Captain Thomas Neville Stack AFC (died 1949) was a 1920s test pilot, air racer and aviation pioneer. He served in both the First and Second World War and in all three services.
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Thomas Neville Stack left the Army to join the Royal Flying Corps in 1917, at the end of the war he became a flying instructor. In 1921[1] he re-joined the Royal Air Force and served in Iraq leaving in 1925 to become chief flying instructor with the Lancashire Aero Club.[2]
On the 15 November 1926 Stack left England in at attempt to reach India in a De Havilland DH.60, he was accompanied by Bernard Leete in another Moth, they reached Karachi on the 8 January 1927.[2][3] In June 1927 Stack and Leete were each awarded the Air Force Cross, Air Ministry, 3 June, 1927, The King had been graciously pleased to approve the award of the Air Force Cross to Mr. Thomas Neville Stack (Flying Officer, Reserve of Air Force Officers), in recognition of the distinguished service rendered to aviation by his recent flight in a light aeroplane from London to Delhi.[4]
In 1934, to enable him to compete in the England-Australia MacRobertson Air Race, Stack together with Sidney Lewis Turner had a specially modified long-range version of the Airspeed Envoy built. It was named the Airspeed Viceroy.
The Airspeed Viceroy started the race from RAF Mildenhall, England, but after several reliability problems including with the mainwheel brakes, it was withdrawn from the race at Athens. The pilots concluded that it would be unsafe to proceed and they would probably be unable to finish the race.
In the 1940s he was Chief Test Pilot at Austin Motors where he flew new aircraft straight from the production lines. He later joined the Fleet Air Arm and commanded 742 Naval Air Squadron in Southern India.[2]
His son Neville Stack born in 1919 became an Air Chief-Marshal in the Royal Air Force. Stack was a manager at Orient Airways when he died near Karachi, India on 22 February 1949.[2] Newspaper reports that he was killed when he was run over by a lorry. The Police allege he threw himself under the vehicle. Stack had recently been interned by the Pakistan authorities (with regard a sale of a Dakota to India) but was allowed a daily visit to see his priest at Mauripore Airport and he is alleged to have thrown himself under the lorry while walking to the house of the priest.[5]