Ronald Burns Bannerman | |
---|---|
Born | Invercargill, New Zealand | 21 September 1890
Died | 2 August 1978 87) Gore, New Zealand | (aged
Allegiance | New Zealand |
Service/ | Aviation |
Years of service | 1917–1945 |
Rank | Captain (later Air Commodore) |
Unit | No. 79 Squadron RAF |
Awards | Commander of the Order of the British Empire, Distinguished Flying Cross and Bar |
Relations | Hugh Bannerman (brother) Wilfred Bannerman (brother) |
Other work | Air Member for Personnel in the RNZAF November 1942–October 1945 Aide de Camp to the Governor-General 1943–1945 |
Air Commodore Ronald Burns Bannerman CBE DFC* was a flying ace during World War I, as well as serving as a high level administrator for his native New Zealand's air force during World War II.
Ronald Burns Bannerman was born on 21 September 1890 in Invercargill, the youngest of three children of accountant William D. D. Bannerman (1859–1942) and Agnes Gibson McEwen (circa 1858–1931). [1] Both of his brothers, Hugh and Wilfred Bannerman played first-class cricket before World War I. The younger Bannerman's education took him from Otago Boys' High School onward to study law at Otago University. He was living at 35 Neidpath Road, Mornington in Dunedin when he enlisted for service in New Zealand's Armed Forces. [2] By 1916 he had risen to the rank of sergeant-major in the 4th Otago Regiment.
He enrolled in March 1916 at the New Zealand Flying School which was located at Mission Bay in Auckland. One of 12 pupils at the school, he was the last of them to qualify, obtained his flying certificate (with only four flying hours in his logbook) in a Curtiss Flying Boat on 16 December 1916. [2] [3]
After a voyage to England, [4] he joined the Royal Flying Corps on 29 March 1917 [5] and undertook further training, amassing 53 hours solo flight time. [4] After initial instruction on a Farman Shoehorn, he gained experience with the Avro 504, before progressing onto the more powerful Bristol Scout, Sopwith Pup, SPAD S.VII, Sopwith Dolphin and the SE5a. [6] During his training in England Bannerman was nearly killed while sitting in his Avro aircraft when another aircraft accidentally landed on top of his, reducing it in Bannerman's words to matchwood. [7]
He was posted to France in February 1918 joining the freshly formed No. 79 Squadron RAF. [8]
He flew a Sopwith Dolphin, scoring his initial victory on 4 August 1918 by destroying a Fokker D.VII.
During August and September he shot down 12 aircraft and a balloon before a period on leave. Upon his return to the front he added more victories to bring his total to 17, with his last triumph coming on 4 November 1918, a week before war's end. His first 15 wins were achieved flying Sopwith Dolphin #C3879; his last two were scored from Dolphin #E4716. His final tally included 16 enemy airplanes destroyed and 22 [9] driven down out of control. He was also a balloon buster, having downed a Drachen on 24 August for his fourth victory. [5] What makes Bannerman's string of victories more remarkable was that the engine of the Dolphin was notorious for its unreliability and his log book records many engine failures, which would have reduced his time in the air. [10] Also 79 Squadron was tasked for ground attack work; none of his victories were scored above 5,000 feet altitude. [4] Indeed, there were only four other aces in the unit: Francis W. Gillet, Frederic Ives Lord, John McNeaney, and Edgar Taylor. [11]
Bannerman ended the war a Captain with two awards of the Distinguished Flying Cross. [5] He had 396 hours flight time and approximately 190 combat sorties. [4] He was New Zealand's top ranking ace. [12]
Victory nº | Date | Hour | Bannerman's unit | Bannerman's aircraft | Opponent/s aircraft | Location |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 4 August 1918 | 0840 | 79 | Sopwith Dolphin (C3879) | Fokker D.VII | Neuve Eglise |
2 | 20 Aug 1918 | 1845 | 79 | Sopwith Dolphin (C3879) | LVG C | Estaires |
3 | 22 Aug 1918 | 0945 | 79 | Sopwith Dolphin (D8075) | DFW C | West of Bailleul |
4 | 24 Aug 1918 | 1305 | 79 | Sopwith Dolphin (C3879) | Balloon | West of Armentières |
5 | 29 Aug 1918 | 1740 | 79 | Sopwith Dolphin (C3879) | Hannover C | East of Estaires |
6 | 31 Aug 1918 | 1915 | 79 | Sopwith Dolphin (C3879) | LVG C | Northeast of Estaires |
7 | 07 Sep 1918 | 1100 | 79 | Sopwith Dolphin (C3879) | LVG C | NE of Ploegsteert |
8 | 16 Sep 1918 | 1145 | 79 | Sopwith Dolphin (C3879) | LVG C | N of Hollebeke |
9 | 16 Sep 1918 | 1200 | 79 | Sopwith Dolphin (C3879) | LVG C | Hooge |
10 | 19 Sep 1918 | 0735 | 79 | Sopwith Dolphin (C3879) | Fokker D.VII | East of Houthoulst Wood |
11 | 21 Sep 1918 | 1015 | 79 | Sopwith Dolphin (C3879) | LVG C | Southwest of Hollebeke |
12 | 28 Sep 1918 | 1235 | 79 | Sopwith Dolphin (C3879) | Fokker D.VII | Southwest of Comines |
13 | 29 Sep 1918 | 1740 | 79 | Sopwith Dolphin (C3879) | Hannover | Estaires |
14 | 27 Oct 1918 | 0815 | 79 | Sopwith Dolphin (C3879) | Halberstadt C | East of Avelghem |
15 | 01 Nov 1918 | 1500 | 79 | Sopwith Dolphin (C3879) | Fokker D.VII | Audenarde |
16 | 02 Nov 1918 | 1000 | 79 | Sopwith Dolphin (E4716) | Halberstadt C | Salsique |
17 | 04 Nov 1918 | 1245 | 79 | Sopwith Dolphin (E4716) | LVG C or DFW | Baeggem |
He continued flying and other duties after the armistice, including serving in the Army of Occupation in Belgium and as an instructor of fighter tactics and aerobatics in Britain. By the time he closed his pilot's log for good in June 1919, he had more than 500 hours flying time. He was transferred to the RAF's Unemployed List on 16 August 1919.
By September 1919 he had returned home, where he begin a distinguished long career as a lawyer first in Dunedin and then at Gore where he entered into partnership with Edmund Robert Bowler (1866–1927), who had served as a Lieutenant-Colonel at Gallipoli. [14] The firm was initially known as Bowler & Bannerman until Bowler's retirement in February 1927. [15]
Bannerman remained a member of the Otago Regiment and then with the Southland Regiment until May 1924. He transferred to the Territorial Air Force, where he remained until he retired in June 1930 with the rank of flight lieutenant. [16] He then had little to do with aviation for the next decade.
After the outbreak of World War II he rejoined the RNZAF in September 1940. [17] [4]
He rose to become the Air Member for Personnel for the RNZAF from November 1942 to October 1945, achieving the rank of Air Commodore in the process. In the 1945 King's Birthday Honours, he was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire for his services. [5] [18]
He resumed his legal career after World War II.
Together with Keith Caldwell and Leonard Isitt he was instrumental in establishing the New Zealand 1914–1918 Airmen's Association in 1960. [19]
In the 1960s he initiated negotiations with landowners and the council to establish and develop a reserve of seven hectares on the site of the original Gore Cemetery. In honour of his efforts the resulting park was named Bannerman Park in 1977. [20]
He died at his home in Gore, New Zealand on 2 August 1978. [4]
In 1917 he married Mona Campbell (1895– ). They subsequently had three children, John Rushford Bannerman, Margaret Elles Bannerman and Lindsay Burns Bannerman. [21]
Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC)
Lieut. Ronald Burns Bannerman.
During recent operations this officer has done gallant service. While on an offensive patrol with two other machines he was attacked by several Fokker biplanes, and, in the engagement, he shot down one. In addition, he has destroyed four other enemy machines. [22]
Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC) Bar
Lieut. (A./Capt.) Ronald Burns Bannerman, D.F.C. (FRANCE)
A bold and resolute leader, whose ability inspires confidence in those who serve with him. During the operations in September he accounted for six enemy machines, displaying marked courage and judgment. [23]
Air Vice Marshal Sir Leonard Monk Isitt was a New Zealand military aviator and senior air force commander. In 1943 he became the first New Zealander to serve as the Chief of the Air Staff of the Royal New Zealand Air Force, a post he held until 1946. At the close of World War II, Isitt was the New Zealand signatory to the Japanese Instrument of Surrender. After the war, following retirement from the Air Force, he worked as chairman of Tasman Empire Airways.
Air Vice Marshal William Vernon Crawford-Compton, was a New Zealand flying ace of the Royal Air Force (RAF) during the Second World War. He was officially credited with destroying at least 20 German aircraft.
Air Marshal Sir Arthur Coningham,, nicknamed "Mary", was a senior officer in the Royal Air Force. During the First World War, he was at Gallipoli with the New Zealand Expeditionary Force, was discharged in New Zealand as medically unfit for active service, and journeyed to Britain at his own expense to join the Royal Flying Corps, where he became a flying ace. Coningham was later a senior Royal Air Force commander during the Second World War, as Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief 2nd Tactical Air Force and subsequently the Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief Flying Training Command.
Francis Warrington Gillet was an American flying ace who served in both the American and British armed forces as a pilot during World War I. With 20 credited aerial victories he was the highest scoring pilot flying the Sopwith Dolphin, and the second highest scoring American, only surpassed by Eddie Rickenbacker.
Air Commodore Keith Logan "Grid" Caldwell, was a New Zealand fighter ace of the Royal Flying Corps in the First World War who also rose to the rank of air commodore in the Royal New Zealand Air Force during the Second World War.
The Sopwith 5F.1 Dolphin was a British fighter aircraft manufactured by the Sopwith Aviation Company. It was used by the Royal Flying Corps and its successor, the Royal Air Force, during the First World War. The Dolphin entered service on the Western Front in early 1918 and proved to be a formidable fighter. The aircraft was not retained in the postwar inventory and was retired shortly after the war.
John Harry McNeaney was a Canadian First World War flying ace, flying with both the Royal Flying Corps and the Royal Air Force. He was credited with five aerial victories. John McNeaney was the only Canadian Sopwith Dolphin Ace.
Air Vice-Marshal Ronald Graham, was a Scottish First World War flying ace of the Royal Naval Air Service. Remaining in the Royal Air Force after that war, he rose to the rank of air vice marshal during the Second World War.
Captain Earl McNabb Hand was a Canadian World War I flying ace credited with five confirmed aerial victories and two unconfirmed ones.
Captain Finlay McQuistan was a Scottish World War I flying ace who was credited with 11 aerial victories.
Captain James William Pearson was an American World War I flying ace credited with twelve aerial victories while flying for the British Royal Air Force.
Alfred de Bathe (Bath) Brandon was a New Zealand lawyer and military aviator who served in the First World War, and was credited with the destruction of two Zeppelin airships.
Joseph Joel Hammond was a pioneering New Zealand aviator. On 17 January 1914 at Epsom showgrounds he took New Zealand's first military plane, a Blériot XI-2, for its first flight.
Wilfred Elles Bannerman was a New Zealand cricketer. He played in three first-class cricket matches for Otago between the 1911/12 and 1914/15 seasons.
James William Hugh Bannerman was a New Zealand journalist, historian, cricketer and soldier.
The 1942 King's Birthday Honours in New Zealand, celebrating the official birthday of King George VI, were appointments made by the King to various orders and honours. The awards were made in recognition of war service by New Zealanders and were announced on 11 June 1942. No civilian awards were made.
The 1943 King's Birthday Honours in New Zealand, celebrating the official birthday of King George VI, were appointments made by the King to various orders and honours. The awards were made in recognition of war service by New Zealanders and were announced on 2 June 1943. No civilian awards were made.
The 1944 King's Birthday Honours in New Zealand, celebrating the official birthday of King George VI, were appointments made by the King to various orders and honours. The awards were made in recognition of war service by New Zealanders and were announced on 8 June 1944. No civilian awards were made.
The 1945 King's Birthday Honours in New Zealand, celebrating the official birthday of King George VI, were appointments made by the King to various orders and honours. The awards were made in recognition of war service by New Zealanders and were announced on 14 June 1945. No civilian awards were made.