Corkery, Joseph Philip

Missing in Action 1918-08-23

Birth Date: unkown date

Born: Almonte, Lanark County, Ontario

Mr. & Mrs. James Corkery

Home: Almonte, Ontario. (parents)

Enlistment: Kingston, Ontario: enlisted in the RFC

Enlistment Date: 1916-06-12

Service

RAF

Unit

66 (B) Wing- Wing (RNAS)

Base

Mesopotamia

Rank

Second-Lieutenant

Position

Second-Lieutenant

Service Numbers

His gunner, Lt Eric Lowe Bragg (British) is also missing, presumed dead. *L.S.*1918-08-23: Corkery was killed in Mespotamia, when he failed to return from a bombing mission. His body was not found-recovered. He is memorialized by name, on the Doiron Memorial, in Greece.

Airco (pre de Havilland) DH 4

(Library and Archives Canada Photo, MIKAN No. 3390141)
(Source Harold A Skaarup web page) de Havilland DH.4, RAF, c1918.
DH-4.jpg image not found

The Airco DH.4 was a British two-seat biplane day bomber of the First World War. It was designed by Geoffrey de Havilland (hence "DH") for Airco, and was the first British two-seat light day-bomber capable of defending itself.

It was powered by a number of different engines in its early years, including the 375 hp (280 kW) Rolls-Royce Eagle engine. It was armed with one 0.303 in (7.7 mm) Vickers machine gun for the pilot and one 0.303 in (7.7 mm) Lewis gun mounted on a Scarff ring for the observer. The DH.4 could carry a pair of 230 lb (100 kg) bombs or four 112 lb (51 kg) bombs. It was first flown in August 1916 and less than a year later, it entered operational service in France with No. 55 Squadron, RFC, on 6 March 1917.

Despite its success, numbers in service with the RFC actually started to decline from spring 1918, mainly due to a shortage of engines, and production switched to the DH.9. Unfortunately, the DH.9 proved to be inferior to the DH.4 in most respects.

Following the Armistice of 11 November 1918, many DH.4s were sold to civil operators where it was found to be particularly useful as a mailplane. Early commercial passenger airplane service in Europe was initiated with modified variants of the DH-4. War-surplus DH-4s became key aircraft in newly emerging air forces throughout the world. The U.S. Army later had several companies re-manufacture its remaining DH.4s to DH.4B standard and they operated the type into the early 1930s.Harold Skaarup web page, Wikipedia


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