| Owen Tudor Boyd | |
|---|---|
| Born | 30 August 1889 |
| Died | 5 August 1944 (aged 54) |
| Allegiance | |
| Service/branch | |
| Years of service | 1916 – 1944 |
| Rank | Air Marshal |
| Commands held | RAF Balloon Command No. 1 Group RAF RAF Khormaksar No. 24 Squadron RAF No. 72 Squadron RAF No. 66 Squadron RAF |
| Battles/wars | World War I World War II |
| Awards | Companion of the Order of the Bath Officer of the Order of the British Empire Military Cross Air Force Cross Mention in Despatches (2) |
Air Marshal Owen Tudor Boyd CB, OBE, MC, AFC (30 August 1889 – 5 August 1944) was an officer in the British Army Royal Flying Corps (RFC) during most of World War I. Boyd was an officer in the Royal Air Force (RAF) during the latter part of World War I, in the interwar period, and during World War II.
|
Contents
|
Boyd was educated at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. On 20 January 1909, he was appointed to a commission on the unattached list before entering the Indian Army in the same year. Boyd was an officer with the Indian Army's 5th Cavalry.[1]
From 25 April 1916, Boyd saw service in World War I as a flying officer with the RFC. Later in 1916, he was a pilot on the Western Front with No. 27 Squadron; on 9 July, he was promoted to Flight Commander.[1]
Boyd stayed on the Western Front and continued to earn promotion. On 26 October, he was made Officer Commanding of a squadron and on 19 January 1917, took command of No. 66 Squadron.[1]
In June 1917, he was moved to a staff appointment and on 2 December, he was made a Staff Officer, 2nd Class, RFC (Captain - graded as Brigade Major).[1]
By 7 July 1918, Boyd was in Mesopotamia as Officer Commanding No. 72 Squadron.[1]
From 18 January 1919, Boyd was an Officer Commanding and a Staff Officer (Acting Lieutenant-Colonel). On 1 August, he was awarded a permanent commission as a Major. By 21 January 1920, he was a Staff Officer with the Mesopotamian Wing Headquarters. He was also involved as a Staff Officer with the Directorate of Operations and Intelligence.[1]
On 23 October 1922, Boyd was once again commanding a squadron, this time No. 24 Squadron.[1]
On 26 February 1923, he was made the Commandant of the School of Army Co-operation. Starting 21 January 1926, he attended the Army Staff College, Camberley. By 21 January 1928, he was on the directing staff of the college.[1]
On 4 January 1930, Boyd became the Deputy Director of Staff Duties.[1]
On 7 August 1931, Boyd was the Officer Commanding, RAF Aden. By 16 April 1934, he was Secretary of State for Air for the Headquarters Fighting Area. By 24 October 1935, he was Air Officer Commanding, Central Area.[1]
On 1 May 1936, Boyd was promoted to Air Commodore of No. 1 Group RAF. He was appointed Director of Personal Services at the Air Ministry in December 1936.[1]
In 1938, as an Air Vice-Marshal, Boyd became Commander-in-Chief RAF Balloon Command. On 1 December 1940, he was replaced by Air Marshal Sir Leslie Gossage at RAF Balloon Command. Boyd was then promoted to Air Marshal and appointed Deputy to the Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief (AOC-in-C) Middle East.[1]
On his way to Egypt, Boyd was to stop in Malta. However, the aircraft in which he and his staff were passengers was forced down over enemy-controlled Sicily by a group of Italian fighters. After destroying his confidential papers by setting his own aircraft on fire, Boyd became a prisoner of war (POW). He spent much of the war in the Castle Vincigliata (Castello di Vincigliata) camp near Florence, Italy.[2]
When Italy capitulated in September 1943, Boyd and two British Army generals (Philip Neame and Richard O'Connor, both captured in North Africa in 1941), made use of the general confusion and escaped from their Italian captors. After some time in the Italian countryside, all three men successfully reached the Allied lines.[3]
Of all of RAF Bomber Command's wartime group commanders, Boyd spent the shortest time in command of his appointed group. In late July 1944, he was divorced. Little more than a week later, on 5 August, he was dead from a heart attack.[1]
| Insignia | Rank | Date [1] | Service |
|---|---|---|---|
| Second Lieutenant | 20 January 1909 | British Army | |
| Lieutenant | 20 April 1911 | British Army | |
| Captain | 1 September 1915 | British Army | |
| Acting Major | 26 October 1916 | British Army | |
| Acting Major | 1 April 1918 | Royal Air Force | |
| Acting Lieutenant Colonel | 18 January 1918 | Royal Air Force | |
| Squadron Leader | 1 August 1919 | Royal Air Force | |
| Wing Commander | 1 January 1923 | Royal Air Force | |
| Group Captain | 1 July 1930 | Royal Air Force | |
| Air Commodore | 1 July 1934 | Royal Air Force | |
| Air Vice-Marshal | 1 July 1937 | Royal Air Force | |
| Acting Air Marshal | 8 November 1940 | Royal Air Force |
| Military offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by C T MacLean As Air Officer Commanding Aden Command |
Officer Commanding RAF Aden 1931 – 1934 |
Succeeded by C F A Portal As Officer Commanding Aden Command |
| Preceded by H R Nicholl |
Air Officer Commanding Central Area 1935 – 1936 |
Formation renamed as No. 1 Group |
| Preceded by J C Quinnell Quinnel's command was redesignated No. 6 Group in 1936 |
Air Officer Commanding No. 1 Group 1936 |
Succeeded by S W Smith |
| New title Command established
|
Air Officer Commanding Balloon Command 1938 – 1940 |
Succeeded by Sir Leslie Gossage |
| Preceded by A P Ritchie |
Air Officer Commanding No. 93 Group 1944 |
Succeeded by G S Hodson |
|
||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)