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Egbert Cadbury

Egbert Cadbury
Born (1893-04-20)20 April 1893
Selly Oak, Birmingham, England
Died 12 January 1967(1967-01-12) (aged 73)
Weston-super-Mare, Somerset, England
Cause of death Cancer
Nationality British
Education Leighton Park School
Alma mater Trinity College, Cambridge
Occupation Businessman
Years active 1919–1963
Organization Cadbury
Spouse(s) Mary Forbes Phillips (m. 1917–67)
Children Peter Cadbury
Robin Cadbury
Parents
Relatives John Cadbury (grandfather)
Family Edward Cadbury (brother)
Marion Greeves (sister)
Military career
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service/branch Royal Navy
Royal Air Force
Years of service 1914–1919
Rank Major
Battles/wars World War I
Awards Distinguished Service Cross
Distinguished Flying Cross

Major (Honorary Air Commodore) Sir Egbert Cadbury DSC, DFC, JP, DL (20 April 1893 – 12 January 1967) was a British businessman, a member of the Cadbury family, who as a First World War pilot shot down two Zeppelins over the North Sea: L.21 on 28 November 1916, and L.70 on 6 August 1918: the latter while flying a De Havilland DH.4 with Robert Leckie as observer/gunner.

Egbert "Bertie" Cadbury was born in Selly Oak, Birmingham, the youngest son of George Cadbury and his second wife Elizabeth Cadbury, and the grandson of John, the founder the family business. A year after he was born the family moved to a new home, Northfield Manor House, in Northfield, Birmingham. He was educated at Leighton Park School in Reading, then went to Trinity College, Cambridge to study economics.

The Cadbury's were Quakers, and thus pacifists, but on the outbreak of the war Cadbury left Cambridge, and volunteered to join the Royal Navy, serving as a seaman aboard the HMY Zarifa, a yacht converted to an armed patrol vessel, manned mainly by Cambridge graduates, while his older brother Laurence joined the Friends' Ambulance Unit. Cadbury was eventually commissioned into the Royal Naval Air Service as a probationary flight sub-lieutenant, being confirmed in his rank on 31 May 1915. He was granted Royal Aero Club Aviators' Certificate No. 1343 on 19 June, after soloing a Grahame-White Biplane at the Grahame-White Flying School at Hendon. Cadbury was posted to the Naval Air Station at South Denes, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, where one of his ground crew was Henry Allingham.


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