Hubert Broad

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Hubert Stanford Broad
MBE
AFC

aviator and noted test pilot.[1]

Early life

Born at Aston Lodge,

St. Lawrence College in Ramsgate, Kent.[4]

RNAS aviator

Broad learned to fly in 1915 at the Hall School of Flying at Hendon.

Dunkirk, France, flying the Sopwith Pup. Broad was wounded in the neck during one First World War mission escorting bombers and returned to England to become an instructor whilst he recuperated.[5]

For his second operational tour, Broad was seconded to No. 46 Squadron of the Royal Flying Corps flying the Sopwith Camel.[1] At the end of the Great War, Broad became an instructor at the Fighter Pilots Flying School, Fairlop.[1]

Test and sports pilot

After leaving the RNAS Broad flew joy-riding aircraft for Avro and in 1920 he flew joy-riding flights in the United States with two Avro seaplanes.[1] In 1921 he came first in the Aerial Derby air race around London, flying a Sopwith Camel.[1] This gained the attention of de Havilland which took him on in October 1921 as chief test pilot at Stag Lane.[1] Given the scarcity of test pilots he was tasked with flying a wide variety of De Havilland aircraft as well as Handley Pages and Glosters.[1]

At the 1925 Schneider Trophy Broad was the sole British entrant following a number of pre-race accidents.[6] Flying a Gloster III seaplane he came second to an American Army test pilot called James Doolittle.[6]

At de Havilland, Broad undertook many demonstration flights and entered air races and competitions to show off de Havilland aircraft.

King's Cup Air Race in a de Havilland Moth.[1] In 1928 he took part in the International Light Aircraft Contest in France, finishing in 3rd place. The next year, he came second in the F.A.I. Tourist Plane Contest – Challenge International de Tourisme 1929. In the subsequent Challenge International de Tourisme 1930, he was 8th overall (he completed the rally section in 1st place).[7]

In 1935 he left de Havilland to work with the

MBE in 1944 for his work as a Hawker test pilot.[8]

Captain Broad died in 1975 at home in Basingstoke; during his career, he completed 7,500 flying hours in 200 different types of aircraft.[1]

Sentimental life

Broad appears to have had an affair with Beryl Markham, the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic from east to west; he was named by Mansfield Markham as a co-respondent in his 1937 divorce from Beryl.[9]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Hubert Broad". Flight International. 7 August 1975. p. 172. Retrieved 14 November 2009.
  2. ^ Although his date of birth was registered as 20 May 1897, which is also the date recorded by the Royal Aero Club, this is contradicts the 18 May as published in his obituary in Flight.
  3. ^ a b 1901 Census of Watford, RG13/1317, Folio 60, Page 31, Hubert S. Broad, Aston Lodge, St Johns Wood, Watford.
  4. ^ 1911 Census of Thanet, RG14PN4536, Hubert Stanford Broad, Hollicondane Ramsgate.
  5. ^ "Britain's Test Pilots No. 2 Capt. H.S. Broad". Flight International. 28 March 1946. p. 314. Retrieved 14 November 2009.
  6. ^ a b "The Schneider Trophy – 70th Anniversary". Royal Air Force. Retrieved 14 November 2009.
  7. ^ "No. 36547". The London Gazette (Supplement). 2 June 1944. p. 2670.
  8. ^ "Divorce Court File: 7428. Appellant: Mansfield Markham. Respondent: Beryl Markham..." nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 11 March 2016.

External links