Ronald T. Mark
Ronald Turnbull Mark, OBE, MC & Bar (28 January 1898 – 16 December 1958) was a British flying ace of the First World War who was credited with 14 aerial victories.[3][4] First World WarMark joined the Royal Flying Corps as a temporary second lieutenant (on probation), and was confirmed in his rank on 20 October 1917.[5] In January 1918 he was posted to No. 24 Squadron on the Western Front to fly the SE.5a single-seat fighter. His first aerial victory came at 0830 hours on 18 February 1918, when Mark, Horace Barton and Andrew Cowper drove a German DFW two-seater reconnaissance aircraft down out of control. He scored his second win later that same day, driving a Pfalz D.III fighter down out of control. The next morning, ten minutes combat saw Mark help Cowper, Reuben Hammersley, and Peter MacDougall burn another DFW reconnaissance aircraft and destroy a Rumpler two-seater. On the 26th, Mark shared with Ian Donald Roy McDonald, Herbert Richardson, and four other British pilots in the destruction of a new Fokker Dr.I triplane fighter. Mark was now an ace.[3] By checking internal evidence to Mark's victory list, these seem to have been the days described in the citation for his first Military Cross:
On 11 March, Mark, Herbert Richardson, Alfred John Brown, and two other pilots drove down a two-seater. Two days later, Mark repeated the feat, but single-handed. Two days after that, he teamed with Richardson and Cowper to destroy an observation aircraft. By 3 May, he had run his string to 14, sharing a victory each with Conway Farrell and Cyril Lowe. On 21 May, he took off on the sortie described in his citation for a second award of the Military Cross:[3]
Unmentioned is the finale; Mark's crash landing of his damaged aircraft set it afire. Somehow he survived unscathed.[3] Mark was appointed a temporary captain on 1 September 1918,[8] and eventually left the RAF, relinquishing his commission on 9 April 1919.[9] Second World WarOn 2 April 1940, Mark was granted a commission in the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve as a pilot officer on probation "for the duration of hostilities".[10] Exactly one year later, he was confirmed in his rank.[11] On 9 February 1941 he was granted the war substantive rank of flying officer,[12] and was promoted to squadron leader in the Administrative and Special Duties Branch on 1 October 1943.[13] By 1 January 1945, when Mark received a mentioned in despatches and was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire,[14][15] he held the acting rank of wing commander. Later lifeMark married Gwendoline Maud Rainbow in 1928.[16] Post-war Mark pursued a career as in business. On 28 May 1948, he, Elsie Brooks and William Stanley Rainbow bought William Bell Rope and Twine Merchants in Edinburgh.[17] Mark was the chairman of the Forster Tobacco Company Ltd. of Newcastle upon Tyne, when it was sold in February 1956.[18] He died in 1958. References
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