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Duncan Pitcher

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Duncan le Geyt Pitcher
Pitcher during the First World War
Born(1877-08-31)31 August 1877
Naini Tal, East Indies[1]
Died1 September 1944(1944-09-01) (aged 67)
Uxbridge, London, England
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
Service / branchBritish Army (1898–1918)
Royal Air Force (1918–29)
Years of service1898–1929
RankAir Commodore
CommandsNo. 22 Group (1926–29)
No. 7 Group (1925–26)
1st Brigade RFC (1916–17, 1918)
Central Flying School (1915–16)
Battles / warsFirst World War
AwardsCompanion of the Order of St Michael and St George
Commander of the Order of the British Empire
Distinguished Service Order
Mentioned in Despatches (2)
Officer of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus (Italy)
Officer of the Legion of Honour (France)

Air Commodore Duncan le Geyt Pitcher, CMG, CBE, DSO (31 August 1877 – 1 September 1944) was an infantry and cavalry officer in the British Indian Army. During the First World War he served in the Royal Flying Corps and in his later years became a senior commander in the Royal Air Force.

Early years

Pitcher was born in Naini Tal in Uttarakhand (then called the East Indies), the son of Major Duncan Pitcher and his wife Rose.[1] His father was on active service with the Bengal Staff Corps of the British Indian Army. At the time of the 1881 Census the family are living in Hendon, North London.[1] In the 1891 Census Pitcher is a 13-year-old scholar at the Sedbergh School in Yorkshire.[2]

Military aviation

Pitcher was sent from India to the Central Flying School in Great Britain in order to learn how to fly and gain the requisite knowledge to set up a flying school in India. The European War broke out before he could return to India and Pitcher became involved in military aviation in Europe.

Pitcher attended the Central Flying School as a pilot under training in 1913 and once he had completed his course, he remained on the staff until the summer of 1914 when he was attached to No 4. Squadron RFC. He returned to the Central Flying School, probably in late 1914 and was appointed Officer In-charge of Transport. Immediately following the New Year of 1915, Pitcher took up instructional duties before being appointed a squadron commander at the Central Flying School in late January. In April 1915 he was appointed Assistant Commandant at the Central Flying School in which capacity he served until mid November 1915. Pitcher then spent around a month as a Royal Flying Corps wing commander before returning to the Central Flying School as its Commandant when Godfrey Paine returned to naval duties at Cranwell.

The 1 April 1916 saw Pitcher promoted and appointed Brigadier-General Commanding the I Brigade. In 1915 he recommended A. M. Low in WWI for work on the radio control systems for unmanned ‘Aerial Target' aircraft and then in 1918, for the remote control Distance Control Boats.[3]

In 1921 Duncan was the best man at his old RFC colleague Robert Loraine’s wedding.[4] Loraine had a great deal in common with Reginald Denny, a younger British actor/airman. They had been in a West End production together in 1902 in London,[5] they were both veterans of the RFC (and its successor, the Royal Air Force) and were both flying and making films in Hollywood in the 1930s. Each of them visited their close relatives in the same area of London. Loraine knew both Duncan, his best man, the Air-Commodore who had been in charge of the RFC radio control weapons that led to the first powered military drone aircraft [6] and Denny, a fellow actor who became interested in radio controlled aircraft and started the first US military drone work at the start of WWII.

References

  1. ^ a b c 1881 Census of Hendon, RG11/1367, Folio 91, Page 58, Duncan L G Pitcher, Age: 3, Where born: Naini Tal, East Indies, Address: 8 Edgware Road, Rockhall Terrace, Hendon, Middlesex.
  2. ^ 1881 Census of Sedbergh, RG12/3489, Folio 25, Page 5, Duncan Leuguy Pitcher, Age: 13, Where born: Lucknow, India, Address: School House Towers, Sedbergh, Yorkshire.
  3. ^ "The Dawn of the Drone" Steve Mills 2019 Casemate Publishers. page 221
  4. ^ "The Life of Robert Loraine: The Stage, the Sky, and George Bernard Shaw” Lanayre D. Liggera page 172
  5. ^ "The Dawn of the Drone"" Steve Mills 2019 Casemate Publishers. page 219
  6. ^ The Queen Bee
Military offices
Preceded by Commandant of the Central Flying School
1915–1916
Succeeded by
Preceded by Brigadier-General Commanding I Brigade RFC
1916–1917
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Cuthbert MacLean
Temporary appointment, preceded by:
Gordon Shephard
Brigadier-General Commanding I Brigade RFC
January – December 1918
Brigade disbanded
End of the First World War
Preceded by Air Officer Commanding No. 7 Group
1925–1926
Vacant
Title next held by
Ralph Cochrane
Vacant
Title last held by
Edward Masterman
Air Officer Commanding No. 22 Group
1926–1929
Succeeded by