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Arthur Coningham

Surname Coningham Given Name Arthur Born 19 Jan 1895 Died 30 Jan 1948 Country New Zealand, United Kingdom Category Military-Air Gender Male

Contributor: C. Peter Chen

ww2dbaseArthur Coningham was born in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia to con artist Arthur Coningham who took his family in fleeing from Australia to New Zealand while the future air force senior officer was still very young. The Coningham parents divorsed due to the older Coningham's infidelity when the younger Coningham was 17 years of age. He was granted a scholarship to attend Wellington College. In 1914, he volunteered for the military and served in Egypt, Somaliland, and the Gallipoli peninsula with the New Zealand Expeditionary Force and then served in Britain and France with the British Royal Flying Corps, finishing the war at the rank of major and as the commanding officer of No. 92 Squadron. It was during WW1 that he acquired the nickname Maori, which corrupted into Mary, the latter of which became the name for which he was referred to by his closest comrades. In the early 1920s, he served as a technical and flight instructor, and then was assigned to No. 55 Squadron based in Mosul, Iraq. In 1923, he was given command of No. 55 Squadron. Between 1924 and 1926, he was attached to the headquarters of Egyptian Group and then the headquarters of Royal Air Force (RAF) Middle East. After further service at the Royal Air Force College Cranwell in Lincolnshire and then the Central Flying School at Wiltshire, both in England, United Kingdom, he became a wing commander. In 1932, he was assigned to Sudan as the senior RAF officer. In 1935, he served as a staff officer with the RAF Coastal Area. In the following year he became the Senior Air Staff Officer at the headquarters of No. 17 Group. Between 1937 and 1939, he was the commanding officer of RAF Calshot in Hampshire, England. When the European War of WW2 began in 1939, he was the commanding officer of No. 4 Group of RAF Bomber Command. He would remain in this role through 1941 in the early aerial bombing campaigns against German positions in Germany, France, and the Low Countries. In 1941, he was transferred to the Middle East as the commanding officer of the Western Desert Air Force; in this role he was credited with supporting the eventual Allied victory in North Africa, particularly with stopping the German advance at El Alamein, Egypt in 1942 where he operated with great cooperation with Bernard Montgomery's ground troops (although his relationship would deteriorate greatly later in the war). He would remain in charge of tactical air operations through the invasion of Sicily, Italy and mainland Italy until he was transferred from 1st Allied Tactical Air Force to 2nd Allied Tactical Air Force for the invasion of France. He was relieved by Sholto Douglas as the commanding officer of 2nd Tactical Air Force shortly after the end of the European War, in Jul 1945. Between late 1945 and Aug 1947, he served as the chief of Flying Training Command. In 1947, he was made commodore of the Royal Air Force Yacht Club. In Jan 1948, while traveling aboard a Avro 688 Tudor Mark IV passenger aircraft operated by British South American Airways from Santa Maria, Azores to Bermuda, he disappeared along with all others aboard in the Bermuda Triangle in poor weather. A total of 26 US Air Force aircraft were assigned to search for the missing passenger aircraft, but the search was abandoned after five days.

ww2dbaseSource: Wikipedia

Last Major Revision: Apr 2013

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