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George Lloyd (RAF officer)

George Lawrence Lloyd
Nickname(s) Zulu
Born (1892-10-01)1 October 1892
Southern Rhodesia
Died 15 July 1955(1955-07-15) (aged 62)
Peekskill, New York, USA
Buried Hillside Cemetery, Cortlandt Manor, New York (41°18′59″N 73°53′50″W / 41.31639°N 73.89722°W / 41.31639; -73.89722Coordinates: 41°18′59″N 73°53′50″W / 41.31639°N 73.89722°W / 41.31639; -73.89722)
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service/branch British Army
Royal Air Force
Years of service 1915–1919
Rank Major
Unit Staffordshire Yeomanry
No. 60 Squadron RFC
No. 40 Squadron RFC
Awards Military Cross
Air Force Cross

Major George Lawrence Lloyd MC, AFC (1 October 1892 – 15 July 1955) was a Rhodesian-born flying ace of the First World War, credited with eight aerial victories.

Lloyd was born in Rhodesia in 1892, which at that time a chartered territory of the British South Africa Company.

On 19 November 1915 Lloyd was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Staffordshire Yeomanry (Queen's Own Royal Regiment), Territorial Force. He was later seconded to the Royal Flying Corps, in which he was appointed a flying officer on 28 February 1917. Lloyd was posted to No. 60 Squadron RFC in April 1917, to fly the Nieuport 17 single seat fighter in operations supporting the Battle of Arras. Inferiority of tactics, technology and training meant that RFC suffered heavy casualties, and the period was subsequently known as "Bloody April". On 22 April Lloyd gained his first aerial victory, destroying an observation balloon north-east of Boiry-Notre-Dame. On 29 June, between Douai and Estrées, he accounted for two Albatros D.III fighters, one destroyed and the other driven down out of control, and drove down another D.III over Wancourt on 7 July.

Lloyd was promoted to lieutenant in his regiment on 1 July 1917, while remaining seconded to the RFC as a second lieutenant, but was appointed a flight commander with the temporary rank of captain on 6 July, and transferred to No. 40 Squadron RFC, where on 14 July he drove down another D.III east of Douai, for his fifth victory, making him an 'ace'. Further victories followed; he drove down a Albatros D.V three miles east of Lens on 12 August, destroyed an Albatros reconnaissance aircraft over Fromelles on 18 August, and destroyed another D.V at La Bassée on 7 October. His overall tally was a balloon, two Albatros fighters and a two-seater reconnaissance aircraft destroyed, and four Albatros fighters driven down out of control, making him the 12th highest-scoring South African ace of the War.


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