Everything about Hugh Dowding totally explained
Air Chief Marshal Hugh Caswell Tremenheere Dowding, 1st Baron Dowding GCB GCVO CMG, (
24 April 1882 -
15 February 1970) was a
British officer in the
Royal Air Force. He was the commander of
RAF Fighter Command during the
Battle of Britain.
Early life
Dowding was born in
Moffat,
Scotland. He was educated at
Winchester College and at the
Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, and later served abroad in the
Royal Artillery.
Career
After obtaining his pilot's licence in December 1913, he joined the
Royal Flying Corps (RFC). He was sent to France and in 1915 was promoted to commander of
16 Squadron. After the
Battle of the Somme, Dowding clashed with General
Hugh Trenchard, the commander of the RFC, over the need to rest pilots exhausted by non-stop duty. As a result Dowding was sent back to Britain and although promoted to the rank of
Brigadier, saw no more active service during the
First World War.
Dowding then joined the recently created
Royal Air Force and gained experience in departments of training, supply, development and research. In
1929 he was promoted to
Air Vice Marshal and the following year joined the
Air Council. Tragedy struck in the inter-war period when his wife of two years died. Left alone to bring up his son, Derek, Hugh Dowding withdrew from socialising and threw himself into his work.
Air Marshal
In 1933 Dowding was promoted to
Air Marshal and was knighted the following year. In the years prior to the
Second World War he was the commanding officer of the RAF's
Fighter Command and oversaw development of the "Dowding System" – an integrated air defence system of
radar, raid plotting and radio control of aircraft. He also introduced modern aircraft into service such as the eight-gun
Supermarine Spitfire and
Hawker Hurricane. He was promoted to
Air Chief Marshal in 1937.
Due to retire in June 1939, he was asked to stay on until March 1940 due to the tense international situation. He was again grudgingly permitted to continue, first until July and finally until October 1940. Thus, he fought the
Battle of Britain under the shadow of retirement.
In 1940, Dowding, nicknamed "Stuffy" by his men, proved unwilling to sacrifice aircraft and pilots in the attempt to aid Allied troops during the
Battle of France. He, along with his immediate superior
Sir Cyril Newall, then
Chief of the Air Staff, resisted repeated requests from
Winston Churchill to weaken the home defence by sending precious squadrons to France. When the Allied resistance collapsed, he worked closely with Air Vice-Marshal
Keith Park, the commander of
11 Fighter Group, in organizing cover for the
evacuation of the
British Expeditionary Force at
Dunkirk.
Through the summer of
1940 in the
Battle of Britain, Dowding's
Fighter Command resisted the attacks of the
Luftwaffe. Aside from the system he bequeathed to Fighter Command, his major contribution was to marshal resources behind the scenes and maintain a significant fighter reserve, while leaving his subordinate commanders' hands free to run the battle. At no point did Dowding commit more than half his force to the battle zone in southern England.
Fighter Command pilots came to recognise Dowding as a distant figure, but one who cared for his men and had their best interests at heart. Dowding often referred to his "dear fighter boys" as his "chicks". Indeed his son Derek was one of them: a pilot in
74 Squadron. In spite of his reserve many junior officers regarded "Stuffy" as a fatherly figure with a steady hand on the tiller.
Because of his preparation and prudence "Stuffy" Dowding was credited with winning the battle and was made a Knight Grand Cross of the
Order of the Bath. However, his prickly temperament and intransigence over issues such as the
Big Wing controversy, as well as Fighter Command's inability to counter night raids, contributed to his downfall. The new Chief of the Air Staff, Air Chief Marshal
Charles Portal removed Dowding from his post in November 1940 and replaced him with his ambitious rival,
Sholto Douglas.
Publication of Dowding's book, "Twelve Legions of Angels", was suppressed in 1942. The British Government considered that it contained information which might be of use to the Germans. The book was finally published in 1946, soon after the war ended.
Ministry of Aircraft Production
After leaving Fighter Command Dowding was sent on special duty in the United States for the Ministry of Aircraft Production, where he made himself unpopular with his outspoken behaviour. On his return he headed a study into economies of RAF manpower before retiring from the Royal Air Force in July,
1942. The following year he was honoured with a
peerage, as
Baron Dowding of Bentley Priory.
Retirement
In his retirement Dowding became actively interested in
spiritualism, both as a writer and speaker. His first book on the subject,
Many Mansions, was written in 1943, followed by
Lychgate (1945),
The Dark Star and
God's Magic. Rejecting conventional
Christianity he joined the
Theosophical Society which advocated belief in
reincarnation. He insisted to his friend
Lord Beaverbrook that he'd been the leader of a Mongol tribe in a previous life. He also espoused the cause of animal welfare. An evangelist with a belief in life after death he wrote in
Lychgate of meeting dead 'RAF boys' in his sleep -- spirits who flew fighters from mountain-top runways made of light. One of his former pilots was to comment years later: "at that stage we thought Stuffy had gone a bit ga ga".
Late in life Dowding's belief that he was unjustly treated by the RAF became increasingly bitter. He approved
Robert Wright's book
Dowding and the Battle of Britain which perpetuated the claim that a conspiracy of
Big Wing proponents, including
Trafford Leigh-Mallory and
Douglas Bader, had engineered his sacking from Fighter Command. In the wake of the debate that followed, which largely refuted the Wright accusations and showed Dowding's recollections to be at fault, the RAF debated whether or not to make the octogenarian a
Marshal of the Royal Air Force, but recommended against it. Dowding saw this as yet another undeserved slight from the service.
Interests
In his youth Dowding was an accomplished
skier, winner of the first ever National
Slalom Championship, and president of the
Ski Club of Great Britain from
1924 to
1925. Dowding and his wife Lady
Muriel Dowding were both
vegetarians and anti-
vivisectionists. In
1973 Britain's
National Anti-Vivisection Society founded
The Lord Dowding Fund for Humane Research in his honour.
Battle of Britain film
In the 1969 film of the
Battle of Britain, Dowding was played by legendary actor
Laurence Olivier. Olivier had himself served as a pilot in the
Royal Navy's
Fleet Air Arm during World War II.
During filming, Dowding (then aged 86 and in a wheelchair) met Olivier on the set of his old office. Olivier told Dowding he'd sat behind the desk all day "pretending to be you" and was "making an awful mess of it too", to which Dowding replied, "Oh, I'm sure you are". This broke the crew and Olivier into laughter.
Footage of this can be seen in the special features section of the film's Special Edition DVD.
According to
The Real Life of Laurence Olivier by Roger Lewis (Arrow Books, 1997), while Olivier filmed the scenes of Dowding on the set of his office at Bentley Priory, Lord Dowding watching the shooting wept at the beauty of Olivier's interpretation of him.
Death
Dowding died at his home in Tunbridge Wells, Kent, on
15 February 1970 aged 87. He was
cremated. At a memorial service at
Westminster Abbey, his ashes were laid to rest below the
Battle of Britain Memorial Window in the Abbey's Royal Air Force chapel.
Memorials
A statue of Dowding stands outside St Clement Danes church on The Strand, London. The inscription reads:
» 'Air Chief Marshal Lord Dowding was commander-in-chief of Fighter Command, Royal Air Force, from its formation in 1936 until November 1940. He was thus responsible for the preparation for and the conduct of the Battle of Britain. With remarkable foresight, he ensured the equipment of his command with monoplane fighters, the Hurricane and the Spitfire. He was among the first to appreciate the vital importance of R.D.F. (radar) and an effective command and control system for his squadrons. They were ready when war came. In the preliminary stages of that war, he thoroughly trained his minimal forces and conserved them against strong political pressure to disperse and misuse them. His wise and prudent judgement and leadership helped to ensure victory against overwhelming odds and thus prevented the loss of the Battle of Britain and probably the whole war. To him, the people of Britain and of the Free World owe largely the way of life and the liberties they enjoy today.'
Other monuments to Dowding can be found in the recreational park in
Moffat, the town of his birth; in Royal Tunbridge Wells where he died, and there's a
bust of him in the War Memorial Cloisters at
Winchester College.
The Dowding Centre at the School of Fighter Control at
RAF Boulmer is named for Dowding.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Hugh Dowding'.
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