Henry Evans (RFC officer)
Second Lieutenant Henry Cope Evans DSO (26 July 1880 – 3 September 1916) was a World War I flying ace credited with five aerial victories, all gained while flying the Airco DH.2.[1] BiographyEvans was the only son of W. H. and Alice M. Evans of West Point, Camberley, Surrey, and was educated at Woodcote House School, Windlesham, and Haileybury. As a young man Evans emigrated to Ontario to learn fruit farming. He enlisted in the Royal Regiment of Canadian Artillery during the Second Boer War, and served in South Africa for a year as part of "C" Battery. On returning to Canada he took up ranching near Macleod, Alberta, and also held a Government appointment as Range Rider. A keen sportsman and horseman, he was well known as a polo player, and was one of the early pioneers of the game in Western Canada.[2] On 23 September 1914 at Valcartier, Quebec, he enlisted as a trooper in the 19th Alberta Dragoons,[3] arriving in England with the 1st Canadian Contingent in November 1914. He served with the Dragoons in France from February until September 1915, was promoted to the rank of sergeant[2] and was badly affected by poison gas.[4] He was transferred to the Royal Flying Corps and commissioned as a temporary second lieutenant on 13 September 1915,[5] and on 25 September joined No. 24 Squadron RAF in action at the front,[2] not being officially gazetted as a flying officer (observer) until 22 November.[6] Evans was posted to Home Establishment on 26 January 1916 for pilot training, being appointed a flying officer on 15 May,[7] and being granted the Royal Aero Club Aviator's Certificate No. 2603, after flying a Maurice Farman biplane at the Military Flying School, Farnborough, on 23 May.[1] He re-joined 24 Squadron on 4 July 1916, gaining his first victory on 20 July, driving a Roland C.II down out of control over Fleurs, and the next day he destroyed another enemy aircraft over Combles. Between 6 and 9 August he destroyed a further three enemy aircraft, gaining the five confirmed victories needed for flying ace status. Evans was shot down and killed by German anti-aircraft fire on 3 September 1916 while on a morning offensive patrol over the British Fourth Army front.[1] He was listed as "missing" by the War Office,[8] and as his remains were never recovered he is commemorated at the Arras Flying Services Memorial.[9] Honours and awardsBoth of Evans' awards were gazetted posthumously, on 22 September 1916 and 2 January 1917 (dated 13 November 1916), respectively.
In a long list of officers noted by General Sir Douglas Haig, Commander-in-Chief of the British Armies in France.[11] References
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