- Sholto Douglas, 1st Baron Douglas of Kirtleside
Infobox Military Person
name=Marshal of the Royal Air Force The Right Honourable
The Lord Douglas of Kirtleside
GCB, MC, DFC
lived=December 23 ,1893 -October 29 ,1969
placeofbirth=Headington ,England
placeofdeath=Royal Tunbridge Wells ,England
caption=Air Chief Marshal Sir Sholto Douglas in 1943 or 1944
allegiance= flag|United Kingdom
serviceyears=1914 – 1947
rank=Marshal of the Royal Air Force
branch= air force|United Kingdom
commands=
battles=World War I World War II
awards=Military Cross
Distinguished Flying Cross.Marshal of the Royal Air Force William Sholto Douglas, 1st Baron Douglas of Kirtleside, GCB, MC, DFC (December 23 ,1893 -October 29 ,1969 ) was a senior figure in theRoyal Air Force up to and duringWorld War II .Douglas was born in
Headington ,Oxfordshire , the son of ProfessorRobert Langton Douglas and his wife Margaret Jane (née Cannon). He was educated atTonbridge School andLincoln College, Oxford . At the outbreak ofWorld War I he was commissioned in theRoyal Field Artillery . In 1915, following a disagreement with his Commanding Officer, he transferred to theRoyal Flying Corps joining 2 Squadron as an observer. He soon trained as a pilot and earnedRoyal Aero Club certificate No 1301. By September 1917 he was a major and Commanding Officer of 84 Squadron. The squadron became one of the premier RFC/RAF fighter units in 1918 and by the end of the war Douglas had been awarded aMilitary Cross and a Distinguished Flying Cross.Post-war he worked briefly for Handley Page and as a commercial pilot before rejoining the Royal Air Force in 1920 after a chance meeting with
Hugh Trenchard . He became an RAF instructor before being appointed to theAir Ministry in 1936. He was raised toAir Vice Marshal in 1938 and made assistant chief of air staff.In 1940,
World War II he andTrafford Leigh-Mallory clashed with the head of 11 Group,Keith Park , and the head of Fighter Command,Hugh Dowding , over strategy in theBattle of Britain . Douglas argued for a more aggressive engagement with a 'Big Wing ' strategy. WhenCharles Portal was made Chief of the Air Staff in October 1940 he supported Douglas, moving Park and Dowding and appointing Douglas to replace Dowding as head of Fighter Command.As commander-in-chief of the Fighter Command, Douglas was responsible for rebuilding of the command's strength after the attrition of the
Battle of Britain , but also for bringing it on the offensive to wrest the initiative in the air from the GermanLuftwaffe . He was therefore one of the main orchestrators of the only partially successfulCircus offensive .In 1942 Douglas was replaced at Fighter Command by Leigh-Mallory and was transferred to
Egypt , becoming commander of the RAF in the Middle East in 1943. Douglas returned to England in 1944 to headCoastal Command during the invasion of Normandy.Douglas was well rewarded after the war. He was the first commander of the British Occupation Zone in
Germany and in 1946 he was promoted to Marshal of the Royal Air Force, one of only two RAF officers ever to hold this rank without serving as Chief of the Air Staff. In 1948 he was raised to the peerage as Baron Douglas of Kirtleside, of Dornock in the County of Dumfries. Douglas retired in 1948 and became chairman of BEA in 1949 a post he retained until 1964.References
* [http://www.rafweb.org/Biographies/Douglas.htm Air of Authority - A History of RAF Organisation - MRAF Douglas]
*Probert, H. (1991). "High Commanders of the Royal Air Force". HMSO. ISBN 0-11-772635-4
* [http://www.thepeerage.com/ www.thepeerage.com]External links
* [http://www.spitfiresite.com/history/articles/2008/05/1941-difficult-year-01.htm 1941: The Difficult Year] - Dispatch submitted to the Secretary of State for Air on 29th February, 1948, by Marshal of the Royal Air Force Sir Sholto Douglas, G.C.B., M.C., D.F.C
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