[Editor's note: This series has been presented on each of the
Thursdays during October 2022. MH]
By Adrian Roberts
Part 1 of this series looked at some German airmen who saw aerial combat in both World Wars. The remaining parts will deal with some well-known Allied airmen. The RAF was stricter than the Germans about the age limits of combat fliers, so the definition of combat in the following examples will be broader.
Part 4 looks at two who were the oldest aircrew of WWII, having also seen aerial action in WWI. It seems that the British were less strict about age if you had the right connections!
William Wedgewood Benn was born in 1877, and was a high-achiever. Although his family were politically active and reasonably affluent, he was not a member of the Eton/Oxbridge Establishment, but he nevertheless became a Liberal Member of Parliament (MP) at the age of 29.
He was also a captain in a Territorial Army unit, and although aged 37 at the outbreak of WWI, and remaining an MP throughout, he volunteered for military service overseas, and served as a staff officer at Gallipoli. He managed to get trained as an air observer with the Royal Naval Air Service, and was posted to the seaplane carrier HMS Ben-My-Chree. He made many flights over Turkish-held territory in Short 184 seaplanes, and also re-organised the intelligence system for processing information gained from the flights. He was wounded in the foot by ground fire on one occasion.
In 1917 he
trained as a pilot, acting as a liaison officer with the Italian air service
and flew on several bombing raids over the Alps, and also flew the first
aeroplane to drop an agent by parachute at night. After the war he continued
his political career, joining the Labour Party in 1924; he was Secretary of
State for
He served again with the RAF in WWII, in the rank of air commodore and was head of RAF public relations from 1942–43. Around that time, at the age of about 65, he flew on several bomber operations as an air gunner. He was secretary of state for air in the Attlee administration from 1945–46. He died in 1958. His eldest son, Michael, was killed in a Mosquito crash during the war; his second son was the Labour MP and Cabinet Minister Anthony “Tony” Wedgewood Benn.
However, he may not have been the oldest person to fly in action in WWII. I don’t have the exact dates for their operations, but there is another candidate for that honor:
Lionel Cohen, known as
“Sos,” was two years older than Wedgewood Benn. Shown at the right in this pre-mission WWII photo, he fought in four wars! He was
born in
He remained in
During the First World War, he joined the South African Horse, aged
40, and took part in the campaign in
Cohen returned to
Photos from author's collection (Benn) and A Dash of Courage: A Tribute to P/O Charles Grevill-Heygate DFC (Cohen)
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