Edgar McCloughry

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Edgar James Kingston-McCloughry
Born 10 September 1896
Hindmarsh, Australia
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Edinburgh, Scotland
Allegiance  Australia
 United Kingdom
Service/branch Australian Imperial Force
Australian Flying Corps
Royal Air Force
Years of service 1914–1953
Rank Air Vice Marshal
Commands held No. 38 Group
No. 18 Group
Allied Expeditionary Air Force Bombing Committee
No. 44 Group
No. 4 Squadron
Battles/wars First World War

Second World War

Awards Companion of the Order of the Bath
Commander of the Order of the British Empire
Distinguished Service Order
Distinguished Flying Cross & Bar
Mentioned in Despatches (3)
Relations Wilfred McClaughry (brother)

Air Vice Marshal Edgar James Kingston-McCloughry CB, CBE, DSO, DFC, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , & Bar (10 September 1896 – 15 November 1972), born Edgar James McCloughry, was an Australian fighter pilot and flying ace of the First World War, and a senior commander in the Royal Air Force during the Second World War. He shot down 21 aircraft and military balloons during the former war, making him the 6th highest-scoring Australian ace. He was also awarded the Distinguished Service Order and the Distinguished Flying Cross and Bar as well as being Mentioned in Despatches.

McCloughry joined the Australian Imperial Force in 1914, and served as a military engineer in Egypt and France before transferring to the Royal Flying Corps (RFC) in December 1916. He graduated from flying training in August 1917 and was posted to 23 Squadron RFC on the Western Front. He was seriously injured in a crash shortly thereafter and, after recovering in hospital, was reassigned as a flight instructor. He was reassigned again in the summer of 1918 to the Australian Flying Corps (AFC). He scored most of his victories there in the last few months of the war.

McCloughry left the AFC in August 1919 and pursued a career as an engineer in the United Kingdom before joining the Royal Air Force (RAF) in 1922. He served there in a strategy-planning capacity through the Second World War. In 1940, under the influence of Lord Beaverbrook, he circulated an series of anonymous memos which were highly critical of senior RAF figures; in response, he was posted to South Africa, but the fallout continued and by the end of the year the Chief of the Air Staff and several other commanders had been replaced.[1]

He retired from the RAF in 1953 as an air vice marshal, and died in 1972 in Edinburgh.

References

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