Richard Gordon Wakeford

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Air Marshal Sir Richard (Dickie) Gordon Wakeford KCB OBE MVO AFC (20 April 1922 - 13 February 2007) was an officer in the Royal Air Force for 36 years, from 1941 to 1977. Beginning as a pilot of flying boats with Coastal Command, he became a flying instructor, and commanded the Queen's Flight. After various operational commands, his last post was as Deputy Chief of Defence (Intelligence) at the Ministry of Defence.

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[edit] Early life and war service

Wakeford was born in Torquay. He was educated at Kelly College in Tavistock.

He joined the RAF in 1941. After flight training with the US Navy in Florida, he joined Coastal Command to fly anti-aubmarine missions. He flew Catalina flying boats in the Indian Ocean with No. 212 Squadron for 18 months from November 1942, based in Karachi. After a period training other pilots of flying boats, he joined No. 210 Squadron in October 1944, based at Sullom Voe in the Shetland Islands. He flew in support of Russian convoys and intercepted German submarines based in Norway.

Wakeford was involved in the last sinking of a German U-boat, on 8 May 1945. VE day was the previous day, and all German submarines had been ordered to travel on the surface: submerged U-boats were liable to be attacked. Flying a Catalina over the North Atlantic, Wakeford detected a submerged German submarine. Having run out of depth charges, he dropped some sonobuoys to track the U-boat before returning to base on the Shetland Islands. A second Catalina relieved him. U-320 was damaged and scuttled off the coast of Norway.

[edit] Post-war career

After the war, Wakeford flew Liberator and York transport aircraft. He became a flying instructor at the RAF College at Cranwell, and then joined the Central Flying School as an examiner, testing other flying instructors. He received the AFC. He married Anne Butler in 1948.

As a wing commander, he served in Malaya in 1955, during the Malayan Emergency. He was appointed OBE in 1958. He then joined the Queen's Flight in 1959 as its commander, and was appointed MVO (4th Class). He spent two years at the RAF Staff College, and was then promoted to group captain. He became commander of the V-bomber base at RAF Scampton in June 1964, in charge of three squadrons of Vulcan bombers. He was Assistant Commandant of the RAF College from 1966 to 1969 during the period when it merged with the RAF Technical College at Henlow.

He was promoted to air vice-marshal in February 1969, and became Commander of the Northern Maritime Air Region, and Air Officer Scotland and Northern Ireland, based at Pitreavie Castle in Fife, where he was responsible for the squadrons that tracked Russian forces in the north Atlantic. He was Director of Service Intelligence at the Ministry of Defence, and was the second commander of the short-lived ANZUK Force, based in Singapore, from 1973 until it was disbanded in January 1975. His last post was as Deputy Chief of Defence (Intelligence) at the Ministry of Defence, from 1975 to 1978. He was appointed KCB in 1976.

[edit] Later life

He retired to Perthshire in 1977, where he enjoyed fly-fishing and golf. He served as a trustee of the MacRobert Trust from 1980 (chairman from 1982 to 1994), supporting hospitals and welfare organisations that assist ex-servicemen, and other educational organisations. He became a Commander of the Order of St John in 1986 and was awarded the inaugural President's Medal of the Royal Academy of Engineering in 1987.[1] He moved to Inchberry in Moray in 1987.

His wife died in 2002. He died from cancer of the oesophagus in Aberdeen. He was survived by two sons and a daughter, Richard, Susan and Christopher. A second daughter, Sally, predeceased him.

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