PropertyValue
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rdfs:label
  • Stanley Goble
rdfs:comment
  • Air Vice Marshal Stanley James (Jimmy) Goble CBE, DSO, DSC (21 August 1891 – 24 July 1948) was a senior commander in the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF). He served three terms as Chief of the Air Staff, alternating with Wing Commander (later Air Marshal Sir) Richard Williams. Goble came to national attention in 1924 when he and fellow RAAF pilot Ivor McIntyre became the first men to circumnavigate Australia by air, journeying in a single-engined floatplane.
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Unit
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dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
serviceyears
  • 1915
Birth Date
  • 1891-08-21
Commands
death place
  • Heidelberg, Victoria
Name
  • Stanley James Goble
Align
  • left
Caption
  • Official RAAF portrait of Air Vice Marshal Stanley Goble
Width
  • 32.0
Birth Place
  • Croydon, Victoria
Title
Awards
death date
  • 1948-07-24
Rank
Battles
  • World War I
  • World War II
Years
  • 1922
  • 1932
  • 1934
  • 1936
  • 1938
  • 1939
Alt
  • Portrait of man in dark military uniform with pilot's wings on chest, wearing peaked cap with two rows of braid
Source
  • Jimmy Goble on his introduction to flying operations at the Western Front, 1915
Quote
  • ...I was detailed to carry out what was termed a fighting patrol in a twin-engined Caudron. My armament was a Very pistol and my gunner was supplied with a rifle... I discovered that my gunner had never been in the air, had never fired a rifle in his life... I had not seen a twin-engined Caudron until after dark on the previous evening and could not even obtain a map of the front... Fortunately this highly efficient fighting combination found nothing to fight.
abstract
  • Air Vice Marshal Stanley James (Jimmy) Goble CBE, DSO, DSC (21 August 1891 – 24 July 1948) was a senior commander in the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF). He served three terms as Chief of the Air Staff, alternating with Wing Commander (later Air Marshal Sir) Richard Williams. Goble came to national attention in 1924 when he and fellow RAAF pilot Ivor McIntyre became the first men to circumnavigate Australia by air, journeying in a single-engined floatplane. During World War I, Goble flew fighters on the Western Front with the British Royal Naval Air Service. He became an ace with ten victories, commanded No. 5 Squadron (later No. 205 Squadron RAF), and was awarded the Distinguished Service Order and the Distinguished Service Cross. Returning to Australia, Goble assisted in the formation of the RAAF as an independent branch of the Australian armed forces. On an exchange posting to Britain in the 1930s, he led No. 2 (Bomber) Group RAF. As Chief of the Air Staff at the onset of World War II, Goble clashed with the Federal Government over implementation of the Empire Air Training Scheme, which he believed would be detrimental to the defence of Australia. He stepped down as leader of the RAAF in early 1940, and spent the rest of the war in Ottawa as Air Liaison Officer to Canada. Goble died in 1948 at the age of fifty-six, two years after his retirement from the military.