| Air Marshal L. S. Breadner | ||||
|
Lloyd Samuel Breadner, born July 14th, 1894, in Carleton Place, Ontario; died March 14th, 1952, in Boston, Massachusetts. Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) officer.
In 1915, young Breadner left the family business in Ottawa to enlist
in the Royal Naval Air Service. He spent most of WWI as a fighter pilot
in France. When the war ended, his flying skills won him a position as
a license examiner with the Canadian Air Board. Breadner was Commanding
Officer of the Camp Borden training base in 1924, the year the RCAF was
officially created 1922. An man of action with a practical mind, he rapidly
moved up the hierarchy, well served by a jolly disposition and a great
sense of humour. He was Director of the RCAF under Lindsay Gordon from
1928 to 1932. In 1936, Breadner received training at the Imperial Defence
College. In 1940, Minister of Defence for Air C.G. "Chubby" Power, himself
a "bon vivant", was greatly taken with Breadner's genial manners.
With Power's support, he succeeded G.M. Croil as Chief of Air Staff on
May 29th, 1940. During WWII, Breadner turned the RCAF into one of the
most powerful air forces in the world. On January 1st, 1944, he was posted
in London as Air Officer Commander-in Chief, RCAF Overseas. Upon his retirement in 1945, Lloyd Breadner was promoted to Chief Air Marshal, the only Canadian ever to hold this rank. |
||||
| Next: Lieutenant-General
E.L.M. Burns |