- Henry Botterell
Henry John Lawrence Botterell (
November 7 ,1896 –January 3 ,2003 ) was a Canadian fighter pilot who served in theRoyal Naval Air Service (RNAS) and then in theRoyal Air Force (RAF) duringWorld War I . When he died at the age of 106, the Canadian Department of Veterans' Affairs believed he had been the last surviving pilot in the world to have seen action in theGreat War .Pre-war life and career
Henry Botterell was born in
Ottawa to Henry and Annie Botterell. His father, a civil servant, died ofpneumonia when Botterell was still a young boy. He attendedLisgar Collegiate Institute before beginning a career in banking. Prior to his war service Botterell worked as a clerk at the Bank of North America (now theBank of Montreal ).World War I service
Entry and training
In 1916, he joined the Royal Naval Air Service (RNAS) as a civilian flying trainee. His entry was facilitated by his sister Edith, who worked in the office of Admiral
Charles Kingsmill . Botterell was sent toEngland for training. Around this time, his older brother Edward, who played football for theToronto Argonauts , was killed in action inFrance while serving with the48th Highlanders of Canada .On
May 16 ,1917 , Botterell became a Probationary Flight Officer with the RNAS, where he was given the nickname "Nap" because of his supposed resemblance to Napoleon. He received his wings onAugust 15 ,1917 , and was awardedRoyal Aero Club certificate number 5093.No. 8 Naval Squadron
In September, Botterell joined
No. 8 Naval Squadron . The squadron, which was usually referred to as Naval 8, was soon posted to France in support of theRoyal Flying Corps . Botterell’s immediate superior was also a Canadian, theflying ace Flight Commander James White. The squadron was commanded by another ace, Squadron CommanderChristopher Draper , who was later known as the "Mad Major" for his habit of flying under bridges.On
September 18 ,1917 , Botterell's second operational flight as a pilot ended in a crash at Dunkirk when the engine of hisSopwith Pup failed. He sustained head injuries, a fractured leg and broken teeth. After six months in hospital, he was discharged and sent back toCanada .En route to Canada, Botterell ran into some of his former colleagues from Naval 8 in
London . They arranged for him to be sent to Manston inKent in order to re-qualify as a pilot. After 10 hours of refresher training he was approved to start flying once more and was sent toSerny on theWestern Front , where he rejoined No. 8 Naval Squadron, now renamedNo. 208 Squadron RAF . He served with them fromMay 11 toNovember 27 ,1918 flying a variety of missions in different aircraft. He flew patrols and fought overSerny ,Tramcourt ,Arras ,Foucacourt andEstrées . In 60 days between June and August 1918 he flew 91 sorties.Botterell's sole air victory saw him bring down a German observation balloon, which was well-defended by anti-aircraft guns, on
August 29 ,1918 near Arras. He was returning from dropping four bombs on the railway station atVitry when he saw the balloon. Putting his Sopwith Camel into a dive, he put 400 machine-gun rounds into the balloon, setting it aflame. The German observer parachuted to safety. The scene was immortalised in Robert Taylor's painting "Balloon Buster".During his service, Botterell flew a variety of planes, including several Sopwiths (Pup, Camel and Snipe), the RE8, the SE5, the
Claude Graham White and theMaurice Farman . He logged 251 combat hours.At the end of the war, Botterell was a
Flight Lieutenant with the Royal Air Force (the Royal Flying Corps and RNAS had been combined onApril 1 ,1918 to form the RAF).After his return to Canada, Botterell never flew again except on commercial flights.
Post-war life and honors
Botterell returned to work at the Bank of Montreal as Assistant Chief Accountant, initially in rural
Quebec and then inMontreal , eventually retiring in 1970. He married in 1929, to Maud Goater, who died in 1983; they had two children, Edward and Frances.During the Second World War, he was an Air Cadet Squadron Commander, in Lachine (now Montreal).
In 1998 Botterell celebrated his 102nd birthday at a hotel in
Lille , where he and 16 other Canadian veterans marked the 80th anniversary of the war's end. In 1999 he was guest of honour at a dinner to celebrate the 75th anniversary of theRoyal Canadian Air Force . In 2001 he received a visit from members of the present-day 208 Squadron.The
Canadian War Museum inOttawa now houses a fence post that was caught in the wing of Botterell's Sopwith Camel during a low-level sortie.During an interview about his wartime exploits Botterell once said: "I had good hands. I didn't have the fighting acumen of some, like
Billy Bishop . I was just a bank clerk. I wasn't one of the very best, but I had my share of action."ee also
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Veterans of the First World War who died in 2003
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