Frederick Sykes Military person

Air Vice-Marshal The Right Honourable Sir Frederick Hugh Sykes GCSI, GCIE, GBE, KCB, CMG (23 July 1877 – 30 September 1954) was a military officer, British statesman and politician.Sykes was a junior officer in the 15th Hussars before becoming interested in military aviation. He was the first Officer Commanding the Military Wing of the Royal Flying Corps before World War I and later served as the Flying Corps' Chief of Staff in France during the 1914 and 1915. Later in the War, he served in the Royal Naval Air Service in the Eastern Mediterranean before returning to Great Britain where he worked to organise the Machine Gun Corps and manpower planning. In late 1917 and early 1918, Sykes was the deputy to General Wilson on the Supreme War Council and from April 1918 to early 1919 he served as the second Chief of the Air Staff.After the War, Sykes was appointed the Controller of Civil Aviation and he continued in this role until 1922 when he entered politics, becoming the Conservative MP for Sheffield Hallam, which he held until 1928 when he resigned. From 1928 to 1931 Sykes was Governor of Bombay, after which time he returned to Great Britain where he involved himself in business and public life. During World War II, Sykes was an MP once more, this time for Central Nottingham. He lost his seat in 1945 and he died nine years later.

Personal facts

Frederick Sykes
Birth dateJuly 23, 1877
Birth place
England , Croydon
Date of deathSeptember 30, 1954
Place of death
England , London

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Military person

award
Order of the Bath
Order of the Indian Empire
Order of the Star of India
Mentioned in dispatches
Order of the British Empire
Order of St Michael and St George
military operations
Second Boer War
World War I
military branch
British Army
military command
Chief of the Air Staff
Military Wing of the Royal Flying Corps
service start1899
service end1919

Frederick Sykes on Wikipedia