The son of Francis Grandy and his wife, Nell Grandy (née Lines), Grandy was educated at Northwood Preparatory School and the University College School in London,[1] and was commissioned into the Royal Air Force as a pilot officer on a probationary basis on 11 September 1931.[2] After completing flying training, he was posted as a pilot to No. 54 Squadron flying Bulldogs from RAF Hornchurch in August 1932.[3] He was confirmed in the rank of pilot officer on 11 September 1932[4] and promoted to flying officer on 11 June 1933.[5] He became Adjutant of No. 604 (County of Middlesex) Squadron at RAF Hendon in April 1935 and attended the Instructors' Course at the Central Flying School in January 1936.[3] He was promoted to flight lieutenant on 11 June 1936[6] and was posted to the University of London Air Squadron as Adjutant in January 1937.[3]
Grandy served in the Second World War, initially as Squadron Commander at No. 13 Flying Training School.[3] In April 1940 he was given command of No. 219 Squadron flying Blenheims from RAF Catterick on night patrol duties[7] and then went on a month later to command No. 249 Squadron flying Hurricanes from RAF Church Fenton during the Battle of Britain.[8] His squadron shot down more German aircraft than any other squadron during the Battle of Britain, one of his pilots winning the Victoria Cross. Gandy himself was shot down and hospitalised in September 1940.[8] In December 1940 he joined the Air Staff at Headquarters RAF Fighter Command and then transferred to the Staff at No. 52 Operational Training Unit.[3] He was promoted to wing commander on a temporary basis on 1 March 1941[9] and in November 1941 he was sent to RAF Duxford where he was given command of flying operations.[3] In February 1942, he was given overall command of RAF Duxford and he oversaw the establishment there of the RAF's first TyphoonWing.[8] He was promoted to wing commander on a war substantive basis on 12 August 1942[10] and mentioned in despatches on 1 January 1943.[11]
Grandy was given command of No. 210 Group RAF defending the Port of Tripoli in February 1943[8] and then went to Egypt to command No. 73 Operational Training Unit at RAF Abu Suwayr in September 1943.[3] Having been promoted to the temporary rank of group captain on 1 July 1944,[12] he became Officer Commanding No. 341 Wing fighting the Japanese in the Far East in February 1945.[13] He became Senior Air Staff Officer at Headquarters No. 232 Group in September 1945[3] and was awarded the Distinguished Service Order on 19 October 1945.[14]
After the war Grandy became Deputy Director of Operational Training at the Air Ministry from 1946 and became Air Attaché in Brussels in January 1949.[3] He was promoted to group captain on a substantive basis on 1 January 1950,[15] before becoming Officer Commanding the Northern Sector of Fighter Command in November 1950.[3] He joined the Air Staff in the Operations Directorate at Headquarters Fighter Command in May 1952 and went on to be Commandant of the Central Fighter Establishment in December 1954.[3] He was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath in the 1956 Birthday Honours[16] and promoted to air commodore on 1 January 1956.[17] He attended Imperial Defence College in early 1957 and then became Commander of Operation Grapple (the Hydrogen Bomb testing programme) in September 1957.[3] He was promoted to acting air vice marshal on 6 December 1957[18] and became Assistant Chief of the Air Staff (Operations) in October 1958.[3] He was confirmed in the rank of air vice marshal on 1 July 1958.[19]