- Arthur Coningham (RAF officer)
-
Sir Arthur Coningham
Air Marshal ConinghamNickname Mary Born January 19, 1895
Brisbane, Queensland, AustraliaDied presumably 29 or 30 January 1948 (aged 53)
Bermuda Triangle (presumed)Allegiance New Zealand
United KingdomService/branch New Zealand Army
Royal Air ForceYears of service 1914–1947 Rank Air Marshal Commands held 2nd Tactical Air Force
1st Allied Tactical Air Force
Western Desert Air Force
No.4 Group
RAF Calshot
No. 92 SquadronBattles/wars - Gallipoli Campaign
- Western Front
- Battle of Amiens
Awards Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath
Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire
Distinguished Service Order
Military Cross
Distinguished Flying Cross
Air Force Cross
Mentioned in Despatches (4)
Officier of the Légion d'honneur (France)Air Marshal Sir Arthur "Mary" Coningham KCB, KBE, DSO, MC, DFC, AFC, RAF (19 January 1895 – presumably 29 or 30 January 1948) was a senior officer in the Royal Air Force. During the First World War, he was at Gallipoli with the New Zealand Expeditionary Force, transferred to the Royal Flying Corps, where he became a flying ace. Conningham was later a senior Royal Air Force commander during the Second World War, as Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief 2nd Tactical Air Force and subsequently the Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief Flying Training Command.
Coningham is chiefly remembered as the person most responsible for the development of forward air control parties directing close air support, which he developed as commander of the Western Desert Air Force between 1941 and 1943, and as commander of the tactical air forces in the Normandy campaign in 1944. On 30 January 1948, he disappeared along with all the other passengers and crew of the airliner G-AHNP Star Tiger when it vanished without a trace somewhere off the Eastern coast of the United States in the Bermuda Triangle.
Contents
Early life
Coningham was born in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia on 19 January 1895.[1] His early life was one that made him learn to be adaptable. His father, also Arthur Coningham, who had played Test cricket for Australia, was a con man who was exposed in court for fabricating legal evidence in a trial designed to shake down a Catholic priest, Denis Francis O'Haran, secretary to the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Sydney.[2] The resulting scandal drove the older Arthur Coningham to remove the Coningham family to New Zealand while Coningham was still young.[2] The change of scene to New Zealand did not change the father's modus operandi; he spent six months imprisoned there for fraud.[3]
Coningham was resilient enough and sufficiently motivated that he won a scholarship to Wellington College. Although Coningham had won a scholarship, he was not an academic star. However, he was athletic and an outdoorsman, with expertise in horsemanship and with firearms.[4]
His parents divorced when he was seventeen; grounds were his father's infidelity. Arthur Coningham was maturely assured enough to remark, "Look here, Coningham, you may be my father, but I am ashamed of you." The comment reflects Coningham's persona; he was abstemious by nature, being a non-smoker, near teetotaler, and impatient with obscene language.[4]
Military career
World War I service
Coningham volunteered for service in the New Zealand Expeditionary Force in 1914. He served in Egypt and Somaliland, but developed Typhoid fever and was invalided out of service. In 1916, he betook himself to England and volunteered for the Royal Flying Corps.[5] By the end of the war he had attained the rank of Major and was in command of No. 92 Squadron.[5] He had destroyed four enemy aircraft and shared in the destruction of three others with Evander Shapard, Frank Billinge, and Arthur Randell. He was also credited with seven victories for having driven down an enemy machine out of control. He emerged from the war with two wounds, a DSO, and a Military Cross.[5] During this time, he had also acquired the nickname "Maori" as a play on his heritage; over the years, this would become corrupted into "Mary".[6]
Inter-war years
After the end of World War I, Coningham remained in the Royal Air Force, initially remaining as Officer Commanding No. 92 Squadron.[5] During the early 1920s he served as a technical and flying instructor before being posted to No. 55 Squadron flying DH9As out of Mosul in Iraq.[5] In the summer of 1923 Coningham was promoted to squadron leader and appointed as the Officer Commanding of No. 55 Squadron.[5] From early 1924 to early 1926 Coningham carried out staff officer duties, first at the headquarters of Egyptian Group and then at the headquarters of RAF Middle East.[5]
After further service at the Royal Air Force College, Cranwell and the Central Flying School, Coningham was promoted to wing commander in 1931.[5] The next year he was sent to the Sudan as the senior RAF officer.[5]
On his return to Great Britain in 1935 he took up staff duties in Coastal Area before being promoted to group captain and serving as the Senior Air Staff Officer at the headquarters of No. 17 Group.[5] From 1937 to 1939, Coningham was the Officer Commanding RAF Calshot.[5]
World War II service
Coningham began the war commanding Bomber Command's No.4 Group, which he led for two years in the bombing offensive against Germany.[5] In 1941 he was sent to the Middle East, where he assumed command of the Western Desert Air Force.[5] He inherited a poorly functioning situation, where the Royal Air Force was almost totally failing to support ground troops. He promptly delegated out technical duties to those he trusted and did not micromanage them; however, he held his subordinates strictly responsible for achieving the results he wanted. Any mistakes by his underlings that resulted in fatalities to friendly troops were grounds for dismissal by Coningham.
Faced with equipment shortages, a hostile desert environment, and superior enemy planes, Coningham's management system, through judicious deployment of his squadrons, gradually achieved air superiority in the North African campaign. In particular, Coningham developed the use of fighter-bombers, able to fight as fighter planes in the air or in bombing and strafing attacks of enemy ground targets. Coningham developed an efficient ground support system to keep planes flying, and a command and control system to allow ground observers to radio in air attacks. Coningham's Western Desert Air Force, in continuous air attacks of enemy ground targets, was instrumental in stopping the enemy offensive at El Alamein in July 1942. Coningham formed a close relationship with the new commander of the British Eighth Army, General Bernard Montgomery.[1] Montgomery and Coningham recognised the importance of joint operations. The air power doctrine devised by Coningham is the basis of modern joint operations doctrine. The dominance of the Allied air force was a critical factor in the British victory at the Second Battle of El Alamein in November 1942. Coningham's doctrine of tactical air power would reach its fruition in early 1943, when RAF and USAAF fighter-bombers and bombers attacked enemy land forces.
Coningham's doctrine was fundamental. He stated that the greatest attribute of air power was its ability to speedily concentrate its force. It followed that its command must also be concentrated. Tactical air power had to be closely coordinated with the ground forces, but the army could not command it. He stated as much in a pamphlet that was widely distributed, to every ranking officer in North Africa, so that they would know what to expect. The pamphlet was later copied nearly verbatim as part of the United States Field Manual on use of air power. FM 100-20 also included Coningham's priorities for success in use of tactical air power. First, gain air superiority. Second, use the air superiority gained to interdict enemy reinforcements of men and materiel. Third, combine air attacks with ground assaults on the front lines.
Coningham was knighted after El Alamein and continued to provide tactical air support for the Eighth Army until they occupied Tripoli in January 1943.[1]
Later in 1943 Coningham was promoted to Air Marshal and directed tactical air force operations in the Allied invasion of Sicily and Italy as commander of the 1st Allied Tactical Air Force.[5]
As the leading exponent of tactical air warfare, Coningham was the obvious choice to command 2nd Tactical Air Force,[5] the Allied tactical air forces in the North-West European campaign, and in January 1944 he was recalled to England where he helped plan air support for the Normandy Landings. By this time his relationship with Montgomery had deteriorated markedly. The two often clashed and Mongomery regularly tried to bypass Coningham to deal directly with Air Marshall Trafford Leigh-Mallory. In August 1944 Montgomery wrote to Alan Brooke that "Coningham is violently anti-army and despised by all soldiers; my army commanders mistrust him and never want to see him.[7]
He remained commander of the 2nd Tactical Air Force until July 1945, when he was replaced by Air Chief Marshal Sir Sholto Douglas and appointed head of Flying Training Command.[5]
Retirement and disappearance
Coningham's career ended on 1 August 1947 after 30 years of commissioned service.[5] He requested that his retirement be shown as taking place at his own request. He disappeared on 30 January 1948 when the airliner G-AHNP Star Tiger in which he was travelling to Bermuda was lost off the east coast of the United States.[5]
In popular culture
In the film Patton, Coningham is played by John Barrie. During his scene, in which General George S Patton is complaining about lack of air cover for American troops, Sir Arthur confirms to Patton that he will see no more German planes. As he has completed his sentence, German planes strafe the compound.
Although a similar scene happened in real life, in actuality, Coningham was not present; Patton was talking to General Carl Spaatz and Air Chief Marshal Arthur Tedder at the time of the fruitless strafing.
Awards and decorations
- Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath - 27 Nov 1942 (CB - 24 Sep 1941)
- Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire - 1 Jan 1946
- Distinguished Service Order - 26 Sep 1917
- Military Cross - 17 Sep 1917
- Distinguished Flying Cross - 6 Jun 1919
- Air Force Cross - 1 Jan 1926
- Mentioned in Despatches - 11 Dec 1917, 11 Jun 1924, 1 Jan 1941, 11 Jun 1942
- Officier of the Légion d'honneur (France).[8]
- Croix de Guerre (France)
- Chief Commander of the Legion of Merit (United States) - 27 Aug 1943
- Distinguished Service Medal (United States) - 3 Aug 1945
- Grand Officer of the Order of Leopold (Belgium) - 23 Nov 1945
- Croix de Guerre with Palms (Belgium) - 23 Nov 1945
- Grand Cross of the Order of the Phoenix (Greece) - 6 Sep 1946
- Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Orange Nassau (Netherlands) - 18 Nov 1947.
See also
- List of people who disappeared mysteriously
Notes
- ^ a b c Sir Arthur Coningham at Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
- ^ a b Coningham, Arthur (1863 - 1939) at Australian Dictionary of Biography
- ^ Orange pp. 6–7
- ^ a b Budiansky, pp. 288-295
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Air of Authority - A History of RAF Organisation - Air Marshal Sir Arthur Coningham
- ^ Above the Trenches: A Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915-1920.
- ^ Carlo D'Este, Decision in Normandy, Penguin, 2001 ed, pp.218-220.
- ^ M. Brewer, 'New Zealand and the Legion d'honneur: Officiers, Commandeurs and Dignites', The Volunteers: The Journal of the New Zealand Military Historical Society, 35(3),March 2010, p.132.
References
- Air of Authority - A History of RAF Organisation - Air Marshal Coningham
- Coningham: A Biography of Air Marshal Sir Arthur Coningham
- Orange, Vincent (1992). Coningham: a biography of Air Marshal Sir Arthur Coningham. DIANE Publishing. ISBN 1428992804. http://books.google.com/books?id=QbRn5MwhlWcC.
- Budiansky, Stephen (2004). Air Power. Viking. ISBN 9780670032853.
- Shores, Christopher F., et al. (1990) Above the Trenches: A Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915-1920. Grub Street. ISBN 0948817194, 9780948817199.
Military offices Preceded by
R E SaulOfficer Commanding RAF Calshot
11 June 1937 - c. 1939Succeeded by
UnknownPreceded by
C H B BlountAir Officer Commanding No. 4 Group
1939 - 1941Succeeded by
C R CarrPreceded by
R CollishawAir Officer Commanding No. 204 Group
1941Group disbanded
Raised to command and renamed AHQ Western DesertNew title
Formation upgraded from No. 204 GroupAir Officer Commanding Air HQ Western Desert
AOC Air HQ Libya from 20 January to 3 February 1942
1941–1942Succeeded by
H BroadhurstPreceded by
J H D'AlbiacCommander-in-Chief Second Tactical Air Force
1944–1945Succeeded by
Sir Sholto Douglas
As C-in-C British Air Forces of OccupationPreceded by
Sir Philip BabingtonAir Officer Commanding-in-Chief Flying Training Command
1945–1947Succeeded by
Sir Ralph CochraneCategories:- 1895 births
- 1948 deaths
- Australian World War I flying aces
- Companions of the Distinguished Service Order
- Missing people
- Former students of Wellington College (New Zealand)
- Knights Commander of the Order of the Bath
- Knights Commander of the Order of the British Empire
- New Zealand World War I flying aces
- Recipients of the Air Force Cross (United Kingdom)
- Recipients of the Distinguished Flying Cross (United Kingdom)
- Chief Commanders of the Legion of Merit
- Recipients of the Military Cross
- Officiers of the Légion d'honneur
- New Zealand recipients of the Légion d'honneur
- Recipients of the Croix de Guerre (France)
- Foreign recipients of the Distinguished Service Medal (United States)
- Recipients of the Order of Leopold (Belgium)
- Recipients of the Croix de Guerre (Belgium)
- Grand Crosses of the Order of the Phoenix (Greece)
- Knights Grand Cross of the Order of Orange-Nassau
- Royal Air Force World War II air marshals
- New Zealand commanders
- Missing air passengers
- New Zealand knights
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