Will Scotland Explained

Will Scotland
Birth Name:James William Humphrys Scotland
Birth Date:1891 9, df=y
Birth Place:Pahi, New Zealand
Death Place:Melbourne, Australia
Occupation:Aviator
Known For:First cross-country flight in New Zealand
Air Force:Royal Flying Corps
Battles:World War I
Rank:Lieutenant[1]
Relatives:Henry Scotland (father)

James William Humphrys Scotland (21 September 1891 – 19 November 1963), usually referred to as Will Scotland,[2] was a pioneering New Zealand aviator.[3] [4] [5] [6] He was the second New Zealander (after Joseph Joel Hammond) to obtain a pilot's certificate.

Early life

Scotland was born on 21 September 1891 at Pahi in Northland, the younger son of Henry and Mary Ann Scotland (née Spriggs). His father was a member of the New Zealand Legislative Council. He was educated at St John's Collegiate School in Auckland (which subsequently amalgamated with King's College).

Aviation career

In 1913, Scotland travelled to England, where he became a pupil of a flying school established by J.Laurence Hall in Hendon. He was awarded a British Aviation Certificate in October of that year, and purchased his own Caudron biplane for £400. He arranged for the biplane to be shipped to New Zealand, where he returned in January 1914. On his return he joined New Zealand Aviation Ltd, a company that arranged for him to give aerial exhibitions around New Zealand. His biplane was dubbed Blue Bird.

On 20 February 1914, Scotland flew the Blue Bird from Invercargill to Gore, the first cross-country flight in New Zealand.[7] [8] His national tour came to an unfortunate end in Wellington on 25 March, when he crash-landed in a tree by Newtown Park. Although Scotland sustained only minor injuries, the Blue Bird was wrecked. Scotland ordered a replacement Caudron shipped from England; however, he found the newer model more difficult to pilot, and it also crashed during a test flight in Christchurch, although once again Scotland escaped serious injury.

Following the outbreak of the First World War, Scotland enlisted in the Royal Flying Corps in 1915 and was deployed as a lieutenant to the Persian frontier. He received a medical discharge in 1916 and was returned to New Zealand. During his convalescence he assisted Henry Wigram with the establishment of the Canterbury Aviation Company.

Personal life

In November 1917, Scotland married Ivy Stewart in Wellington;[9] it is unclear whether this marriage ended in divorce or Ivy's death. In 1919, he left the aviation industry and joined an insurance company. According to aviation historian E.F. Harvie, Scotland married Mabel Louisa Kennerley during a visit to Sydney in October 1925; the couple settled in Auckland but had no children. In 1936, they emigrated to Melbourne, Australia, where Scotland died on 19 November 1963.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Territorial Force - James William Humphreys Scotland . . 4 October 2023.
  2. Book: Harvie . E.F. . Venture the Far Horizon: The Pioneer Long-Distance Flights in New Zealand . 1966 . Whitcombe & Tombs . 19–79 . The Scotland Flights.
  3. Web site: Foster . Bernard George . SCOTLAND, James William Humphrys . An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand . 1966. Te Ara.
  4. Book: King . John . Famous New Zealand Aviators . 1998 . Grantham House, 1998. . Wellington . 9781869340667.
  5. Web site: The Feats of Will Scotland and his Caudron biplane - Blue Bird . . 3 October 2023 . en.
  6. Web site: Memorial to Will Scotland . . 3 October 2023 . en-nz.
  7. Web site: Scotland crosses Southland in pioneering flight . NZ History . NZ Ministry for Culture and Heritage . en . 16 February 2023.
  8. Book: Martyn . Errol . A Passion for Flight: New Zealand Aviation Before the Great War: Aero Clubs, Aeroplanes, Aviators and Aeronauts, 1910-1914, Volume 2 . 2014 . Volplane Press . 9780473245290.
  9. News: Down the Line . Manawatu Evening Standard . 28 November 1917 . 7. PapersPast.