Marshal of the Royal Air ForceWilliam Sholto Douglas, 1st Baron Douglas of Kirtleside, GCB, MC, DFC (23 December 1893 – 29 October 1969) was a senior commander in the Royal Air Force. After serving as a pilot, then a flight commander and finally as a squadron commander during the First World War, he served as a flying instructor during the inter-war years before becoming Director of Staff Duties and then Assistant Chief of the Air Staff at the Air Ministry.
During the Second World War Douglas clashed with other senior commanders over strategy in the Battle of Britain. Douglas argued for a more aggressive engagement with a "Big Wing" strategy, i.e. using massed fighters to defend the United Kingdom against enemy bombers. He then became Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief of Fighter Command in which role he was responsible for rebuilding the command's strength after the attrition of the Battle of Britain, but also for bringing it on the offensive to wrest the initiative in the air from the German Luftwaffe.
After the war Douglas worked briefly for Handley Page and as a commercial pilot before rejoining the Royal Air Force in 1920 after a chance meeting with Hugh Trenchard.[11] After being granted a permanent commission as a squadron leader on 25 March 1920,[20] Douglas attended the RAF Staff College and then served as a flight instructor four years.[15] Promoted to wing commander on 1 January 1925,[21] he continued his work as an instructor before attending the Imperial Defence College in 1927.[15] He became station commander at RAF North Weald in January 1928 and then joined the Air Staff at Headquarters Middle East Command in Khartoum in August 1929.[15] Promoted to group captain on 1 January 1932,[22] he became an instructor at the Imperial Defence College in June 1932 and then, having been promoted to air commodore on 1 January 1935,[23] he became Director of Staff Duties at the Air Ministry on 1 January 1936.[24] Promoted to air vice marshal on 1 January 1938,[25] he went on to be Assistant Chief of the Air Staff on 17 February 1938.[26]
As commander-in-chief of Fighter Command, Douglas was responsible for rebuilding the command's strength after the attrition of the Battle of Britain, but also for bringing it on the offensive to wrest the initiative in the air from the German Luftwaffe. He was therefore one of the main orchestrators of the only partially successful Circus offensive whereby large wings of fighters accompanied by bombers would take advantage of good weather to sweep over Northern France.[33]
Promoted to Marshal of the Royal Air Force on 1 January 1946,[38] Douglas became the second commander of the British Zone of Occupation in Germany in May 1946.[15] He was raised to the peerage as Baron Douglas of Kirtleside, of Dornock in the County of Dumfries on 17 February 1948, sitting as a member of the Labour Party.[39][40] Douglas retired in 1947 and became chairman of BEA in 1949, a post he retained until 1964. He published two volumes of autobiography, Years of Combat, covering the First World War, and Years of Command covering the Second World War.[11]
Lord Douglas of Kirtleside was married three times. First he married Beatrice May Hudd on 1 August 1919 at The Registry Office in Croydon, Surrey; they were childless and divorced in 1932. Secondly he married Joan Leslie (née Denny) in 1933; this marriage was also childless and ended in divorce in 1952. Thirdly he married Hazel Walker in 1955; they had one daughter.[11]
Arms
Coat of arms of Sholto Douglas, 1st Baron Douglas of Kirtleside
Crest
A heart Gules imperially crowned Proper between two wings displayed Or.
Escutcheon
Quarterly 1st & 4th Argent a heart Gules imperially crowned Proper on a chief Azure three mullets of the first (Douglas), 2nd & 3rd Azure a bend between six cross crosslets fitchée Or (Mar), all within a bordure engrailed Gules on a canton sinister Sable an eagle displayed Or.
Supporters
Two horses Azure winged crined and hooved Or.
Motto
Forward And Aloft (above), Jamais Arrière (below) [43]
Douglas, Sholto, Baron Douglas of Kirtleside (1963). Years of Combat: the first volume of the autobiography of Sholto Douglas, Marshal of the Royal Air Force, Lord Douglas of Kirtleside. GCB, MC, DFC. Collins.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
Douglas, Sholto, Baron Douglas of Kirtleside (1966). Years of Command: the second volume of the autobiography of Sholto Douglas, Marshal of the Royal Air Force, Lord Douglas of Kirtleside. GCB, MC, DFC. Collins.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^"No. 37407". The London Gazette. 28 December 1945. p. 5.
^"No. 37414". The London Gazette (Supplement). 28 December 1945. p. 187.
^"No. 38210". The London Gazette. 17 February 1948. p. 1127.
^"Air Marshal William Sholto Douglas, 1st and last Baron Douglas of Kirtleside". Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage. Vol. 1 (107th ed.). Wilmington, Delaware: Genealogical Books. 2003. p. 842.
^"It's easy to scoff at supernatural tales of seances and Ouija boards, but Compton Miller found that some remarkable people who believe them." "Humble pie from the hereafter Lady Douglas of Kirtleside: Aged 62, an ex-Molyneax model and widow of the World War II RAF hero.
^Miller, Compton (5 October 1984). "Lords and ladies in high spirits". The Times. No. 61954. London. col A, p. 15. Sholto Douglas was an atheist who always maintained that death was as final as "treading on a beetle". Soon after he died in 1969 his distraught widow met Dr Mervyn Stockwood, then Bishop of Southwark.