- Harold Balfour, 1st Baron Balfour of Inchrye
Harold Harington Balfour, 1st Baron Balfour of Inchrye MC & Bar (1897 – 1988) was a Conservative Party politician in the
United Kingdom , andFirst World War flying ace. As Under-Secretary of State for Air in 1944 he was instrumental in the establishment ofLondon Heathrow Airport .Early years
Balfour was born at
Camberley ,Surrey ,England on1 November ,1897 and educated at Chilverton Elms School,Dover ,Kent and later at theRoyal Navy College ,Osborne ,Isle of Wight .Aviator and fighter ace
Balfour joined the
60th Rifles in 1914 and served in France for three months before he transferred to theRoyal Flying Corps . After training he was posted to 60 Squadron. In 1917 he was serving with No. 43 Squadron when he downed two enemy aircraft while flying aSopwith 1½ Strutter . He was injured in a crash and moved on to the School of Special Flying, 40 Squadron, then returned to 43 Squadron. Now piloting theSopwith Camel he claimed 7 more victories and was promoted to Major. Balfour then took command of a training school until 1919. He was private secretary andAide-de-camp to SirJohn Salmond 1921-22 and temporary ADC to SirSamuel Hoare , Secretary for Air, 1923. He retired from theRoyal Air Force in 1923 to follow a career in journalism and business. Balfour was interviewed on 30 September 1978 by the art historian Anna Malinovska. The interview is reproduced in "Voices in Flight" (Pen & Sword Books, 2006)Politician
He contested Stratford without success in 1924 and was elected in 1929 as
Member of Parliament for Isle of Thanet. He served in the Air ministry from 1938 and was Minister Resident inWest Africa , 1944-45. He left the House of Commons in 1945 and was raised to the peerage as Baron Balfour of Inchrye, of Shefford in the County of Berkshire. Balfour died on21 September 1988 aged 90. He was married twice in 1921 and 1946 with a son from the first marriage and a daughter from the second. One of his wives was Mary Ainslie Profumo, sister of the disgraced cabinet minister,John Profumo . After Profumo resigned andLord Hailsham attacked his morals Balfour remarked - on live television - that "When a man has by self-indulgence acquired the shape of Lord Hailsham sexual continence requires no more than a sense of the ridiculous". Balfours's son Ian Balfour become the 2nd Baron Balfour of Inchrye on his father's death.Awards and Decorations
*26 May 1917 Balfour was awarded the
Military Cross ("For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty on many occasions. He was carried out many valuable reconnaissances under very adverse conditions. He has shot down two hostile machines").
*22 April 1918 Balfour was awarded a bar to theMilitary Cross ("For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty. On three occasions during one month he has destroyed one hostile machine and driven down twow others completely out of control. On one occasion, flying at very low altitude, under extreme adverse weather conditions, he carried out a reconnaissamce, in which he bombed two guns and silenced them, bombed large bodies of troops in a market square, and fired into the hangars and huts in a hostile aerodrome, several casualties being observed. He has at all times shown himself to be a leader of exceptional dash and ability, and offensive patrols led by him have constantly attacked enemy formations with marked gallantry and determination")
*5 July 1945 he gained the title 1st Baron Balfour of Inchrye, of Shefford in the County of Berkshire.External links
* [http://www.theaerodrome.com/aces/england/balfour.html Biographic entry at "The Aerodrome" ]
* [http://janus.lib.cam.ac.uk/db/node.xsp?id=EAD%2FGBR%2F0014%2FBLFR Biographic entry] at [http://janus.lib.cam.ac.uk/ Janus]References
* Harold Balfour, "Wings Over Westminster", Hutchinson (1973), ISBN 0-09-114370-5
* Harold Balfour, "An airman marches: early flying adventures", Hutchinson (1933)
* Harold Balfour, "An airman marches: early flying adventures", Greenhil (1985) Abridged ed
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