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Arthur Noss

Arthur Rex Hurden Noss
Born (1897-01-22)22 January 1897
Hornsey, London, England
Died 15 September 1917(1917-09-15) (aged 20) (DOW)
Buried Zuydcoote Military Cemetery, Nord, France (51°03′40″N 2°29′05″E / 51.06111°N 2.48472°E / 51.06111; 2.48472Coordinates: 51°03′40″N 2°29′05″E / 51.06111°N 2.48472°E / 51.06111; 2.48472)
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service/branch British Army
Rank Second Lieutenant
Unit No. 48 Squadron RFC
Awards Military Cross

Second Lieutenant Arthur Rex Hurden Noss MC (22 January 1897 – 15 September 1917) was a British World War I flying ace credited with nine aerial victories. He won a Military Cross as Keith Park's gunner, and was killed in a flying accident shortly thereafter.

Arthur Rex Hurden Noss was the only child of Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Noss of Crouch End. He was educated at Herne Bay, winning eight athletic prizes in his final year.

Noss began his military service as a gunner (regimental number 625052) in the Honourable Artillery Company, before transferring to the Royal Flying Corps.

On 4 April 1917, Noss was commissioned as a temporary second lieutenant on probation. Noss was on the General List of the Royal Flying Corps when he was appointed as a flying officer (observer) on 20 June 1917. His seniority date of appointment was set at 16 May 1917, indicating he began actual duties as an observer/gunner then.

Noss was assigned to No. 48 Squadron as an observer/gunner in Bristol F.2 two-seater fighters in March 1917. He scored his first aerial victory on 27 May 1917, and would score one more before pairing up with Keith Park. On 19 July, this aircrew suffered a magneto failure and a crash-landing that injured Noss. On 2 August 1917, Flight magazine reported Noss had been wounded.

Noss and Park would go on to score seven victories in August 1917, with an outstanding performance on the 17th. That was the day that Park went to the rescue of a Sopwith Camel being attacked by three German Albatros D.IIIs. In the process of driving the three Germans away, Noss and Park were assailed by two more of the enemy. Noss fired at the attacking pair; when they overran his fighter, Park took his turn and shot them both down. At that point, another trio of Germans attacked; Noss spun one of them out with machine gun fire. Park chased after the falling German; still another three Germans attacked, but they also overran the British crew. Park then saw a second Sopwith Camel under attack from a German, and pumped 100 rounds of machine gun ammunition into the German from 50 yards range. The German spun out, for the British crew's fourth win of the day. They would win the Military Cross for this action; the award was announced on 26 September 1917.


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