Edward Maitland (RAF officer)

Edward Maitland Maitland

Brigadier General Edward Maitland c.1918
Born (1880-02-21)21 February 1880
London, England
Died 24 August 1921(1921-08-24) (aged 41)
Humber River, England
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service/branch British Army (1900–18)
Royal Air Force (1918–21)
Years of service 1900–21
Rank Air Commodore
Commands held RAF Airship Base, Howden (1920–21)
RNAS Pulham (1916–17)
No. 1 Squadron RFC (1911–14)
Battles/wars Second Boer War
First World War
Awards Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George
Distinguished Service Order
Air Force Cross
Navy Distinguished Service Medal (United States)[1]

Air Commodore Edward Maitland Maitland, CMG, DSO, AFC, FRGS (21 February 1880 – 24 August 1921)[2] was an early military aviator who served in the Air Battalion of the Royal Engineers, the Royal Flying Corps, the Royal Naval Air Service and the Royal Air Force. He was a noted pioneer of lighter-than-air aviation.

Early life

Edward Maitland was the eldest son of Arthur Gee, a barrister from Cambridgeshire. The family name was changed to 'Maitland' in 1903. He was educated at Haileybury and Trinity College, Cambridge,[3] leaving Trinity without taking his degree to enlist in the Army. He later took his degree in 1906, gaining a third.[2]

Military career

After gaining his commission in the Essex Regiment in May 1900, Maitland served in the Orange River Colony during the Second Boer War in South Africa. He was promoted to lieutenant on 26 January 1902.[4]

On 19 August 1911 Maitland was attached to the Royal Engineers' Air Battalion and later that year he was appointed Officer Commanding No. 1 Company, Air Battalion. (No. 1 Company, Air Battalion was subsequently renamed No. 1 Squadron RFC and then No. 1 Squadron RAF). In 1914, when the Army airships were transferred to the Navy, Maitland transferred to the Royal Naval Air Service and in the early months of World War I served with the Dunkirk Squadron, operating captive balloons Impressed by the kite-balloons being used by the French, he returned to Britain to promote their use to the War Office, and was appointed head of the kite balloon school which was established at Roehampton. Early in 1916 he became the head of the Air Operational Department at the Admiralty, but this post did not suit him and he was appointed the head of the naval airship station at Pulham. On 1 April 1918, with the merger of the Royal Naval Air Service and the Royal Flying Corps, Maitland transferred to the Royal Air Force. He was subsequently promoted to air commodore.[5]

Accomplishments in ballooning

Maitland took up ballooning in 1908. On 18 November 1908, he flew with Mr C C Turner and Prof A E Gaudron[6] in a balloon named the Mammoth from Crystal Palace in England to Meeki Derevi, near Novo Aleksandrovsk in Russia[7] (now Zarasai in Lithuania). The distance of 1,117 mi (1,798 km) was covered in thirty-six and a half hours. From 1909 Maitland was attached to the Balloon School at Farnborough Airfield. In addition to ballooning, he also experimented with powered aircraft, but following a crash in which he broke both legs he restricted his activities to airships and balloons. He was awarded Royal Aero Club Airship Pilot certificate No.8 in September 1911[8] and in 1913 he carried out a parachute descent from the airship Delta. In 1919 Maitland was on board the Airship R34 when it completed the first transatlantic crossing.

On 24 August 1921 Maitland was killed when the R38 airship on which he was a passenger suffered structural failure and broke up in mid air over the Humber.[5]

See also

References

  1. The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 31691. p. 15614. 16 December 1919.
  2. 1 2 Edward Maitland: Oxford Biography Index entry
  3. Flight 1 September 1911.
  4. The London Gazette: no. 27441. p. 3753. 10 June 1902.
  5. 1 2 "An Airship Pioneer". News. The Times (42808). London. 25 August 1921. col B, p. 10.
  6. http://www.ballooninghistory.com/whoswho/who'swho-g.html Auguste Eugene Gaudron
  7. "Untitled". The Dominion. 2 (399). 7 January 1909.
  8. Notices to MembersFlight 3 September 191

External links

Military offices
Preceded by
Unknown
Officer Commanding No 1 Company Air Battalion
1911–1912
Air Battalion reorganised as Royal Flying Corps
Royal Flying Corps established from Air Battalion Officer Commanding No. 1 Squadron RFC
1912–1914
Succeeded by
Charles Longcroft
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