristol Fighter aircraft, piloted by Alfred Atkey with his observer Charles George Gass engaged twenty enemy aircraft. Gurdon and Thornton shot down three enemy aircraft; Atkey and Gass shot down five.[3]

As a result of this action he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross, which was gazetted on 2 August. His citation read:

Lt. John Everard Gurdon.
This officer is a brilliant fighting pilot who on all occasions shows great determination with entire disregard of personal danger. He has personally destroyed nine enemy machines. On a recent date when on offensive patrol with another Bristol fighter he attacked a formation of seven enemy machines; one of these he shot down in flames. The enemy were then reinforced by two other formations, which brought their number up to twenty. Fighting continued for about half an hour when the Bristols broke off the engagement, their ammunition being exhausted. Only seven enemy machines remained, many having been seen to spin away, and one was shot down by this officer.[6]

On 10 July his aircraft was badly shot up, Gurdon being hit by a bullet in the left arm, and his gunner, Lt. J. J. Scaramaga, being killed. He was appointed a flight commander with the rank of temporary captain on 23 July,[7] but in August he received a concussion from an anti-aircraft shell near-miss. He was returned to the UK in September and relinquished his commission owing to his injuries on 21 December,[8] but was permitted to retain the rank of captain.[9]

His confirmed claims, in conjunction with his gunners, consisted of 13 and one shared aircraft destroyed, and 14 driven down 'out of control'.[3]

Interwar career edit

After the war Gurdon pursued a career as a journalist and author, publishing his first novel Over and Above in 1919, republished in 2018. He then translated Georg Paul Neumann's Die Deutschen Luftstreitkräfte im Weltkriege, an official history, which was published in English as The German Air Force in the Great War in 1921. Another novel Feeding The Wind was published in 1924. However, in December 1925 he was declared bankrupt.[10][11][12][13] and over the next fifteen years, to pay off his creditors, Gurdon wrote several novels, and numerous short stories, mainly adventure stories aimed at young adults, and published in such magazines as The Modern Boy and Air Stories.[14] He finally gained his discharge from bankruptcy in late 1937,[15][16][17] but continued to publish regularly up to the outbreak of the Second World War.

Second World War service edit

Despite being blinded in one eye after a car crash in 1935 and suffering a hip problem following an aircraft landing accident, Gurdon joined the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve, and was granted a commission "for the duration of hostilities" as a pilot officer (on probation) on 20 September 1940.[18] He served as an instructor and managed to fly on several bombing operations unofficially as a front gunner on Wellingtons, but after a landing accident aggravated his existing hip problem he was forced to relinquish his commission on 29 September 1941.[19]

Later life edit

He published two more novels in the early 1950s.

John Gurdon died on 14 April 1973 in Alassio, Italy.

Personal life edit

Gurdon married Florence M. Pleming in 1920 at Kensington, London.[2] They had three sons, John (known as Robin), Philip, and David. The eldest, Sergeant John Robert Gurdon, was killed in action in April 1943 flying Wellingtons of No. 166 Squadron.[20] Philip Gurdon was a member of No. 273 Squadron, flying Spitfires in Burma.

Publications edit

Translations
  • Neumann, Georg Paul (1921). Die Deutschen Luftstreitkräfte im Weltkriege [The German Air Force in the Great War]. London: Hodder & Stoughton Ltd.
Novels
  • Over and Above. London: W. Collins Sons & Co. 1919.
  • Feeding The Wind. London: Chapman & Dodd. 1924.[21]
  • The Sky Trackers. London: Frederick Warne & Co. 1931.
  • Saracen Junior. London: Frederick Warne & Co. 1934.
  • The King's Pipe. London: Frederick Warne & Co. 1934.
  • The Secret of the Lab. London: Frederick Warne & Co. 1936.
  • The Monkey Trick. London: George Newnes Ltd. 1936.
  • Winged Warriors. London: George Newnes Ltd. 1936.
  • Banners Yellow. London: George Newnes Ltd. 1938.
  • A Matter of Course. London: Frederick Warne & Co. 1939.
  • The Secret of the South. London: Frederick Warne & Co. 1950.[21]
  • The Riddle of the Forest. London: Thomas Nelson & Sons. 1952.
  • Over and Above. London: Grub Street Publishing Ltd. 2018.
Short stories and articles[14]
  • "P.P.P.", Hutchinson's Adventure & Mystery Story Magazine, October 1928
  • "The Bottomless Gulf", The Popular Magazine, 2 November 1929
  • "The Schooling Bullet", The Strand, February 1930
  • "Softy", Flying Stories, March 1930
  • "The Sky Trackers", The Modern Boy, 31 May 1930
  • "The Devil that Flies by Night", The Modern Boy, 7 June 1930
  • "The Stolen Inventor", The Modern Boy, 14 June 1930
  • "The Flying Fish", The Modern Boy, 21 June 1930
  • "Black Pirates", The Modern Boy, 28 June 1930
  • "The Bat's Prisoners", The Modern Boy, 5 July 1930
  • "Thunder Over the Alps", The Modern Boy, 12 July 1930
  • "The Menace of the Bat", The Modern Boy, 19 July 1930
  • "The Sea-Hawk!", The Modern Boy, 18 November 1933
  • "The Flying Treasure!", The Modern Boy, 25 November 1933
  • "The Trickster Tricked!", The Modern Boy, 2 December 1933
  • "Death Flies Low", George Bruce's Squadron, May 1934
  • "Flight of a Lovebird", The (London) Evening News, 20 February 1935
  • "Early Bird", Popular Flying, August 1935
  • "The Dabu Devil", The Thriller, 28 December 1935
  • "A Private War", Argosy (UK), February 1936
  • "Winged Warriors", Air Stories, February 1936
  • "Flash-Point", The (London) Evening News, 4 March 1936
  • "The Loop of Death", Air Stories, May 1936
  • "The Four Dumb Mouths", Air Stories, June 1936
  • "The Brotherhood of Sin", Air Stories, July 1936
  • "Spies Fly High", Air Stories, November 1936
  • "First Solo", The Modern Boy's Annual, 1937
  • "Striking a Bargain", The Modern Boy's Annual, 1938
  • "Leashed Lightning", Fantasy, 1938[22]
  • "The Gentleman from Java", Air Stories, February 1938
  • "The Mammoth and the Midge", Air Stories, September 1938
  • "The Man Outside", Fantasy, 1939[23]
  • "Flight to Hell", Air Stories, October 1939
  • "Alarums Aloft", The Modern Boy's Annual, 1941

References edit

Notes
  1. ^ a b "John Everard Gurdon". The Aerodrome. 2015. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  2. ^ a b Lundy, Darryl (6 January 2012). "John Everard Gurdon". thepeerage.com. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  3. ^ a b c Shores et.al. (1990), p.179.
  4. ^ "No. 30040". The London Gazette (Supplement). 27 April 1917. p. 4081.
  5. ^ "No. 30257". The London Gazette (Supplement). 28 August 1917. p. 8968.
  6. ^ "No. 30827". The London Gazette (Supplement). 2 August 1918. p. 9200.
  7. ^ "No. 30821". The London Gazette. 30 July 1918. p. 9011.
  8. ^ "No. 31078". The London Gazette. 20 December 1918. p. 14958.
  9. ^ "No. 31837". The London Gazette. 26 March 1920. p. 3675.
  10. ^ "No. 14186". The Edinburgh Gazette. 8 December 1925. p. 1405.
  11. ^ "No. 33111". The London Gazette. 4 December 1925. p. 8103.
  12. ^ "No. 33111". The London Gazette. 4 December 1925. p. 8106.
  13. ^ "No. 33123". The London Gazette. 12 January 1926. p. 349.
  14. ^ a b Stephensen-Payne, Phil (2015). "Gurdon, J(ohn) E(verard) (1898–1973)". Galactic Central. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  15. ^ "No. 34438". The London Gazette. 24 September 1937. p. 6004.
  16. ^ "No. 34452". The London Gazette. 9 November 1937. p. 7018.
  17. ^ "No. 34485". The London Gazette. 18 February 1938. p. 1157.
  18. ^ "No. 34982". The London Gazette. 29 October 1940. p. 6259.
  19. ^ "No. 35309". The London Gazette. 14 October 1941. p. 5982.
  20. ^ "Casualty Details: Gurdon, John Robert". Commonwealth War Graves Commission. 2015. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  21. ^ a b "Gurdon, J. E.". Science Fiction Encyclopedia. 2015. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  22. ^ "Publication Listing: Fantasy, No. 1". The Internet Speculative Fiction Database. 2015. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  23. ^ "Publication Listing: "Fantasy", No. 3". The Internet Speculative Fiction Database. 2015. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
Bibliography
  • Shores, Christopher F.; Franks, Norman & Guest, Russell F. (1990). Above the Trenches: a Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915–1920. London, UK: Grub Street. ISBN 978-0-948817-19-9.


john, everard, gurdon, 1898, april, 1973, british, flying, first, world, credited, with, twenty, eight, victories, dfcborn, 1898, 1898balham, surrey, englanddied14, april, 1973, 1973, aged, alassio, italyallegianceunited, kingdomservice, branchbritish, armyroy. John Everard Gurdon DFC 24 May 1898 14 April 1973 was a British flying ace in the First World War credited with twenty eight victories 1 John Everard GurdonDFCBorn 1898 05 24 24 May 1898Balham Surrey EnglandDied14 April 1973 1973 04 14 aged 74 Alassio ItalyAllegianceUnited KingdomService wbr branchBritish ArmyRoyal Air ForceYears of service1917 19181940 1941RankPilot OfficerService number86019UnitSuffolk RegimentNo 22 SquadronBattles warsFirst World WarSecond World WarAwardsDistinguished Flying CrossOther workJournalist and author Contents 1 Early life and background 2 First World War service 3 Interwar career 4 Second World War service 5 Later life 6 Personal life 7 Publications 8 ReferencesEarly life and background editGurdon was born in Balham Surrey 1 the son of John Gurdon and Mary Gray Rattray 2 and attended Tonbridge School in Kent From September 1916 he attended the Royal Military College Sandhurst 3 as a Gentlemen Cadet and after passing out graduating he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Suffolk Regiment on 1 May 1917 4 First World War service editGurdon was seconded to the Royal Flying Corps in May 1917 and was confirmed in his rank of the General List on 10 August 1917 5 He completed his pilot training at Central Flying School and was sent to No 22 Squadron in 1918 flying Bristol F 2 Fighters nbsp The Shuttleworth Collection s Bristol F 2B FighterGurdon achieved all twenty eight of his victories between 2 April and 13 August 1918 while flying the Bristol Fighter aircraft seventeen of them using the front gun On 7 May he was involved in an historic engagement known as the Two versus Twenty Gurdon together with his observer 2nd Lt John Thornton in partnership with one other Bristol Fighter aircraft piloted by Alfred Atkey with his observer Charles George Gass engaged twenty enemy aircraft Gurdon and Thornton shot down three enemy aircraft Atkey and Gass shot down five 3 As a result of this action he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross which was gazetted on 2 August His citation read Lt John Everard Gurdon This officer is a brilliant fighting pilot who on all occasions shows great determination with entire disregard of personal danger He has personally destroyed nine enemy machines On a recent date when on offensive patrol with another Bristol fighter he attacked a formation of seven enemy machines one of these he shot down in flames The enemy were then reinforced by two other formations which brought their number up to twenty Fighting continued for about half an hour when the Bristols broke off the engagement their ammunition being exhausted Only seven enemy machines remained many having been seen to spin away and one was shot down by this officer 6 dd On 10 July his aircraft was badly shot up Gurdon being hit by a bullet in the left arm and his gunner Lt J J Scaramaga being killed He was appointed a flight commander with the rank of temporary captain on 23 July 7 but in August he received a concussion from an anti aircraft shell near miss He was returned to the UK in September and relinquished his commission owing to his injuries on 21 December 8 but was permitted to retain the rank of captain 9 His confirmed claims in conjunction with his gunners consisted of 13 and one shared aircraft destroyed and 14 driven down out of control 3 Interwar career editAfter the war Gurdon pursued a career as a journalist and author publishing his first novel Over and Above in 1919 republished in 2018 He then translated Georg Paul Neumann s Die Deutschen Luftstreitkrafte im Weltkriege an official history which was published in English as The German Air Force in the Great War in 1921 Another novel Feeding The Wind was published in 1924 However in December 1925 he was declared bankrupt 10 11 12 13 and over the next fifteen years to pay off his creditors Gurdon wrote several novels and numerous short stories mainly adventure stories aimed at young adults and published in such magazines as The Modern Boy and Air Stories 14 He finally gained his discharge from bankruptcy in late 1937 15 16 17 but continued to publish regularly up to the outbreak of the Second World War Second World War service editDespite being blinded in one eye after a car crash in 1935 and suffering a hip problem following an aircraft landing accident Gurdon joined the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve and was granted a commission for the duration of hostilities as a pilot officer on probation on 20 September 1940 18 He served as an instructor and managed to fly on several bombing operations unofficially as a front gunner on Wellingtons but after a landing accident aggravated his existing hip problem he was forced to relinquish his commission on 29 September 1941 19 Later life editHe published two more novels in the early 1950s John Gurdon died on 14 April 1973 in Alassio Italy Personal life editGurdon married Florence M Pleming in 1920 at Kensington London 2 They had three sons John known as Robin Philip and David The eldest Sergeant John Robert Gurdon was killed in action in April 1943 flying Wellingtons of No 166 Squadron 20 Philip Gurdon was a member of No 273 Squadron flying Spitfires in Burma Publications editTranslationsNeumann Georg Paul 1921 Die Deutschen Luftstreitkrafte im Weltkriege The German Air Force in the Great War London Hodder amp Stoughton Ltd NovelsOver and Above London W Collins Sons amp Co 1919 Feeding The Wind London Chapman amp Dodd 1924 21 The Sky Trackers London Frederick Warne amp Co 1931 Saracen Junior London Frederick Warne amp Co 1934 The King s Pipe London Frederick Warne amp Co 1934 The Secret of the Lab London Frederick Warne amp Co 1936 The Monkey Trick London George Newnes Ltd 1936 Winged Warriors London George Newnes Ltd 1936 Banners Yellow London George Newnes Ltd 1938 A Matter of Course London Frederick Warne amp Co 1939 The Secret of the South London Frederick Warne amp Co 1950 21 The Riddle of the Forest London Thomas Nelson amp Sons 1952 Over and Above London Grub Street Publishing Ltd 2018 Short stories and articles 14 P P P Hutchinson s Adventure amp Mystery Story Magazine October 1928 The Bottomless Gulf The Popular Magazine 2 November 1929 The Schooling Bullet The Strand February 1930 Softy Flying Stories March 1930 The Sky Trackers The Modern Boy 31 May 1930 The Devil that Flies by Night The Modern Boy 7 June 1930 The Stolen Inventor The Modern Boy 14 June 1930 The Flying Fish The Modern Boy 21 June 1930 Black Pirates The Modern Boy 28 June 1930 The Bat s Prisoners The Modern Boy 5 July 1930 Thunder Over the Alps The Modern Boy 12 July 1930 The Menace of the Bat The Modern Boy 19 July 1930 The Sea Hawk The Modern Boy 18 November 1933 The Flying Treasure The Modern Boy 25 November 1933 The Trickster Tricked The Modern Boy 2 December 1933 Death Flies Low George Bruce s Squadron May 1934 Flight of a Lovebird The London Evening News 20 February 1935 Early Bird Popular Flying August 1935 The Dabu Devil The Thriller 28 December 1935 A Private War Argosy UK February 1936 Winged Warriors Air Stories February 1936 Flash Point The London Evening News 4 March 1936 The Loop of Death Air Stories May 1936 The Four Dumb Mouths Air Stories June 1936 The Brotherhood of Sin Air Stories July 1936 Spies Fly High Air Stories November 1936 First Solo The Modern Boy s Annual 1937 Striking a Bargain The Modern Boy s Annual 1938 Leashed Lightning Fantasy 1938 22 The Gentleman from Java Air Stories February 1938 The Mammoth and the Midge Air Stories September 1938 The Man Outside Fantasy 1939 23 Flight to Hell Air Stories October 1939 Alarums Aloft The Modern Boy s Annual 1941References editNotes a b John Everard Gurdon The Aerodrome 2015 Retrieved 18 February 2015 a b Lundy Darryl 6 January 2012 John Everard Gurdon thepeerage com Retrieved 18 February 2015 a b c Shores et al 1990 p 179 No 30040 The London Gazette Supplement 27 April 1917 p 4081 No 30257 The London Gazette Supplement 28 August 1917 p 8968 No 30827 The London Gazette Supplement 2 August 1918 p 9200 No 30821 The London Gazette 30 July 1918 p 9011 No 31078 The London Gazette 20 December 1918 p 14958 No 31837 The London Gazette 26 March 1920 p 3675 No 14186 The Edinburgh Gazette 8 December 1925 p 1405 No 33111 The London Gazette 4 December 1925 p 8103 No 33111 The London Gazette 4 December 1925 p 8106 No 33123 The London Gazette 12 January 1926 p 349 a b Stephensen Payne Phil 2015 Gurdon J ohn E verard 1898 1973 Galactic Central Retrieved 18 February 2015 No 34438 The London Gazette 24 September 1937 p 6004 No 34452 The London Gazette 9 November 1937 p 7018 No 34485 The London Gazette 18 February 1938 p 1157 No 34982 The London Gazette 29 October 1940 p 6259 No 35309 The London Gazette 14 October 1941 p 5982 Casualty Details Gurdon John Robert Commonwealth War Graves Commission 2015 Retrieved 31 March 2015 a b Gurdon J E Science Fiction Encyclopedia 2015 Retrieved 18 February 2015 Publication Listing Fantasy No 1 The Internet Speculative Fiction Database 2015 Retrieved 18 February 2015 Publication Listing Fantasy No 3 The Internet Speculative Fiction Database 2015 Retrieved 18 February 2015 BibliographyShores Christopher F Franks Norman amp Guest Russell F 1990 Above the Trenches a Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915 1920 London UK Grub Street ISBN 978 0 948817 19 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Everard Gurdon amp oldid 1074268051, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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