October 4, 2011 at 7:05 am
Hi All,
Had a stroll through the Church Cemetery yesterday and came across the attached gravestone.
I (and I’m sure others) would be interested to know more about this gentleman as it is a rather grand gravestone. Note the carving at the top, can anyone identify the engine? Does anyone know more about the circumstances and what this man achieved?
Many Thanks, John
By: PeterVerney - 1st November 2011 at 19:08
It is interesting to note that the B1113 which runs past the cemetery is called Loraine Way
By: PeterVerney - 1st November 2011 at 19:08
It is interesting to note that the B1113 which runs past the cemetery is called Loraine Way
By: DaveF68 - 1st November 2011 at 18:11
Came across this photo of S/Sgt Wilson in the new IWM beta website photo collection.
By: DaveF68 - 1st November 2011 at 18:11
Came across this photo of S/Sgt Wilson in the new IWM beta website photo collection.
By: Carpetbagger - 4th October 2011 at 12:50
Thanks everyone, I knew I was asking in the right place.
I would point out that according to the RAFM document referenced in the Wiki entry the 2 Loraine’s were of no relation.
It does however add that Loraine was a good friend of Trenchard and persuaded him to take flying lessons in the last letter he wrote. The rest, as they say, is history.
John
By: Dogtail2 - 4th October 2011 at 10:17
Clerget did a 7 cylinder, but the Gnome fits the story better.
By: DaveF68 - 4th October 2011 at 10:00
I think the engine is supposed to be an early Gnome – note the 7 cylinders
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gnome_Omega
In the CCI book on Nieuports in British service, S/Sgt Wilson is noted as an expert on the Gnome engine – he flew with Capt Loraine on that flight as the latter had reported trouble with his engine on an earlier flight.
The aircraft was a Nieuport IVG which belonged to Capt Loriane’s brother, Robert, and had not yet been allocated an RFC serial as it was still undergoing acceptance trials.
This accident was one of a series which led to the War Office banning the Military Wing of the RFC from flying monoplanes.
By: paulmcmillan - 4th October 2011 at 09:29
Capt Eustace Broke Loraine Grenadier Guards Royal Aero Club Certificate 154 (died soon after arrival at Burford Hospital) and Staff-Serjeant Richard Hubert Victor Wilson (Royal Engineers) Royal Aero Club Certificate 232 (died at scene of broken neck) killed in a Nieuport Monoplane crash Salisbury Plain 5th July 1912
Wilson buried Andover, Loraine at Bramford, Ipswich
also see:
By: Dogtail2 - 4th October 2011 at 08:49
The engine looks like a Clerget.