Air Member for Personnel
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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. He 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 world-wide.
The current Air Member for Personnel is double-hatted as Deputy Commander-in-Chief Air Command with responsibility for No. 22 Group RAF and RAF personnel management functions.
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[edit] History
The post of Master-General of Personnel was established on 3 January 1918 and the occupant sat on the Air Council. The first incumbent was Major-General Godfrey Paine. Some time in April or June 1919, the post was downgraded to Director of Personnel within the Department of the Chief of the Air Staff and the incumbent ceased to sit on the Air Council. However, in 1923 the appointment of Director of Personnel was upgraded to that of Air Member for Personnel and re-appointed to the Air Council.
On 1 April 1994, at the establishments of Personnel and Training Command, the new Air Officer Commanding in Chief was also appointed as Air Member for Personnel. Upon the merger of Personnel and Training Command with Strike Command to form RAF Air Command on 1 April 2007, the post of AOC Personnel and Training was re-designated as Deputy Commander-in-Chief Personnel (DCinC Pers), retaining the responsibility to Chief of the Air Staff as Air Member for Personnel.
[edit] Masters-General of Personnel
- 3 January 1918 Major-General G M Paine
- 22 August 1918 Major-General W S Brancker
- 1919 Post vacant
[edit] Directors of Personnel
- 1919 Rear Admiral C F Lambert[1]
- 1 April 1920 Air Vice-Marshal J F A Higgins[2]
- 1921 unknown
- January or February 1922 Air Commodore, later Air Vice-Marshal, O Swann[3]
[edit] Air Members for Personnel
- 1923 Air Vice-Marshal O Swann
- 27 November 1923 Air Vice-Marshal Sir Philip Game
- 1 January 1929 Air Chief Marshal Sir John Salmond
- 1 January 1930 Air Vice-Marshal Sir Tom Webb-Bowen
- 26 September 1931 Air Marshal Sir Edward Ellington
- 22 May 1933 Post Vacant
- 31 July 1933 Air Vice-Marshal F W Bowhill
- 1 July 1937 Air Marshal Sir William Mitchell
- unknown
- 1 February 1939 Air Marshal C F A Portal[4]
- 3 April 1940 Air Marshal Sir Leslie Gossage[5]
- 1 December 1940 Air Marshal Sir Philip Babington
- 17 August 1942 Air Marshal Sir Bertine Sutton
- 5 April 1945 Air Marshal Sir John Slessor
- 1 October 1947 Air Marshal Sir Hugh Saunders
- 31 October 1949 Air Chief Marshal Sir Leslie Hollinghurst
- 1 November 1952 Air Marshal Sir Francis Fogarty
- 1 January 1957 Air Marshal Sir John Whitley
- 1 April 1959 Air Chief Marshal Sir Hubert Patch
- 1 October 1959 Air Marshal Sir Arthur McDonald[6]
- 11 December 1961 Air Marshal Sir Walter Cheshire
- 22 February 1965 Air Marshal Sir David Lee
- 18 March 1968 Air Marshal Sir Andrew Humphrey
- 18 March 1970 Air Marshal Sir Lewis Hodges
- 25 April 1973 Air Marshal Sir Harold Martin
- 5 October 1974 Air Marshal Sir Neil Cameron
- 5 June 1976 Air Marshal Sir John Aiken
- 25 February 1978 Air Marshal Sir John Gingell
- 3 May 1980 Air Marshal Sir Charles Ness
- 7 May 1983 Air Marshal Sir Thomas Kennedy
- 20 March 1987 Air Marshal Sir Laurence Jones
- 25 October 1989 Air Marshal Sir David Parry-Evans
- Date Not Known Air Marshal Sir Roger Palin
- 16 April 1993 Air Marshal Sir Andrew Wilson
- 1 May 1995 Air Marshal, later Air Chief Marshal, Sir David Cousins
- 7 August 1998 Anthony Bagnall
- 2000 Air Marshal Sir John Day
- 20 March 2001 Air Marshal Sir Christopher Coville
- 25 April 2003 Air Marshal Sir Joe French
- 6 January 2006 Air Marshal B M Thornton
- 1 April 2007 Air Marshal S Dalton