Arthur Robert Hoyle (1922 – 2 May 2012)[1] was an Australian historian and biographer. Born in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, in 1922 to Arthur Hoyle (1896–1971) and Gertrude Underwood (1895–1972), he served in the Royal Air Force as a navigator during World War II with 460 Squadron[2] and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross.[3] Hoyle returned to Australia and married Moira Peisley (1924–1998). He had four sons, Arthur Marshall Hoyle Phillip, Warwick and Andrew (dec).
He died on 2 May 2012 at Calvary Retirement Community Canberra.[5]
Biographies
King O'Malley: The American Bounder, A. R. Hoyle, Macmillan, Melbourne, 1981
Roderick Flanagan: A bright flame too soon extinguished, A. R. Hoyle, SP, Canberra, 1988
Into the Darkness: A personal memoir (Autobiography), A.R. Hoyle, SP, Canberra, 1989
Eddie Ward: The Truest Labor Man, A. R. Hoyle, SP, Canberra, 1994
The Life of John Hunter: Navigator, Governor, Admiral, A. R. Hoyle, Mulini Press, Canberra, 2001
Hughie Edwards VC: The Fortunate Airman, A. R. Hoyle, Mulini Press, Canberra, 2001
Autobiography
Into the Darkness – One Young Australian's Journey from Sydney to the deadly skies over Germany 1939–1945 by Arthur Hoyle, DFC, Edited by David Vernon, Stringybark Publishing, Canberra, 2012, ISBN978-0-9870922-7-4
References
^"Arthur HOYLE". The Sydney Morning Herald. 5 May 2012. Retrieved 19 November 2013.
^Into the Darkness – One Young Australian's Journey from Sydney to the Deadly Skies Over German 1939–1945 by Arthur R Hoyle DFC, edited by David Vernon, Stringybark Publishing, Canberra, 2012