Edmund Tempest

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Born(1894-10-30)30 October 1894
Died17 December 1921(1921-12-17) (aged 27)
Buried
North Gate War Cemetery, Baghdad
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
Edmund Roger Tempest
Born(1894-10-30)30 October 1894
Died17 December 1921(1921-12-17) (aged 27)
Buried
North Gate War Cemetery, Baghdad
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
BranchBritish Army
Royal Air Force
Years of service1914–1921
RankFlight Lieutenant
Unit
Battles / warsWorld War I
  Western Front
AwardsMilitary Cross
Distinguished Flying Cross

Flight Lieutenant Edmund Roger Tempest MC, DFC (30 October 1894 – 17 December 1921) was a British First World War flying ace credited with 17 aerial victories.[1]

Edmund Tempest was born at the family estate of Ackworth Grange, in Ackworth, Yorkshire, the son of Wilfrid Francis Tempest, a member of the notable recusant Tempest family, and his second wife Florence Helen O'Rourke. (Wilfrid had a total of 15 children from two marriages).[2][3][4] Tempest was educated at The Oratory School in Edgbaston. In 1912 he and his brother, Wulstan Joseph Tempest, moved to Perdue, Saskatchewan, to farm, but returned to England to enlist on the outbreak of the war.[5]

World War I

Tempest was commissioned as a temporary second lieutenant on 30 November 1914,[6] to serve in the King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry. On 18 August 1915 he was granted Royal Aero Club Aviators' Certificate No. 1604 after soloing a Maurice Farman biplane at the Military School in Birmingham,[7] and on 3 November he was appointed a flying officer in the Royal Flying Corps, transferred to the General List.[8]

He served in No. 6, No. 15, and No. 29 Squadrons,[1] receiving promotion to lieutenant on 1 April 1916.[9] He was posted to No. 64 Squadron in July 1917,[1] being appointed a flight commander with the acting rank of captain on the 30th.[10]

Tempest gained his first aerial victory on 30 November 1917 flying an Airco DH.5 single-seat fighter, by driving down out of control an Albatros D.V. His squadron was re-equipped with the S.E.5a fighter in early 1918, and Tempest shot down five enemy aircraft in March. On 1 April 1918, the Royal Flying Corps was merged with the Royal Naval Air Service to form the Royal Air Force, and his unit became No. 64 Squadron RAF. Tempest destroyed two more aircraft that month, then two more in May, also being awarded the Military Cross on the 13th. He accounted for one enemy aircraft in June, and another in July, and finally five in August, before being posted back to England, where on 2 November he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross.[1]

Of his brothers, Major Wilfred Norman Tempest, 2nd Battalion (attached 9th Battalion), King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry, was killed in action on 26 September 1916, and is commemorated on the Thiepval Memorial,[11] while Major Wulstan Joseph Tempest also served in the KOYLI and Royal Flying Corps, shooting down Zeppelin L.31 over Potters Bar on 1 October 1916 while serving in No. 39 (Home Defence) Squadron. He was subsequently awarded the Military Cross and the Distinguished Service Order.[12][13]

List of aerial victories

Combat record[1]
No. Date/Time Aircraft/
Serial No.
Opponent Result Location Notes
130 November 1917
@ 1520
D.H.5
(A9507)
Albatros D.VOut of controlNorth-west of Bourlon Wood
28 March 1918
@ 1230
S.E.5aAlbatros D.VDestroyedGraincourt
317 March 1918
@ 1130–1135
S.E.5aPfalz D.IIIDestroyedDouai
4Pfalz D.IIIOut of controlBiacheShared with Lieutenants J. F. T. Barrett & Charles Bissonette, and Second Lieutenants C. B. Stringer & K. G. P. Hendrie.
518 March 1918
@ 1235
S.E.5aAlbatros D.VOut of controlCambrai
622 March 1918
@ 1745
S.E.5a
(C5392)
Pfalz D.IIIDestroyedPronville
72 April 1918
@ 1835
S.E.5a
(B74)
Albatros D.VDestroyed in flamesErvillers
823 April 1918
@ 1835
S.E.5a
(B74)
Albatros D.VDestroyedBoiry-Notre-Dame
93 May 1918
@ 1645
S.E.5a
(B74)
Pfalz D.IIIDestroyedVitry-en-Artois
1031 May 1918
@ 0625
S.E.5a
(C1860)
Albatros D.VDestroyedNorth-west of Steenwerck
1112 June 1918
@ 1230
S.E.5a
(B74)
Albatros CDestroyed in flamesFestubert
1220 July 1918
@ 0925
S.E.5aRumpler CDestroyedDrocourtShared with Captain Philip Burge and Lieutenant W. R. Henderson.
1310 August 1918
@ 0840
S.E.5a
(B74)
Fokker D.VIIDestroyedRoye
1411 August 1918
@ 0815
S.E.5a
(B74)
Fokker D.VIIOut of controlRoyeShared with Captains T. St. P. Bunbury, A. F. Buck, & Charles Cudemore, and Lieutenants Thomas Rose & G. L. Wood.
1511 August 1918
@ 1515
S.E.5a
(B74)
Fokker D.VIIDestroyedRoye
1612 August 1918
@ 0715
S.E.5aFokker D.VIIDestroyedChaulnes
1714 August 1918
@ 0910
S.E.5aType COut of controlNorth of RoyeShared with Lieutenants Thomas Rose & G. L. Wood.

Post-war career and death

Honours and awards

References

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