Admiralty Order First British Airship On May 7, 1909
Royal Navy aviators and veterans,
including Jock Moffat, the Swordfish pilot whose torpedo crippled
the Bismark in World War II, gathered Monday at the Royal
Aeronautical Society in London to launch the One Hundredth
Anniversary of Naval Aviation. The centenary year will be marked by
a number of colorful events and activities throughout the UK.
The anniversary marks the Admiralty's decision on May 7, 1909 to
order the first airship, HMS Airship 1, and embark on a development
program for military aviation. Consequently, when World War One
broke out five years later, the Royal Navy was not only prepared
but in the vanguard.
British officials proudly note it was the Royal Navy who carried
out the first strategic bombing from the air, the first air to air
kill, the first sinking of a ship using a torpedo from the air and
the first use of aircraft in a sea battle. The Fleet Air Arm went
on to perform with valour and distinction including actions such as
the Taranto Raid, the Channel Dash, involvement in the sinking of
the Bismarck and more recently the Falklands Conflict, Gulf Wars
and Afghanistan.
The Fleet Air Arm has won 4 VCs during its history, the first
being awarded to Lt. Warneford in 1915 for downing a German
Airship.
"The Harrier Jets of the Naval Strike Wing have just returned
from Afghanistan where they were providing vital close air support
to our troops, including the Royal Marines of 3 Commando Brigade,"
said First Sea Lord, Admiral Sir Jonathon Band. "Sea King and Lynx
helicopters from three Naval Air Squadrons are also out there,
having moved across from operations in Iraq where they had been
since day one of the war. Eighty per cent of our front-line
squadrons are deployed on operations around the world demonstrating
the flexibility, adaptability and professionalism that has become
the hallmark of the Fleet Air Arm."
"We face an increasingly unstable world, and at the very heart
of our national defence policy lies the requirement to respond to
threats to our national security by dealing with them where and
when they occur," Band added. "This need for expeditionary
capability is at the very core of what the Royal Navy is all about
and the Fleet Air Arm is now, and will continue to be, a key
element."
The highlight of the anniversary events will be on May 7 this
year at Greenwich, London with a fly past of historic and current
Fleet Air Arm aircraft over the aircraft carrier HMS Illustrious. A
service of thanksgiving at St Paul's Cathedral on May 8 will
formally recognize and pay tribute to the sacrifices made during
the history of the Royal Naval Air Service and the Fleet Air
Arm.