- Whitney Straight
Air Commodore Whitney Willard Straight CBE, MC, DFC (November 6 ,1912 -April 5 ,1979 ) was aGrand Prix motor racing driver, aviator, businessman, and a member of the prominentWhitney family of theUnited States .Born in
New York , Whitney Straight was the son of Willard Dickerman Straight and heiressDorothy Payne Whitney . He was six years old when his father died inFrance ofinfluenza during the great epidemic while serving with theUnited States Army duringWorld War I . Following his mother's remarriage to British agronomistLeonard K. Elmhirst in 1925, the family moved toEngland . They lived atDartington Hall where he attended the progressive school founded by his parents. His education was completed at Trinity College, Cambridge.Flying was his passion, and while 16 years old, still too young for a pilot's licence he had already achieved over 60 hours solo flight. While still an undergraduate at Cambridge, he became a well known
Grand Prix motor racing driver and competed at events in England and on the Continent. He competed in more Grands Prix than any American until afterWorld War II . In 1933 driving aMaserati he won theDonington Trophy and the Mountain Championship, and in 1934 formed his own motor racing team, personally driving to victory in theSouth African Grand Prix . He also gave public demonstrations atBrooklands Racing Circuit achieving a speed of 138.7 mph, a record for 5 litre class cars.On July 17, 1935 he married Lady Daphne Margarita Finch-Hatton, daughter of the 14th Earl of Winchilsea, and they had two daughters.
In his early 20s, as head of the Straight Corporation Limited, he operated airfields throughout Britain and ran flying clubs. In 1936 he helped develop the
Miles Whitney Straight aircraft. He became a naturalised British citizen that year. On October 18, 1938, the Straight Corporation purchased control of Norman Edgar (Western Airways), Ltd. and renamed it Western Airways, Ltd.During
World War II , Whitney Straight served as aRoyal Air Force pilot in 601 Squadron with over 4 kills to his credit in theBattle of Britain . Straight was seriously wounded inNorway in 1940 while laying out an aerodrome on the frozen surface of a lake, and after convalescing he rejoined his squadron towards the end of theBattle of Britain . For his service in Norway, he would, in 1942, be awarded the "Krigskorset med Sverd" or NorwegianWar Cross with Sword . He was credited with four and a half kills and also recorded damage to many other planes. He was shot down overFrance in August 1941 and initially evaded capture. Through the French Underground, he made his way toSpain where he was eventually captured and put in a GermanPOW camp . However, he escaped and reached safety inGibraltar . With the rank of Air Commodore, he was sent to the Middle East in charge of RAF transport command operations there, and in September 1943 took over the newly made Cairo aerodrome.At war's end, he became chairman of the
Royal Aero Club and in July 1947, at the age of only thirty-four, he was made managing director and Chief Executive Officer ofBritish Overseas Airways Corporation . He reorganised the company and in 1949 was appointed deputy Chairman of the board. In the United States, his cousinCornelius Vanderbilt Whitney was the President of Aviation Corporation of America which becamePan American Airways .Later Whitney Straight joined Rolls-Royce as deputy Chairman, and it was while visiting
Peking ,China in 1958 that Straight was horrified to discover that the Russian Mig 15 planes had counterfeit versions of the Rolls-Royce Derwent and Nene engines.Russia had been provided with 40 of these engines under an export license provided by the government of Prime MinisterClement Atlee after the war. Straight tried unsuccessfully to claim back £200m from Russia in royalties.Whitney Straight died in
Fulham in 1979 at the age of sixty-six.Whitney Straight was the father of Barney Barnato (born 1947) out of a long term relationship with
Diana Barnato Walker , the British air ace, who herself was the first British woman to break the sound barrier (Source - "Spreading My Wings" by Diana Barnato-Walker).References
* [http://www.rafweb.org/Biographies/Straight.htm Air of Authority - A History of RAF Organisation - Air Cdre Straight]
*Rolls Royce - Sunday Times 10 May 10 1987
*Obituary - The Times 10 April, 1979
* [http://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/diana-barnato-walker-aviator-who-was-the-first-british-woman-to-break-the-sound-barrier-824292.html Obituary of Diana Barnato Walker] - byPhilip Jarrett - The Independent, 9 May 2008
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