Service Details
Name:
BETTINGTON
Given Name:
CLAUDE ALBEMARLE
Initials:
C A
Rank:
Lieutenant
Other Casualties of this Rank
Regiment:
Royal Flying Corps
Other Casualties from this Regiment
Unit:
3rd Sqdn.
Other Casualties from this Unit
Former Regiment:
formerly Royal Artillery
Date of Death:
1912-09-10
Other Casualties on this Date
Date of Birth:
1875-05-13
Age:
37
Cause of Death:
Died in Aircraft Accident. The autumn army manoeuvers of 1912 included the RFC for the first time. Bettington was paired with Edward Hochkiss, chief test pilot for the Bristol Aeroplane Company to fly a Bristol Coanda Monoplane 263. Taking-off from Larkhill at 07.00 on 10 September 1912 they flew directly to Port Meadow, Oxford which was the first stage. Arriving over Port Meadow at 2000 ft. On their approach for landing a quick-release catch holding a strap opened and the strap fractured a flying wire which whipped about, tearing a hole in the starboard wing. Fabric stripped off and control became impossible; the aircraft crashed into the ground at Lower Wolvercote, 120 yards (110 m) short of Port Meadow. Bettington was flung to his death from the aircraft and Hotchkiss perished in the ensuing impact
Additional
Information:
Son of Col. Rowland Albermarle Bettington. Attended St. Andrew's College, Grahamstown from April to December 1890. At the start of the Boer War Bettington served in the Imperial Light Horse from its formation to May 1900, later a lieutenant in the Royal Field Artillery, 14th Battery from May 1900 to end of war. Bettington was a member of the Mechanical Engineers Assn. of the Witwatersrand and a member of the Chemical and Metallurgical Assn. of the Witwatersrand. and worked as a mining mechanical engineer from 1891 to outbreak of the Boer War in 1899. Bettington invented a new type of steam boiler and together with Anthony M Robeson invented a boiler furnace for burning pulverized fuel. As a young officer serving with the Royal Artillery was fascinated by the possibilities which flying offered to the artillery regarding observation and reconnaissance. After learning to fly and becoming the first South African to take the Aviator's Certificate of the Royal Aero Club of the United Kingdom and the Federation Aeronautique Internationale. Bettington transferred to the newly formed Royal Flying Corps (RFC).
Commemoration
Country:
United Kingdom
Other Casualties commemorated in United Kingdom
Locality:
Yorkshire
Other Casualties commemorated in Yorkshire
Cemetery:
HUNMANBY (GOD'S ACRE) CEMETERY
Other Casualties commemorated in this Cemetery

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