Richard Minifie
Australian flying ace
Died when: 71 years 57 days (853 months)Star Sign: Aquarius
Richard Pearman Minifie, DSC & Two Bars (2 February 1898 – 31 March 1969) was an Australian fighter pilot and flying ace of the First World War.
Born in Victoria, he attended Melbourne Church of England Grammar School.Travelling to the United Kingdom, he enlisted in the Royal Naval Air Service in June 1916.
Accepted for flight training, he completed his instruction in December and joined No. 1 (Naval) Squadron RNAS on the Western Front in January 1917, flying Sopwith Triplanes.
He went on to score seventeen aerial victories on this type of machine throughout the year, becoming both the youngest Australian flying ace of the First World War and No. 1 (Naval) Squadron's highest-scoring ace on the Triplane.
The unit re-equipped with the Sopwith Camel late in 1917, with Minifie going on to achieve a further four victories on the aircraft, raising his final tally to a score of twenty-one aircraft shot down.
Minifie crash-landed in German-held territory in March 1918, and spent the remainder of the war in prisoner-of-war camps in Germany.He was released at the end of the war, and was demobilised as a captain in September 1919.
Returning to Australia, he joined the staff of his father's flour milling business, James Minifie & Co.Pty Ltd.He served as a squadron leader in the Air Training Corps of the Royal Australian Air Force during the Second World War.
Minifie returned to the flour milling industry after the war, becoming managing director of James Minifie & Co.Pty Ltd in 1949.
He died in 1969 at the age of seventy-one.