- Wilfred Theodore Blake
Major Wilfred Theodore Blake (1894 - 1968) was a pioneer aviator, travel writer and traveller. He served with the
Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry .It was Blake who led the first attempt to fly round the world in 1922. The pilot for this mission was Norman MacMillan. The aircraft was a
de Havilland DH9A bought from theRoyal Air Force . Blake's ambitious round-the-world trip was cancelled after the first stage of the flight came to grief in Calcutta.In 1951 he drove his
Standard Vanguard motor car on a record journey aroundSouth America fromLa Paz toRio de Janeiro taking inPeru ,Chile ,Argentina andParaguay along the way.In 1959 he and his wife drove around the
Central African Federation , again in a Standard Vanguard, at the invitation of the Federation Government, meeting bothRoy Welensky andEdgar Whitehead , the Prime Ministers of the Federation and Southern Rhodesia respectively. Welensky impressed him greatly, Whitehead less so. Blake had visited many of the places he now saw twenty five years before and marvelled at the great changes wrought to the country. He produced a readable, if uncritical, book of his journey Rhodesia and Nyasaland Journey published in 1960. Now rather dated it is nevertheless a useful social history of the period - he several times notes how many ex-RAF men there were in Southern Rhodesia and their likely influence on its politics.There is bench in his memory at
St Columb Major Parish Church, Cornwall. He lived in St Columb in the latter part of his life and died there in 1968.Bookography
The following books by Blake appeared under the name of "Wing Adjutant"
References
* [http://www.airforce.forces.gc.ca/equip/historical/DH9Alst_e.asp Basic Information]
* [http://www.frontiersmenhistorian.info/world.htm Secondary Source]
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