Major Gerald Loxley | |
Birth Date: | 31 January 1885 |
Birth Place: | Fairford, Gloucestershire, UK |
Death Place: | Hereford, Herefordshire, UK |
Allegiance: | United Kingdom |
Serviceyears: | 1915–1920 |
Rank: | Major |
Battles: | World War I |
Awards: | Air Force Cross Légion d'honneur Corona d'Italia |
Relations: | Earls of Stamford and Warrington |
Laterwork: | United Nations |
Major Gerald Herbert Loxley AFC (1885–1950) was a decorated British aviator of the First World War deployed in military intelligence,[1] before serving with the United Nations in Switzerland.[2]
Born on 31 January 1885 at Fairford, Gloucestershire, a vicar's son,[3] he was named after his godfather Sir Herbert Brewer.
Loxley attended Summer Fields School and Malvern College before going up to read Jurisprudence at Oriel College, Oxford.[4]
His World War I service in the Royal Naval Air Service saw action as an air pilot[5] before being appointed to a distinguished position in aerial reconnaissance,[6] advising the Director-General of Aircraft Production (Ministry of Munitions) in Paris.[7] He was promoted to the rank of Major upon the creation of the Royal Air Force in 1919.
Later in life Major Loxley served as a diplomat at the United Nations Organization at Geneva.[8]
The 5th child and 4th son of the Revd Canon Arthur Smart Loxley, son of John Loxley of Norcott Court, near Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, he was the only one of the Loxley brothers to survive the Great War.[9] In 1930 he married Alice Blundell Booth (died 1955, leaving no children), a cousin of the Booth baronets.[10] Through Julia Maria Heath[11] a collateral ancestor of his was the poet Lord Byron; and, with Cornish ancestry, his family was also closely related to Lord Dover and the Duncombes.[12]
After suffering a severe stroke, Loxley died on 29 September 1950 at St Mary's Hospital, Burghill, near Hereford.
Loxley received the Air Force Cross[13] and was invested as a Chevalier of the Légion d'honneur by Marshal Foch in 1919,[14] having previously been appointed an Ufficiale of the Corona d'Italia in 1916.[15]
He received many other military honours as well as being admitted as a Freeman of the City of London "for War Services".[16]