Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Francis Mellersh (RAF officer)

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Nickname(s)
  
Tog

Role
  
RAF officer

Name
  
Francis Mellersh

Unit
  
No. 209 Squadron RAF

Years of service
  
1916–1954

Rank
  
Air vice-marshal

Allegiance
  
United Kingdom



Battles/wars
  
World War IWorld War II

Died
  
May 25, 1955, West Itchenor, United Kingdom

Awards
  
Order of the British Empire, Air Force Cross

Battles and wars
  
Service/branch
  

Air Vice Marshal Sir Francis John Williamson Mellersh, (22 September 1898 – 25 May 1955) was a Royal Naval Air Service aviator and flying ace credited with five aerial victories during the First World War, and a senior commander in the Royal Air Force during the 1940s and 1950s. He was killed in a helicopter accident in 1955.

Contents

Francis Mellersh (RAF officer) Francis Mellersh RAF officer Wikipedia

First World War

Francis Mellersh (RAF officer) RAF pilot Francis Mellersh getting a haircut and reading Greenmantle

Mellersh joined the Royal Naval Air Service in 1916. He trained as a fighter pilot and was posted to 9 Naval Squadron in 1917. While flying a Sopwith Triplane on 28 July 1917, he drove down an Aviatik C. He switched to flying a Sopwith Camel and scored victories 15 October 1917 and 12 April 1918; the latter win was shared with squadron-mate Roy Brown. On 21 April 1918, Mellersh was a flight commander involved in the dogfight that brought down the Red Baron, Manfred von Richthofen; Mellersh claimed a Fokker Dr.I triplane destroyed on that date. His last victory came two days later.

Death

Mellersh debarked from a helicopter onto a quay on 25 May 1955; he had been invited to cruise on a yacht belonging to the Itchenor Yacht Club. As the helicopter departed, one of its rotors hit the mast of a yacht. As the copter crashed, the main rotor killed Mellersh.

References

Francis Mellersh (RAF officer) Wikipedia