Maurice Cooper
Maurice Lea Cooper | |
---|---|
Born |
Dublin, Ireland | 18 December 1898
Died |
2 October 1918 19) Northeast of Gitsberg, Belgium | (aged
Dadizeele New British Cemetery | Moorslede, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium |
Allegiance | United Kingdom |
Service/branch | Aviation |
Years of service | 1917–1918 |
Rank | Captain |
Unit | No. 13 Squadron RNAS/No. 213 Squadron RAF |
Awards | Military Cross |
Captain Maurice Lea Cooper (18 December 1898 – 2 October 1918) was an Irish World War I flying ace credited with six aerial victories.[1]
Cooper was born in Dublin, Ireland in 1998 and educated in Dublin and later at Bootham school York, England. He was born of an English Quaker mother and Irish presbyterian father. He had two sisters Norah Lea and Joyce and enjoyed a happy family life in Dublin.
Biography
He joined the Royal Naval Air Service on 29 April 1917 and was commissioned a Flight Sub-Lieutenant. He was posted to 13 Naval Squadron to fly a Sopwith Camel. He destroyed an enemy two-seater on 5 December 1917, aided by fellow aces John Pinder, George Chisholm MacKay, and John Paynter. On 29 January 1918, aided by MacKay, Paynter, John Edmund Greene, and Leonard Slatter, he destroyed a seaplane. On 12 March 1918, Cooper shared another victory with Greene, MacKay, and another pilot. On 1 April, Cooper flamed a German two-seater seaplane at Zeebrugge, killing M. R. Behrendt and D. R. Hauptvogel. On 7 July 1918, he, Charles Sims, and four other pilots drove down an Albatros D.V. On 30 July 1918, he drove down another D.V at Bruges. That made his tally four enemy planes destroyed, three of which were shared wins, and two driven down out of control, one of which was shared.[2]
During this string of triumphs, he became a flight commander, and won a Distinguished Flying Cross on 15 June 1918. On 2 October 1918, while bombing an enemy troop train, his plane was hit by ground fire and he died in the crash near Gitsberg, Belgium.[2]
References
- ↑ Maurice Cooper at The Aerodrome, Retrieved 12 February 2010
- 1 2 Above the Trenches: A Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915–1920. p. 121.
Sources
Above the Trenches: a Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915-1920. Christopher F. Shores, Norman L. R. Franks, Russell Guest. Grub Street, 1990. ISBN 0-948817-19-4, ISBN 978-0-948817-19-9.