Christopher Courtney

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Sir Christopher Lloyd Courtney

Courtney (shown on right) with Trenchard and Prince Albert, 1919
Born (1890-06-27)27 June 1890
Died 22 October 1976(1976-10-22) (aged 86)
Service/branch  Royal Navy (19051918)
 Royal Air Force (19181945)
Rank Air Chief Marshal
Commands held Killingholme Naval Air Station
No. 4 Squadron RNAS
Royal Naval Air Station Dover
No. 4 Wing RNAS
No. 7 Squadron RNAS
11th Brigade
Independent Air Force
No. 2 (Indian) Wing RAF
RAF Iraq Command
Reserve Command
Battles/wars World War I
World War II
Other work Businessman

Air Chief Marshal Sir Christopher Lloyd Courtney, GBE, KCB, DSO (27 June 1890 22 October 1976) was a senior British Royal Air Force officer.

RAF career

Courtney joined the Royal Navy in May 1905 as a midshipman at Britannia Naval College.[1] By late 1909 he was an acting sub-lieutenant on board HMS Commonwealth.[1]

He fought in World War I initially as Officer Commanding Killingholme Royal Naval Air Station.[1] He continued his war service as Officer Commanding Royal Naval Air Station Dover, Officer Commanding No. 4 Wing RNAS and then Officer Commanding No. 7 Squadron RNAS.[1] In April 1918, with the creation of the Royal Air Force, Courtney transferred from the Navy to the RAF and at that time he was appointed Deputy Director of Aircraft Equipment at the newly established Air Ministry. Just before the end of World War I, Courtney was promoted to acting brigadier-general and sent France to command the 11th Brigade which was being established as a subordinate formation of the RAF's Independent Air Force. However, once the armistice was declared, the Independent Air Force's commander, Major-General Sir Hugh Trenchard, returned home and Courtney succeeded him as commander.[2]

After the War he served as Officer Commanding, No 2 (Indian) Wing and then after a tour on the Directing Staff at the RAF Staff College, Andover, he was appointed Deputy Director of Operations and Intelligence at the Air Ministry.[1] He briefly served as Air Officer Commanding RAF Iraq Command on a temporary basis in late 1932.[1] He was made Director of Training at the Air Ministry in 1933, Director of Staff Duties in 1934 and Deputy Chief of the Air Staff and Director of Operations & Intelligence in 1935.[1] After that he was appointed Air Officer Commanding RAF Iraq Command in 1937 and Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief Reserve Command in February 1939.[1] He became Air Member for Supply and Organisation in January 1940 and remained in that post throughout the remainder of World War II until he retired in 1945.[1]

Honours and awards

References

External links

Military offices
Preceded by
Sir Hugh Trenchard
As Commander-in-Chief the Inter-Allied Independent Air Force
General Officer Commanding the Independent Force
1918
Force disbanded
Preceded by
E R Ludlow-Hewitt
Air Officer Commanding Iraq Command
Temporary appointment

1932
Succeeded by
C S Burnett
Preceded by
E R Ludlow-Hewitt
Deputy Chief of the Air Staff
and Director of Operations and Intelligence

26 January 1935 25 January 1937
Succeeded by
R E C Peirse
Preceded by
W G S Mitchell
Air Officer Commanding British Forces in Iraq
19371939
Succeeded by
H G Smart
Preceded by
New Post
Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief Reserve Command
February 1939 August 1939
Succeeded by
Sir John Steel
Preceded by
W L Welsh
Air Member for Supply and Organisation
1940 1945
Succeeded by
Sir Leslie Hollinghurst
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