T. M. Wilkes
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Thomas Martin Wilkes CBE, MC[1] (24 March 1888 - 23 October 1958)[2] was a New Zealand soldier who later, as an Air Force Group Captain, was appointed to the Royal New Zealand Air Force's Air Board.[3] Wilkes also served as Controller of Civil Aviation in New Zealand as part of a twenty-year career during which he developed and regulated civil aviation policy.[4]
Thomas Martin Wilkes was son of Walter Wilkes (died 1920), of Chronometer House, Thames, Coromandel, New Zealand, who owned a "lucrative" watchmaking and jewellery business, and was a "highly-respected" "good man" in the community,[5][6] and Elizabeth (d. 1940), née Green,[7] The Wilkes family had come from England in the mid-1800s; it was observed in 1901 that Walter Wilkes's business was "handed down... from generation to generation of this worthy family, who all seem to be jewellers." On the death from consumption of family friend and neighbour Frederick James Ray, a dispensing chemist who had lived with the Wilkes family for some time due to his declining health, Walter Wilkes- the executor of his will- took over the business to generate income for Ray's estate's beneficiaries, who were in the United Kingdom.[8][9] T. M. Wilkes was educated at King's College, Auckland,[10] then Auckland University College (now the University of Auckland).[2]