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Rex Pierson

Rex Pierson
Born 9 February 1891
Little Fransham, Norfolk, England
Died 10 January 1948 (1948-01-11) (aged 56)
Cranleigh, Surrey, England
Nationality United Kingdom
Education Felsted School
Engineering career
Discipline Aircraft designer
Institutions Vickers Limited
Vickers-Armstrongs Limited
Significant design Vickers Vimy
Awards Commander of the Order of the British Empire

Reginald Kirshaw "Rex" Pierson CBE (9 February 1891 – 10 January 1948) was an English aircraft designer and chief designer at Vickers Limited later Vickers-Armstrongs Aircraft Ltd. He was responsible for the Vickers Vimy heavy bomber during World War 1 and the first aircraft to cross the Atlantic non-stop and was chief designer of the Vickers Wellington bomber of World War 2.

Pierson was born on 9 February 1891 at Little Fransham, Norfolk, the son of the rector the Reverend Kirshaw T. Pierson and his wife Helen Mary, he was educated at the Felsted School in Essex. Although his father wanted him to work in a bank, young Rex started an apprenticeship in 1908 with Vickers at Erith. As soon as the company started an aircraft section in 1911 he joined that part of the company and learned to fly. He gained Royal Aero Club Aviators's certificate number 660 on 14 October 1913 at Brooklands. By 1917 he was the chief aircraft designer at Vickers based in its Knightsbridge offices in London.

In 1917 he designed the twin-engined Vickers Vimy biplane heavy bomber which entered service with the Royal Air Force in 1919. One Vimy made the first non-stop crossing of the Atlantic Ocean by Alcock and Brown in June 1919. Among his many other designs were the Vickers Vespa which held the world altitude record in 1932 and the Vickers Wellesley which held the world long distance record in 1938. He was also chief designer of the Vickers Wellington twin-engined bomber which formed the backbone of RAF Bomber Command in WW2 and of which nearly 11,500 were built between 1936 and 1945. Postwar designs included the Viking, Valetta and Viscount and Pierson was promoted to chief engineer in 1946. His successor as chief designer was the talented engineer and industrial leader Sir George Edwards.


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