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Francis James Ralph

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Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Rank
  
Second lieutenant

Place of burial
  
Somme, France


Name
  
Francis Ralph

Years of service
  
1915–1918

Unit
  
No. 20 Squadron RAF

Born
  
9 December 1892 Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England (
1892-12-09
)

Buried at
  
Villers-Bretonneux Military Cemetery, Somme, France (49°53′13″N 2°30′43″E / 49.88694°N 2.51194°E / 49.88694; 2.51194Coordinates: 49°53′13″N 2°30′43″E / 49.88694°N 2.51194°E / 49.88694; 2.51194)

Service/branch
  
British Army Royal Air Force

Died
  
September 3, 1918, Pas-de-Calais, France

Awards
  
Distinguished Flying Cross

Second Lieutenant Francis James Ralph (9 December 1892 – 3 September 1918) was a British World War I ace credited with 13 confirmed aerial victories over German fighter aircraft while flying as an aerial observer.

Contents

Early life

Francis James Ralph was born in Cheltenham on 9 December 1892. After completion of his education, he worked as a draughtsman for the Co-op Gas Company in Thurlaston, Leicestershire, before his enlistment in 1915.

Military career

From cadet he was appointed a temporary second lieutenant (on probation) on 12 February 1918, on the General List to serve in the Royal Flying Corps. He was confirmed in his rank as an observer officer on 27 May, by which time the Army's Royal Flying Corps and the Royal Naval Air Service had merged to form the Royal Air Force. By then Ralph was already serving as a gunner/observer in the rear seat of a Bristol F.2 Fighter in No. 20 Squadron, as on 9 May, flying with pilot Lieutenant David Smith, he had gained his first victory, shooting down in flames a Fokker Dr.I west of Lille. He then went on to fly with a number of pilots. On 31 May, he and Lieutenant Leslie Capel destroyed an Albatros D.V north of Laventie. Then, flying with Lieutenant William Thomson, he destroyed a Pfalz D.III over Comines–Houthem on 9 June, and drove down out of control a Fokker D.VII over Boezinge on 17 June, a victory shared with Captain Dennis Latimer & Lieutenant Tom Noel. On 26 June, for his fifth victory, which made him an ace, he drove down a Pfalz D.III over Armentières with Lieutenant Paul Iaccaci. From then on all his victories were made with Captain Horace Lale in the pilot's seat. They scored two Fokker D.VII's north of Comines on 25 July, one shared with Lieutenant Thomson & Sergeant D. D. C. Summers and Lieutenants Smith & John Hills, and on 14 August drove down a Fokker D.VII over Dadizele. Late on 21 August they accounted for a Pfalz D.III, then an Albatros D.V, and two Fokker D.VII north-east of Geluwe, the first Fokker being shared with Captain Latimer & Sergeant Arthur Newland and Lieutenant John Colbert & 2nd Lieutenant Harold Edwards. Ralph's 13th and final victory came on 3 September, driving down a Fokker D.VII south of Havrincourt Wood, but appears to have come at the cost of his life as he died the same day.

His award of the Distinguished Flying Cross was gazetted posthumously on 2 November 1918. His citation read:

Distinguished Flying Cross
Second Lieutenant Francis James Ralph.

Ralph was originally buried in the Cemetery of the Military Hospital at Dury, near Amiens, but in 1927 his remains were exhumed and re-interred at the Military Cemetery at Villers-Bretonneux.

References

Francis James Ralph Wikipedia