William Gray (RAF officer)


Lieutenant William Edrington Gray, was a Scottish World War I flying ace credited with seven aerial victories.

Biography

Gray was the son of Edward and Annabella Gray of Edrington Castle in Mordington, Berwickshire, Scotland. He joined the Royal Naval Air Service on 25 July 1917. By May 1918, when Gray went operational, the RNAS had been incorporated into the Royal Air Force. Gray was assigned to a former naval squadron, No. 213, as a Sopwith Camel pilot.
On 19 May 1918, Gray was patrolling with William Pinder. Vizefeldwebel Triebswetter of Jasta 16 pulled away from burning a Belgian observation balloon when the British pair shot him down. This began a run of victories for Gray that ran almost to war's end. Gray won a Distinguished Flying Cross on 2 November 1918. He also received two belated awards in early 1919, being Mentioned in Despatches and winning the Croix de guerre.
After the war Gray left the RAF, being transferred to the unemployed list on 22 June 1919, and pursued a career as aeronautical engineer. This was a long-standing interest, as he and his older brother Edward Leadbetter Gray had built a primitive monoplane in 1910–1911, and a biplane in 1914–1915. On 25 October 1926 he filed a patent for his aircraft undercarriage design at the UK Patent Office, and did the same at the U.S. Office on 14 October 1927, being granted U.S. Patent No. 1,716,439 on 11 June 1929. In 1962 Gray, then Principal Scientific Officer at the Royal Aircraft Establishment was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in recognition of his services.

List of aerial victories

No.Date/timeAircraftFoeResultLocationNotes
119 May 1918
@ 1735 hours
Sopwith Camel
serial number B6239
Albatros D.VShot down in flamesA mile south of Woumen, BelgiumKill shared with John Pinder; Vizefeldwebel Triebswetter killed in action
22 June 1918 1935 hoursSopwith Camel
s/n D3409
Pfalz D.IIIDriven down out of controlMoorslede, BelgiumVictory shared with John Pinder
311 August 1918
@ 1940 hours
Sopwith Camel
s/n D8189
Albatros two-seaterDestroyed4 miles southeast of Diksmuide, BelgiumVictory shared with three other pilots
421 August 1918
@1915 hours
Sopwith Camel
s/n D8189
Fokker D.VIIDestroyed2 miles northwest of ZeebruggeGerman pilot killed by parachute failure
523 September 1918
@ 1425 hours
Sopwith Camel
s/n D8189
Fokker D.VIIDriven down out of controlEast of Diksmuide, Belgium
625 September 1918
@ 1745 hours
Sopwith Camel
s/n D8189
Fokker D.VIIDriven down out of control4 miles west of Thorout, Belgium
71 October 1918Sopwith Camel
s/n D8189
Fokker D.VIIDriven down out of controlHouthulst Forest

Honours and awards

;Distinguished Flying Cross
;Mention in Despatches
;Croix de Guerre with Palme