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The last World War I Royal Navy pilot, Conrad Philip Bristow,
has died just a fortnight short of his 102nd birthday.
Philip Bristow joined the Royal Naval Air Service in 1917.
He was summoned to London for an Admiralty board, and on his
18th birthday made his way to the Royal Naval College at Greenwich
as a Probationary Flying Officer, learning navigation, the
principles of flight, and how to take apart and put together
a machine gun.
The next stage of his training saw him actually get his hands
on the controls of an aircraft, when he headed off for France,
to Vendome in La Rochelle.
He was taken aloft in a Caudron bi-plane for a handful of
flights until he was judged ready for his first solo flight.
Then it was "Off you go, Bristow!" - and off he
went, his son John recalled him saying.
After circling above the French countryside and making a perfect
landing on the bumpy grass, Philip taxied hurriedly over to
his instructor to ask if he had qualified as a pilot. "Yes,
but don't you taxi as fast as that!" came the reply.
The fledgling pilot then returned to the Naval Air Station
at Lee-on-the-Solent for training in seaplanes - a completely
different technique, as water presented a difficult platform
for both take-off and landing.
There was the added complication at Lee-on-the-Solent of
having to avoid the jutting pier.
Once fully trained, Philip moved on to Westgate-on-Sea to
begin submarine surveillance flights.
Coming down at sea was a serious risk for Naval pilots, not
least because of the unreliability of the engines, and each
aircraft trailed a long copper wire to act as a radio aerial
- and two carrier pigeons as a back-up in calling for assistance.
On three occasions Bristow ditched with mechanical problems.
He was rescued in turn by a trawler, a drifter and a British
destroyer - twice employing his pigeons.
In April 1918 the RNAS was absorbed into the newly-formed
Royal Air Force and Philip left the RAF as a flight lieutenant
in May 1919 to rejoin the family glass merchants business
in Cardiff, of which he became managing director in 1938.
But he kept his Naval uniform throughout his time at Westgate
and described his RAF uniform as "rarely worn".
Philip Bristow was made a Chevalier de la Legion d'Honneur
in 1999. His wife Norah died in 1983 and he is survived by
two children, five grandchildren and eight great grandchildren.
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