Last modified: 2010-01-22 by rob raeside
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Flag suggested for Royal Air Force in 1918.
National Archives (PRO) AIR 5/333 Pt. II
Not apparently ever seriously considered, but it might perhaps have been the
inspiration
for the RAF rank flags?
David Prothero, 4 October 2004
I think that the plain five-striped design was used as some sort of camp flag
by RFC during WW1. This page at
www.aeroconservancy.com has a few relevant images. At the top of the page
there is a RFC pennant, which was probably an unofficial novelty flag. A third
down the page there is the RFC armband with the five stripes; just below it at
the right there is a poster with a tiny flag bearing those five stripes!
Miles Li, 5 October 2004
This was a proposal devised to accompany a submission to the War Cabinet over
the design of the RAF flag. Since the RAF and the Admiralty could not agree on a
design, someone proposed that the War Cabinet should break the 'logjam'. But the
flag was rejected. (My notes say that the decision was made to refer the matter
to the War Cabinet in December 1918, but that the proposal was not made until
January 1920 - see amplification below.)
The original design was used as a headquarters flag for the Royal Flying Corps
in the Field in France, set out in a British Expeditionary Force General Routine
Order of June 1917 (I have not traced the original of this order yet). The
difference was that there was no union jack canton, and the letters RFC were
placed on the central red stripe. The colours were also used as brassards by RFC
staff officers. This was modified to provide rank flags from the formation of
the service (and possibly before, when it was just the RFC). In AIR 2/337, there
is a sheet that must have come from an official order, but is now separate.
Dated April 1918, it shows rank flags:
- with two red stripes as 'Major General' in ink with RFC HQ deleted
- with one red stripe, swallowtailed 'Brigadier' with Brigade crossed out
- one one red stripe, pennant 'Wing Commander' with Wing crossed out
- with one red stripe and pilot's wings above and a number below, with Squadron,
Army Aircraft Park, Aircraft Depot crossed out.
It looks as if there was a move from flags that indicated units, to flags that
indicated rank.
Air Ministry Weekly Order 782 of May 1918 amended Wing Commander to Colonel, and
instituted two new flags:
- with two narrow red stripes, a pennant, for lieutenant-colonel
- the old squadron flag, for major.
Army ranks were abolished on 15th September 1919, and replaced by the the RAF
ranks that are still in use today.
Ian Sumner, 5 October 2004