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Robert Dodds
Canadian air ace

Robert Dodds

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Canadian air ace
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Stoney Creek, Canada
Place of death
Hamilton, Canada
Age
87 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Captain Robert E. Dodds MC OBE (11 March 1893–8 October 1980) was a Canadian World War I flying ace credited with 11 aerial victories. Postwar, he would remain involved in civil aviation. By 1957, he had risen to become the Director of Civil Aviation for Canada.

Early life and infantry service

Robert Dodds was born in Stoney Creek, Canada on 11 March 1893, to Margaret Dodds. He enrolled in the 129th Battalion of the Canadian Expeditionary Force on 3 January 1916 at Dundas, Canada. On his enlistment papers, he gave his occupation as fruit grower, stated he was single and lived on Rural Route 5 with his mother. Though he claimed no prior military experience, he belonged to the 77th Regiment of militia. He signed his enrollment form "R. Dodds, Lieut".

World War I

On 27 March 1917, Dodds was appointed a Flying Officer.

Dodds was posted to 48 Squadron as a Bristol F.2 Fighter pilot on 12 July 1917. Nine days later, Dodds shared in a victory with fellow aces Brian Edmund Baker and Robert Coath. Dodds scored his fifth victory on 21 October 1917 and closed out the year as an ace. A double victory on 9 January 1918, followed by three wins on 8 March, brought his total to ten.

On 10 February 1918, after his sixth and seventh wins, Lieutenant Dodds was appointed Flight Commander and temporary captain.

His valor was not confined to air-to-air combat; on 19 March 1918, he led a bombing attack through heavy ground fire to bomb a German hangar from low level. He then circled the German airfield in his riddled plane as his squadron also bombed the enemy.

Both of these feats were cited when Military Cross (MC) was published in The London Gazette:

Lieutenant (Temporary/Captain) Robert Dodds, 1st Central Ontario Regiment and Royal Flying Corps

...He has destroyed or driven down eleven enemy machines. On one occasion while on a one-machine patrol he attacked three enemy scouts, but owing to his gun jamming he was forced to withdraw from the attack. Though under heavy fire from the pursuing enemy he succeeded in remedying the defect, and then turned and attacked the enemy again. He destroyed one of them and drove down another out of control. Later, he led a bombing raid on an enemy aerodrome, and under intense machine gun fire from the ground dived to within 100 feet of the hangars before releasing his bombs. Though his machine was damaged, he remained at a height of 200 feet until the rest of his formation had dropped their bombs. His magnificent example of pluck and determination was of the greatest value to the squadron.

List of victories

No.Date/timeAircraftFoeResultLocationNotes
121 July 1917 @ 1800 hoursBristol F.2 Fighter serial number A7153Albatros D.IIIDriven down out of controlSlijpe, BelgiumDodd's ace observer was Lieutenant Thomas Tuffield
222 August 1917 @ 0905 hoursBristol F.2 Fighter s/n 7222Albatros D.IIIDriven down out of controlGhistelles, BelgiumObserver Tuffield
33 September 1917 @ 0815 hoursBristol F.2 Fighter s/n 7222Albatros D.IIIDestroyed by fireNorth of Dixmude, BelgiumObserver Tuffield. Otto Hartmann KIA
43 September 1917 @ 0815 hoursBristol F.2 Fighter s/n 7222Albatros D.IIIDriven down out of controlNorth of DixmudeObserver Tuffield
521 October 1917 @ 1245 hoursBristol F.2 Fighter s/n B1134Albatros D.VDriven down out of controlClemskerkeObserver ace Lieutenant Arthur Cyril Cooper
69 January 1918 @ 1140 hoursBristol F.2 Fighter s/n B1182Rumpler reconnaissance planeDriven down out of controlCaudry, FranceObserver Lieutenant W. Hart
79 January 1918 @ 1150 hoursBristol F.2 Fighter s/n B1182Albatros D.VDriven down out of controlWillencourt, FranceObserver Lieutenant W. Hart
8morning of 8 March 1918Bristol F.2 Fighter s/n C4606Pfalz D.IIIDestroyed by fireLa Fère, FranceObserver Lieutenant D. Wishart-Orr
9morning of 8 March 1918Bristol F.2 Fighter s/n C4606Pfalz D.IIIDestroyed by fireLa FèreObserver Lieutenant D. Wishart-Orr
108 March 1918 @ 1600 hoursBristol F.2 Fighter s/n C4606Reconnaissance two-seaterDriven down out of controlBellecourt-QuesnoyObserver Lieutenant D. Wishart-Orr

Post World War I

On 4 May 1919, Dodds was seconded from 1st Central Ontario Regiment to the Royal Air Force as an acting captain; simultaneously, he relinquished his RAF commission and went on the unemployed list.

Dodds then returned to Canada and helped found the Hamilton Ontario Aero Club. He managed International Airways and supervised airmail operations in eastern Canada.

Dodds joined the Canadian Civil Aeronautics Division in 1930; he would become heavily involved in development of Canada's airways system, especially as it affected Trans-Canada Air Lines.

There was a Trans-Canada Airlines landing crash of a Lockheed Electra 14 (Registration CF-TCP) at Armstrong, Thunder Bay District, Ontario on 6 February 1941, killing 12; Chief Airline Inspector Dodds as chairman of the Federal Board of Inquiry arranged for removal of the crash debris to Winnipeg to aid in the accident investigation. This crash investigation was in addition to his ongoing administrative duties during World War II, providing airfields for use under the Empire Air Training Plan. He won the Order of the British Empire for this World War II service.

In 1950, he was promoted to Controller of Civil Aviation, putting him effectively in charge of Canada's civil aviation infrastructure.

On 11 August 1957, a DC-4 crash found Dodds as Director of the Civil Aviation Branch of Canada's Department of Transport.

He retired in 1958. He died on 8 October 1980.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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Early life and infantry service

World War I

List of victories

Post World War I

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