Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 162,241 pages of information and 244,492 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

John Lankester Parker

From Graces Guide

John Lankester Parker OBE FRAeS Hon. MSLAE (1896 – 22 August 1965) was Chief Test Pilot for Short Brothers from 1918 until his retirement in 1945.

1896 Born at Barton Mills, Suffolk, second son of Luther Charles Frederick Parker, of Parker Brothers (Mildenhall), millers[1]

Affected by infantile paralysis but recovered except for some residual handicap.

1913 With financial help from an uncle, he enrolled at Vickers Flying School, Brooklands

1914 Gained his Aviation Certificate; took a job at a Hendon Flying School as an instructor.

Went to Windermere for seaplane training and was soon given a job as instructor.

He joined Shorts in 1916 as a part-time test pilot and assistant to then Chief Test Pilot Ronald Kemp, having been recommended for the post by Captain, later Admiral, Sir Murray Sueter, RNAS. By the time he retired he was a director of the company.

He gained his first flying experience as a pilot and instructor flying for the Northern Aircraft Company's Seaplane School based in Windermere, where he flew, first as a pupil and then as an instructor, between 1914 and 1916. It was during his time flying with the Northern Aircraft Company that he made the acquaintance of Murray Sueter, Ronald Kemp and Oscar Gnosspelius, all of whom would figure later in his work at Shorts.

In 1916 he joined the Prodger-Isaacs Syndicate of freelance test pilots, working for several British aircraft manufacturers.

His first assignment with Short Brothers began on 17 October 1916, when he was asked by Horace Short to test fly a batch of six Short Bombers from the Eastchurch airfield. In spite of his relative youth, his flying skills impressed Horace Short, who soon offered him a permanent position as assistant to Ronald Kemp.

He became Chief Test Pilot for Short Brothers in 1918 as successor to Ronald Kemp. Between 1918 and his last official flight as Chief Test Pilot on 22 August 1945 he flew every Shorts prototype on its maiden flight, ranging from the diminutive Short Shirl (560 lb (254 kg)) to the very large Short Shetland (75,860 lb (34,410 kg)). During the course of his long association with the company, especially during the early pioneering years, he survived numerous forced landings, both on land and on water.

He was awarded the OBE in June 1942.

1943 he became a Director of Short and Harland, Belfast, resigning from the Board of Short Brothers and Harland in 1958.

Parker was a long-time member of the Guild of Air Pilots and Air Navigators, serving as its Master from 1951 until 1953 and again from 1956 until 1957.

1948 he was the first recipient of the Guild's Brackley Memorial Trophy, "awarded to a transport pilot(s) or navigator(s), for outstanding flying, contributing to the operational development of air transport, or transport aircraft, or of new techniques in air transport flying."

1958 Retired from Short's.

1964 he succeeded Lord Douglas of Kirtleside as President of the Seaplane Club of Great Britain.

1965 Died

In memory of his long association with the Medway area, a road in Rochester, Kent was named after him.

See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. The Times, Aug 24, 1965