- Arthur de Terrotte Nevill
Air Vice Marshal Sir Arthur de Terrotte Nevill KBE, CB (29 April 1899 – 1985) was a famousNew Zealand military aviator and administrator.He attended the Royal Military College of Australia from 1916 until 1919 and was appointed a Lieutenant in the
New Zealand Army in 1919 and held various staff and regimental appointments inNew Zealand from 1921 until 1930 when he transferred to the New Zealand Permanent Air Force [ [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Royal_New_Zealand_Air_Force] The New Zealand Permanent Air Force] at its establishment on 1 April 1930.During that time he had been appointed as New Zealand Liaison Officer to the
Air Ministry and he continued there until 1935.In 1937 he was appointed as Air Member for Supply to the Air Board of the newly organised Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF). As such he was responsible for all of the logistics activities of the RNZAF. As a result of this appointment he was then appointed in 1942 as Air Officer Commanding RNZAF Headquarters in
London until 1943.In 1944 he was returned to NZ and appointed Vice-Chief of Air Staff, and then in 1946 to Chief of Air Staff until January 1951. During this period his administration coped with the RNZAF at its greatest establishment of manpower, that were being, or had been, employed in most war theatres from Europe to the western Pacific [ [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Royal_New_Zealand_Air_Force] World War II] , and then through a period of demobilisation when airmen were employed on many "make work" tasks and flying was minimalised to save money. During this period, too, there were so-called "strikes" when airmen and other servicemen and women throughout New Zealand used "refusing to cooperate with orders" tactics to get demobilised more quickly.
Most of the aircraft employed by the air force were subject to Lend Lease rules and were required to be returned to US control, or destroyed. Most were destroyed, some later than the extent of his administration. He also had to endure the effect of a home government that decided to support Britain (financially) by ordering a small fleet of pre-wartime and wartime designed aircraft, for example 100 Mosquitos, for which no useful service was contemplated. Only twelve ever flew in New Zealand and they were soon mothballed.
However he was also responsible for the initiation of a series of orders for aircraft such as the Vampire, Devon, Type 170 Freighter and Hastings C Mk3 that were to see service well into the 1960s, and some beyond that.
In 1969 Sir Arthur was appointed an Honorary Doctor of the University of Waikato.
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