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Richard Williams (RAAF officer) : ウィキペディア英語版
Richard Williams (RAAF officer)

Air Marshal Sir Richard Williams, (3 August 18907 February 1980) is widely regarded as the "father" of the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF). He was the first military pilot trained in Australia, and went on to command Australian and British fighter units in World War I. A proponent for air power independent of other branches of the armed services, Williams played a leading role in the establishment of the RAAF and became its first Chief of the Air Staff (CAS) in 1922. He served as CAS for thirteen years over three terms, longer than any other officer.
Williams came from a working-class background in South Australia. He was a lieutenant in the Army when he learned to fly at Point Cook, Victoria, in 1914. As a pilot with the Australian Flying Corps (AFC) in World War I, Williams rose to command No. 1 Squadron AFC, and later 40th Wing RAF. He was awarded the Distinguished Service Order and finished the war a lieutenant colonel. Afterwards he campaigned for an Australian Air Force run separately to the Army and Navy, which came into being on 31 March 1921.
The fledgling RAAF faced several challenges to its continued existence in the 1920s and early 1930s, and Williams received much of the credit for maintaining its independence. However an adverse report on flying safety standards saw him dismissed from the position of CAS and seconded to the RAF prior to World War II. Despite support in various quarters for his reinstatement as Air Force chief, and promotion to air marshal in 1940, he never again commanded the RAAF. After the war he was forcibly retired along with other World War I veteran officers. He took up the position of Director-General of Civil Aviation in Australia, and was knighted the year before his retirement in 1955.
==Early career==

Williams was born on 3 August 1890 into a working-class family in Moonta Mines, South Australia.〔Garrison, ''Australian Dictionary of Biography'', pp. 502–505〕〔Helson, ''Ten Years at the Top'', p. 75〕 He was the eldest son of Richard Williams, a copper miner who had emigrated from Cornwall, England, and his wife Emily.〔〔Odgers, ''The Royal Australian Air Force'', p. 49〕 Leaving Moonta Public School at junior secondary level, Williams worked as a telegraph messenger and later as a bank clerk. He enlisted in a militia unit, the South Australian Infantry Regiment, in 1909 at the age of nineteen.〔 Commissioned a second lieutenant on 8 March 1911, he joined the Permanent Military Forces the following year.〔〔Department of Defence, ''AIF Personnel File'', p. 7〕
In August 1914, Lieutenant Williams took part in Australia's inaugural military flying course at Central Flying School, run by Lieutenants Henry Petre and Eric Harrison. After soloing in a Bristol Boxkite around the airfield at Point Cook, Victoria, Williams became the first student to graduate as a pilot, on 12 November 1914.〔Stephens, ''The Royal Australian Air Force'', p. 1〕 He recalled the school as a "ragtime show" consisting of a paddock, tents, and one large structure: a shed for the Boxkite.〔Molkentin, ''Fire in the Sky'', pp. 8–10〕 Following an administrative and instructional posting, Williams underwent advanced flying training at Point Cook in July 1915. The next month he married Constance Esther Griffiths, who was thirteen years his senior. The couple had no children.〔

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