Anthony Heward Explained

Anthony Wilkinson Heward
Birth Date:1 July 1918
Allegiance:United Kingdom
Branch:Royal Air Force
Serviceyears:1936–76
Rank:Air chief marshal
Commands:Air Member for Supply and Organisation (1973–76)
No. 18 (Maritime) Group (1972–73)
RAF Finningley (1959–62)
University of London Air Squadron (c.1952–54)
No. 97 Squadron (1944–45)
No. 50 Squadron (1944)
Battles:Second World War
Awards:Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath
Officer of the Order of the British Empire
Distinguished Flying Cross & Bar
Air Force Cross
Mentioned in dispatches

Air Chief Marshal Sir Anthony Wilkinson Heward, (1 July 1918 – 27 October 1995) was a senior Royal Air Force (RAF) commander.

RAF career

Heward joined the Royal Air Force in 1936.[1] He served in the Second World War as Officer Commanding No. 50 Squadron and then as Officer Commanding No. 97 Squadron before being made Personal Staff Officer to the Air Commander-in-Chief, RAF Mediterranean and Middle East in July 1945.[1]

Promoted to group captain, he was appointed to the Air & Special Operations staff at Headquarters Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe in 1957 and Station Commander at RAF Finningley in 1959.[1] Then after attending the Imperial Defence College in 1962 he was promoted to air commodore and appointed Director of Operations (Bomber & Reconnaissance) at the Ministry of Defence in 1963.[1] Promoted to air vice marshal, he was appointed Deputy Commander of RAF Germany in 1966, Air Officer for Administration at Headquarters RAF Air Support Command in 1969 and Chief of Staff at RAF Strike Command in 1970.[1] Promoted to air marshal, he went on to be Air Officer Commanding No. 18 (Maritime) Group in February 1972 and Air Member for Supply and Organisation in 1973.[1] He was promoted to air chief marshal in 1974 and retired in 1976.[1]

In retirement he became a County councillor for Wiltshire.[1]

Family

In 1944, he married Clare Myfanwy Wainwright, the daughter of Major-General C B Wainwright CB. They had two children.

References

|-|-

Notes and References

  1. http://www.rafweb.org/Biographies/Heward.htm Air of Authority – A History of RAF Organisation – Air Chief Marshal Sir Anthony Heward