George Lawson (RAF officer) explained

George Edgar Bruce Lawson
Birth Date:26 April 1899
Birth Place:Cape Town, Cape Colony
Allegiance:British Empire
Branch:Royal Flying Corps
Rank:Lieutenant
Unit:No. 32 Squadron RAF
Awards:Distinguished Flying Cross
Relations:Frank Lionel Lawson (brother)
Elsa Gertrude Lawson (sister)
Laterwork:Joined South African Air Force

Lieutenant George Edgar Bruce Lawson was a South African World War I flying ace credited with six aerial victories.[1]

Early life

Lawson was born on 26 April 1899 in Cape Town, Cape Colony. After the Union of South Africa was formed the family travelled by train and then by ox wagon to Johannesburg.

World War I

See also: Aerial victory standards of World War I.

Lawson was assigned to 32 Squadron in April 1918. He scored his first victory on 7 June 1918, driving down an Albatros D.V while flying Royal Aircraft Factory SE5a No. C1881. He then used No. E1399 to drive down two Fokker D.VIIs and destroy three others during September 1918. The last of those triumphs, his second of 27 September, resulted in the death in action of noted German ace Fritz Rumey of Jagdstaffel 5.[2] Lawson and Rumey collided in midair. Rumey bailed out, but his parachute failed to open. Lawson nursed his crippled plane back to the British lines.[1] He was later awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross. The citation read:

Postwar

Lawson joined the South African Air Force in 1922. He was killed in an accident on 19 November 1922 while riding as a passenger in an Airco DH.9.[1] [2]

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Aerodrome. George Lawson . 16 February 2010.
  2. Book: Above the Trenches: A Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915-1920 . 234 .