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Hugh Champion de Crespigny

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Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Rank
  
Air vice-marshal

Died
  
June 20, 1969


Name
  
Hugh de

Years of service
  
1915–1945

Hugh Champion de Crespigny

Born
  
8 April 1897 Elsternwick, Australia (
1897-04-08
)

Service/branch
  
British Army (1914–18)  Royal Air Force (1918–45)

Commands held
  
No. 21 (Training) Group (1943–46) AHQ Iraq (1942–43) No. 25 (Armament) Group (1939–42) No. 8 Flying Training School (1936–39) No. 2 (Indian) Wing (1930–34) No. 39 Squadron (1925–30) No. 60 Squadron (1922–24) No. 65 Squadron (1918) No. 29 Squadron (1917)

Battles/wars
  
First World War Second World War

Awards
  
Companion of the Order of the Bath Military Cross Distinguished Flying Cross Mentioned in Despatches Croix de guerre (France)

Battles and wars
  
World War I, World War II

Air Vice Marshal Hugh Vivian Champion de Crespigny, (8 April 1897 – 20 June 1969) was a senior Royal Air Force officer who commanded British Air Forces in Iraq during the Second World War.

RAF career

Hugh Champion de Crespigny joined the Special Reserve of the Royal Flying Corps in 1915 during the First World War. He went on to be Officer Commanding No. 29 Squadron on the Western Front and then Officer Commanding No. 65 Squadron also on the Western Front. After the war he went to India where he commanded No. 60 Squadron and then No. 39 Squadron and finally No. 2 (Indian) Wing.

He served in the Second World War as Air Officer Commanding No. 25 (Armament) Group, as Air Officer Commanding Air Headquarters Iraq and then as Air Officer Commanding No. 21 (Training) Group. He retired in 1945.

After the war he stood as a Labour Party candidate for the British Parliament in Newark. and then became Regional Commissioner for Schleswig-Holstein for the Control Commission for Germany. In 1948 he was succeeded as commissioner by William Asbury and stayed in Kiel as British consul until 1956. He later lived at Vierville in Natal, South Africa.

References

Hugh Champion de Crespigny Wikipedia