The following is a list of Royal Flying Corps generals. While officially general officers are not considered to belong to any regiment or corps (simply being "late" of their erstwhile regiment), in practice almost all the general officers to hold a Royal Flying Corps-related appointment gained their promotion to the general officer ranks in that appointment and remained in such appointments until the creation of the Royal Air Force on 1 April 1918. Royal Flying Corps generals then became Royal Air Force generals.
Two officers took up Royal Flying Corps related appointments while holding general officer rank: David Henderson was already a brigadier-general when the Royal Flying Corps was established, and Edward Ellington was promoted to brigadier-general while serving on the General Staff of the British VIII Corps in France, prior to taking up appointment as Deputy Director-General of Military Aeronautics. Conversely, Duncan MacInnes gained his promotion to brigadier-general while serving at the Military Aeronautics Directorate but subsequently served with the Royal Engineers.
Ranks indicated are the highest rank the officer obtained while in the RFC.
Portrait | General | Highest rank | Promoted Brig-Gen | Promoted Maj-Gen | Promoted Lt-Gen | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sir David Henderson | Lieutenant-General | 4 April 1908 | 26 October 1914 | 24 March 1916 [1] | Promoted to brigadier-general before creation of Royal Flying Corps. Temporary promotion to lieutenant-general 24 March 1916, substantive promotion 1 January 1917. [2] | |
Sir Hugh Trenchard | Major-General | 25 August 1915 | 24 March 1916 [1] | N/A | Temporary promotion to major-general 24 March 1916, substantive promotion 1 January 1917. Subsequently promoted to Marshal of the Royal Air Force. [3] | |
W S Brancker | Major-General | 18 December 1915 | 22 June 1917 | N/A | Temporary promotion to major-general 22 June 1917, rank made substantive in the RAF on 3 January 1918. Subsequently granted the equivalent rank of air vice-marshal. [4] | |
J M Salmond | Major-General | 1 February 1916 [5] | 22 June 1917 | N/A | Temporary promotion to major-general 22 June 1917, rank made substantive in the RAF on 1 April 1918. Subsequently promoted to Marshal of the Royal Air Force. [6] | |
E B Ashmore | Major-General | 30 January 1916 | 30 July 1917 | N/A | Temporary promotion to major-general 30 July 1917, later regraded to air vice marshal in the RAF before being substantively promoted to major-general in the British Army on 1 January 1924. [7] | |
C A H Longcroft | Major-General | 28 August 1916 | 18 October 1917 | N/A | Temporary promotion to major-general on 18 October 1917, reverted to temporary brigadier-general on 29 April 1918, substantively promoted to air-vice marshal 1 July 1925. [8] | |
W G H Salmond | Major-General | 1 July 1916 | 3 January 1918 | N/A | Temporary promotion to major-general 3 January 1918. [9] Later promoted to air chief marshal. [10] | |
T I Webb-Bowen | Brigadier-General | 1 February 1916 [5] | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general. Promotion to acting major-general in the RAF on 1 February 1919, substantively promoted to air vice-marshal 1 July 1925. [11] | |
H R M Brooke-Popham | Brigadier-General | 12 March 1916 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general. Later promoted to air chief marshal. [12] | |
D S MacInnes | Brigadier-General | 27 March 1916 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 27 March 1916. [13] Departed Royal Flying Corps duties in early 1917. Killed on the Western Front while holding the rank of brigadier-general on 23 May 1918. | |
D le G Pitcher | Brigadier-General | 1 April 1916 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general. Permanent promotion to air commodore on 5 August 1919. [14] | |
J F A Higgins | Brigadier-General | 25 August 1916 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general followed by temporary promotion to major-general on 29 April 1918 in the RAF. Permanent promotion to air vice-marshal on 1 August 1919. [15] | |
P W Game | Brigadier-General | 16 October 1916 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general followed by temporary promotion to major-general on 14 October 1918 in the RAF. Permanent promotion to air vice-marshal on 1 January 1922. [16] | |
J H W Becke | Brigadier-General | 20 December 1916 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general. Retired on 29 February 1920 with the honorary rank of brigadier-general in the RAF. [17] | |
E. L. Ellington | Brigadier-General | 14 January 1917 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 14 January 1917 but not appointed to Royal Flying Corps duties until 20 November 1917. Temporary promotion to major-general in the RAF on 10 April 1918. Permanent promotion to air-vice marshal the following year. Subsequently promoted to Marshal of the Royal Air Force. [18] | |
G S Shephard | Brigadier-General | 8 February 1917 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 8 February 1917. Killed in a flying accident 19 January 1918. [19] | |
L E O Charlton | Brigadier-General | 28 February 1917 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 28 February 1917. Permanent promotion to air commodore on 5 August 1919. [20] | |
W B Caddell | Brigadier-General | 4 April 1917 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 4 April 1917. Retired from the RAF on 28 May 1919 with the honorary rank of brigadier-general. [21] | |
H C T Dowding | Brigadier-General | 23 June 1917 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 23 June 1917. Later promoted to air chief marshal. [22] | |
C G Hoare | Brigadier-General | 1 August 1917 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 1 August 1917. Relinquished his commission on 24 May 1919 when hold the rank of brigadier-general. [23] | |
P L W Herbert | Brigadier-General | 5 August 1917 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 5 August 1917. Retired from the RAF on 3 December 1929 as an honorary air commodore. [24] | |
R E T Hogg | Brigadier-General | 5 August 1917 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 5 August 1917. Retired from the RAF on 1 September 1919 as an honorary brigadier-general. [25] | |
G Livingston | Brigadier-General | 9 August 1917 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 9 August 1917. Retired from the RAF on 14 February 1919 as an honorary brigadier-general. [26] | |
T C R Higgins | Brigadier-General | 1 September 1917 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 1 September 1917. Substantive promotion to air commodore on 30 June 1922 and retired from the RAF on 1 November 1929 in that rank. [27] | |
F L Festing | Brigadier-General | 10 October 1917 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 10 October 1917. [28] Retired from the RAF after the war. | |
E R Ludlow-Hewitt | Brigadier-General | 17 October 1917 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 17 October 1917. Substantive promotion to air commodore on 30 June 1923. Later promoted to air chief marshal. [29] | |
J G Hearson | Brigadier-General | 28 October 1917 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 28 October 1917. Substantive promotion to air commodore on 30 June 1923. [30] | |
A E Borton | Brigadier-General | 14 December 1917 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 14 December 1917. Substantive promotion to air commodore on 1 October 1922. Later promoted to air vice-marshal. [31] | |
A Huggins | Brigadier-General | 22 December 1917 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 22 December 1917. Retired from the RAF, retaining the rank, on 20 March 1919. [32] | |
C L N Newall | Brigadier-General | 28 December 1917 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 28 December 1917. Substantive promotion to air commodore on 1 January 1925. Later promoted to marshal of the RAF. [33] | |
R R Smith-Barry | Brigadier-General | 27 January 1918 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 27 January 1918. [34] Rank relinquished on 23 February 1918. [35] Promoted to substantive colonel in the RAF on 17 April 1918. [36] | |
A C Critchley | Brigadier-General | 4 March 1918 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 4 March 1918. [37] Retired from the RAF after the war. Rejoined during World War II and was promoted to air commodore on 1 June 1943. [38] | |
C F De S Murphy | Brigadier-General | 6 March 1918 | N/A | N/A | Temporary promotion to brigadier-general on 6 March 1918. Retired from the RAF after the war. [39] |
In addition to the above generals, Brigadier-General N J G Cameron was a member of the Royal Flying Corps reserve who had qualified as a military pilot. Unlike the above generals, Cameron never held a Royal Flying Corps appointment. [40]
In late 1915 brigades started to be established in the RFC and so brigadier-generals were created. A list of brigade command appointments is at List of Royal Flying Corps brigades.
Air vice-marshal (AVM) is a two-star air officer rank which originated in and continues to be used by the Royal Air Force. The rank is also used by the air forces of many countries which have historical British influence and it is sometimes used as the English translation of an equivalent rank in countries which have a non-English air force-specific rank structure. Air vice-marshals may be addressed generically as "air marshal".
The Chief of the Air Staff (CAS) is the professional head of the Royal Air Force and a member of both the Chiefs of Staff Committee and the Air Force Board. The post was created in 1918 with Major General Sir Hugh Trenchard as the first incumbent. The current and 30th Chief of the Air Staff is Air Chief Marshal Sir Michael Wigston, who succeeded Sir Stephen Hillier in July 2019.
Marshal of the Royal Air Force Sir Edward Leonard Ellington, was a senior officer in the Royal Air Force. He served in the First World War as a staff officer and then as director-general of military aeronautics and subsequently as controller-general of equipment. In the inter-war years he held command positions in the Middle East, in India and then in Iraq. He served as Chief of the Air Staff in the mid-1930s and in that role he implemented a plan, known as 'Scheme F'. This scheme implemented an increase in the size of the Royal Air Force to 187 squadrons within three years to counter the threat from Hitler's Germany. He also broke up the command known as "Air Defence of Great Britain" to create RAF Fighter Command, RAF Bomber Command, RAF Coastal Command and RAF Training Command. He then served as Inspector-General of the RAF until his retirement in 1940.
Marshal of the Royal Air Force Sir John Maitland Salmond, was a British military officer who rose to high rank in the Royal Flying Corps and then the Royal Air Force. During the First World War he served as a squadron commander, a wing commander and then as General Officer Commanding the RAF on the Western Front towards the end of the war. He went on to be Air Officer Commanding British Forces in Iraq in the early 1920s when he halted a Turkish invasion and sought to put down a Kurdish uprising against King Faisal, the British-sponsored ruler of Iraq. He was Chief of the Air Staff in the early 1930s and bitterly opposed the position taken by British politicians at the World Disarmament Conference in Geneva, which would have led to the UK's complete aerial disarmament. In the event the talks broke down when Adolf Hitler withdrew from the Conference in October 1933.
Air Chief Marshal Sir William Geoffrey Hanson Salmond, was a senior commander in the Royal Flying Corps during the First World War. Remaining in the Royal Air Force after the war, he held senior appointments in the Middle East, Great Britain and India. In 1933, Salmond served as Chief of the Air Staff for only a matter of days before being taken ill and subsequently dying from cancer.
The Central Flying School (CFS) is the Royal Air Force's primary institution for the training of military flying instructors. Established in 1912 at the Upavon Aerodrome, it is the longest existing flying training school. The school was based at RAF Little Rissington from 1946 to 1976. Its motto is Imprimis Praecepta, Latin for "The Teaching is Everlasting".
The Air Member for Personnel (AMP) is the senior Royal Air Force officer who is responsible for personnel matters and is a member of the Air Force Board. The AMP is in charge of all aspects of recruiting, non-operational flying and ground training, career management, welfare, terms, and conditions of service, and resettlement for RAF regular, reserve, and civilian staffs worldwide.
Air Vice Marshal Sir William Sefton Brancker, was a British pioneer in civil and military aviation and senior officer of the Royal Flying Corps and later Royal Air Force. He was killed in an airship crash in 1930, exactly 20 years after his first flight.
Major General is a "two-star" rank in the British Army and Royal Marines. The rank was also briefly used by the Royal Air Force for a year and a half, from its creation to August 1919. In the British Army, a Major General is the customary rank for the appointment of division commander. In the Royal Marines, the rank of Major General is held by the Commandant General.
Air Vice Marshal Amyas Eden Borton, was a pilot and commander in the Royal Flying Corps during the First World War and a senior commander in the Royal Air Force during the 1920s. He saw active service on the Western Front, in Palestine and in Iraq. In the latter part of his career, Borton was the second Commandant of the RAF College at Cranwell before becoming the Air Officer Commanding RAF Inland Area.
Air Marshal Owen Tudor Boyd, was a British aviator and military officer. He served with the Royal Flying Corps during the First World War before transferring to the newly formed Royal Air Force in 1918, with which he served during the interwar period and into the Second World War.
No. 5 Wing of the Royal Air Force was a wing of aircraft squadrons which was originally established as the Fifth Wing of the Royal Flying Corps. Currently inactive, the wing has been formed and disbanded five times over the course of its history.
Air Chief Marshal Sir Robert Mordaunt Foster, was a Royal Flying Corps pilot in the First World War, and a senior commander in the Royal Air Force during the Second World War and the immediate post-war years.
The Royal Air Force College (RAFC) is the Royal Air Force military academy which provides initial training to all RAF personnel who are preparing to be commissioned officers. The College also provides initial training to aircrew cadets and is responsible for all RAF recruiting along with officer and aircrew selection. Originally established as a naval aviation training centre during World War I, the College was established as the world's first air academy in 1919. During World War II, the College was closed and its facilities were used as a flying training school. Reopening after the War, the College absorbed the Royal Air Force Technical College in 1966.
Air Vice Marshal Sir Matthew Brown Frew, was a Scottish First World War flying ace, credited with 23 aerial victories, who went on to serve as a senior officer in the Royal Air Force and South African Air Force during the Second World War.
The Palestine Brigade of the Royal Flying Corps, and later Royal Air Force, was formed 5 October 1917 in response to General Allenby's request for an air formation for his planned offensive against the Ottoman Empire in Palestine.
Middle East Command was a command of the Royal Air Force (RAF) that was active during the Second World War. It had been preceded by RAF Middle East, which was established in 1918 by the redesignation of HQ Royal Flying Corps Middle East that had been activated in 1917 although a small Royal Flying Corps presence had been operational in the region since 1914.
Air Vice Marshal Kenneth Malise St. Clair Graeme Leask, was a senior officer of the Royal Air Force (RAF). He began his career in the British Army and served with the Royal Flying Corps in the First World War, being credited with eight aerial victories to become a flying ace. He flew over 100 sorties, and survived three forced landings. He attained the rank of captain, and position as flight commander, in No. 84 Squadron. He remained in the RAF after the war, being appointed Director-General of Engineering in the Air Ministry with the rank of air vice marshal after the Second World War.
The Directorate of Military Aeronautics was the British War Office department responsible for military aviation before and during World War I. It functions were subsumed into the Air Ministry when the Royal Air Force was created in 1918.
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