Frank McGill

Frank McGill
Date of birth (1894-06-20)June 20, 1894
Place of birth Montreal, Quebec
Date of death June 28, 1980(1980-06-28) (aged 86)
Place of death Montreal, Quebec
Career information
Position(s) Quarterback
College McGill University
Career history
As player
1910s–1920s Montreal AAA Winged Wheelers
Career stats
Military career
Allegiance  Canada
Service/branch  Royal Canadian Air Force
Rank Air vice-marshal
Awards Companion of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath, Order of Lafayette, King Haakon VII Cross of Liberation

Air Vice-Marshal Frank McGill, CB (June 20, 1894 June 28, 1980) was a prominent member of Canada's military, having been an air vice marshal in the RCAF, and a considerable sports figure, amongst other things a star football player in the Canadian Football League for the Montreal AAA Winged Wheelers.

Sports career

McGill was born on June 20, 1894 in Montreal, Quebec to John Jones McGill and Eliza Jane Bryson. He played college football at McGill University, where he also starred at hockey, water polo and swimming. He was inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1965 and into the Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1959.

Military career

Frank McGill served in First World War as a pilot for the Royal Naval Air Service, after graduating from McGill in 1913. At the outbreak of War in 1914, a brief period in the Army training corps found McGill extremely bored, following which he promptly joined the Royal Naval Air Service. During the First World War he served in combat and as a test pilot, and was decorated for his Royal Flying Corps work. In 1915 while flying with an instructor over the Thames estuary, McGill's plane crashed, resulting in a fractured arm and stay in the Royal Naval Hospital. In 1917 he was appointed second-in-command to a small flying boat force in the Scilly Isles, England.

During the inter-war period, Air Vice Marshal McGill organized and led an RCAF squadron which eventually became the country’s primary fighter unit and participated in the Battle of Britain. He played a founding role in the development of the Commonwealth Air Training Plan, as well as serving as the first commanding officer of Uplands and Trenton airforce bases.

In September 1939 Wing Commander McGill was called up to active service. He was the commanding officer of no. 1 Service Flying Training School at Camp Borden, and during 1940-1941, he was organizer and first commanding officer of no. 2 Service Flying Training School at Uplands. Further postings followed as Director of Postings and Records in 1941 to Air Force Headquarters, and as commanding officer to No. 2 (Movements) Group Headquarters at Halifax in 1941-1942 and to RCAF Station Trenton in 1942-1942.

In 1943 he was promoted Air Commodore and given command of No. 2 Training command in Toronto. Following another promotion to Air Vice Marshal, he returned to Air Force Headquarters in December 1943, where he remained for the rest of the war as Air Member for Organization, later Air Member for Supply and Organization. McGill retired from the RCAF in 1946. From 1951 to 1961 he was Director of the Aircraft Production branch of the Department of Defence Production.[1] He died in Montreal on June 28, 1980.

References

  1. National Defence Headquarters Directorate of History and Heritage. "Frank S. McGill fonds". Archeion. Archives Association of Ontario. Retrieved 2014-03-18.
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