poliphilo: (Default)
poliphilo ([personal profile] poliphilo) wrote2020-09-30 09:12 am

Alwyne Loyd

Last time I visited St Laurence, Hawkhurst they had most of the building roped off as a CV19 prevention measure. I tried again yesterday and the ropes had been taken away- and I was able to wander round and take pictures...

Alwyne Loyd was a Great War pilot with six victories to his name- which is enough for him to rank as an "ace". He was killed- aged 23- flying over German lines somewhere to the east of Ypres- one of the 44 victims of war-crazy loon Rudolph Berthold. His memorial consists of a brass plaque and the whittled down propeller that once stood in place of a cross over his temporary grave at Poperinghe.

cmcmck: (Default)

[personal profile] cmcmck 2020-09-30 09:33 am (UTC)(link)
Our local ace when we were in Kent,James Byford McCudden VC was the highest scoring British ace of WW1. He died in a take off accident. The SE5a could be problematic apparently great plane though it was.

Our previous home had been McCudden's which was a nice connection for two historians.