Dermot Boyle Military person

Marshal of the Royal Air Force Sir Dermot Alexander Boyle GCB, KCVO, KBE, AFC, RAF (2 October 1904 – 5 May 1993) was a senior officer in the Royal Air Force. He served in World War II initially as a staff officer with the Advanced Air Striking Force in Reims in which capacity he organised the evacuation of the Force through Brest in May 1940. His war service included tours as a bomber squadron commander, as a station commander and also as an air group commander. He was Chief of the Air Staff in the late 1950s and, in that role, deployed British air power during the Suez Crisis in October 1956 and defended the RAF against the views of Duncan Sandys, the Minister for Defence, who believed that the V bomber force rendered manned fighter aircraft redundant.

Personal facts

Dermot Boyle
Birth dateOctober 02, 1904
Birth place
Ireland , County Laois , Rathdowney
Date of deathMay 05, 1993
Place of death
England , Sway Hampshire

Search

Military person

award
Order of the Bath
Royal Victorian Order
Air Force Cross (United Kingdom)
Mentioned in dispatches
Order of the British Empire
military operations
World War II
military command
RAF Stradishall
Chief of the Air Staff
Fighter Command
No. 83 Squadron
No.1 (Bomber) Group
No.11 Group
service start1922
service end1959

Dermot Boyle on Wikipedia