Everything about Geoffrey De Havilland totally explained
Captain Sir Geoffrey de Havilland,
OM,
CBE,
AFC,
RDI,
FRAeS, (
27 July 1882 –
21 May 1965) was a
British aviation pioneer and aircraft engineer. His
Mosquito has been considered the most versatile warplane ever built.
Biography
Early life
Born on
27 July 1882 at Magdala House, Terriers, High Wycombe,
Buckinghamshire, de Havilland was the second son of
the Revd Charles de Havilland and his first wife, Alice Jeannette (née Saunders).
He was educated at
Nuneaton Grammar School,
St Edward's School, Oxford and the Crystal Palace School of
Engineering (from 1900 to 1903).
After engineering school, his first interest was in
automotive engineering, building cars and motorcycles. He took an apprenticeship with engine manufacturers Willans & Robinson of
Rugby, after which he worked as a draughtsman for the
Wolseley Motor Company in Birmingham, a job from which he resigned after only a year.
He subsequently spent two years working in the design office of an omnibus company in Walthamstow.
He married in 1909 and almost immediately embarked on the career of designing, building and flying aircraft to which he devoted the rest of his life.
Aviation career
Built with money borrowed from his maternal grandfather,
, de Havilland's
first aircraft took two years to build and he crashed it during its first very short flight near
Litchfield, Hampshire. A memorial today marks the event. Subsequent designs were more successful: in 1912 he established a new British altitude record of 10,500 feet (3.2 km) in an aircraft of his design.
In December 1910, de Havilland joined HM Balloon Factory at
Farnborough, which was to become the
Royal Aircraft Factory. He sold his second aeroplane (which he'd used to teach himself to fly) to his new employer for 400 pounds - it became the
F.E.1 - the first aircraft to bear an official Royal Aircraft Factory designation. For the next three years de Havilland designed, or participated in the design of, a number of experimental types at the "Factory".
In January 1914, he was appointed an inspector of aircraft in the Aeronautical Inspection Directorate. Unhappy at leaving design work, in May he was recruited to become the Chief Designer at
Airco, in
Hendon. He designed many aircraft for Airco all designated using his initials
DH. Large numbers of de Havilland designed aircraft were used during the
First World War flown by the
Royal Flying Corps and later the
Royal Air Force.
Airco was bought by the
BSA Company but BSA were only interested in using the company factories for car production. De Havilland raised £20,000, bought the relevant assets he needed and in
1920 formed the
de Havilland Aircraft Company at
Stag Lane Aerodrome,
Edgware where de Havilland and his company designed and built a large number of aircraft including the
Moth family of aircraft. In 1933 the company moved to
Hatfield Aerodrome, in
Hertfordshire. One of his roles was as test pilot for the company's aircraft, in all of which he liked to fly.
The company's aircraft, particularly the
Mosquito played a formidable role in World War II and de Havilland was knighted in 1944.
He controlled the company until it was bought by the
Hawker Siddeley Company in 1960.
Retirement and death
In 1955, de Havilland retired from active involvement in his company, though remaining as president. He continued flying up to the age of seventy.
He died aged 82, of a cerebral haemorrhage, on
21 May 1965 at Watford Peace Memorial Hospital, Hertfordshire.
Honours
In 1918, de Havilland was made an
OBE and CBE in 1934. He received the
Air Force Cross in 1919, in recognition of his service in the
First World War, and was knighted in 1944. He was appointed to the
Order of Merit in 1962. He received numerous national and international gold and silver medals and honorary fellowships of learned and engineering societies.
Family
The famous actresses
Olivia de Havilland and
Joan Fontaine were sisters and de Havilland's cousins, while his father Charles and their father Walter were half-brothers.
In 1909, de Havilland married Louise Thomas, who had formerly been
governess to de Havilland's sisters. They had three sons together.
Two of de Havilland's sons died as test pilots in de Havilland aircraft. One of these (also named
Geoffrey) carried out the first flights of the Mosquito and
Vampire and was killed flying the
DH 108 Swallow while diving at or near the speed of sound. His youngest son, John died in an air collision in 1943. Louise suffered a nervous breakdown following these deaths and died in 1949.
In 1951, de Havilland remarried, to Joan Mary Frith, herself a divorcée.
In 1979, de Havilland's autobiography,
Sky Fever was published by Peter and Anne de Havilland.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Geoffrey De Havilland'.
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