Captain A. Roy Brown, D.S.C. Plaque

Carleton Place, Ontario
Type
Other

The Captain A. Roy Brown, D.S.C. plaque was erected by the Ontario Heritage Foundation. Captain Arthur Roy Brown was the Great War flying ace credited for bringing down German Baron Manfred von Richthofen, the legendary Red Baron. Although controversy will always follow the cause of the Baron's demise, generally sources give credit to Captain Brown for firing the fatal shot.

Brown was born on December 23, 1893, in Carleton Place, Ontario. In the summer of 1915, he applied to Britain’s Royal Naval Air Service but was told he first needed a private pilot’s license. The nearest Canadian flying school was full, so he attended the Wright School of Aviation in Dayton, Ohio and obtained his pilot’s license on November 13, 1915. He enrolled in the Royal Naval Air Service and was sent to Royal Naval Air Service Station Chingford in northeast London to learn the fundamentals of military flying and dropping bombs.

He was injured on May 2, 1916, when he crashed a training airplane and was hospitalized for two months. In March 1917, Brown was posted to No. 9 Naval Squadron, was injured again and did not recover until May. On November 2, Brown was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his aerial victories and for aiding a fellow pilot under attack by four German aircraft, even though his own machine guns had jammed. By April 1918, he had shot down nine enemy aircraft.

On the morning of April 21, 1918, Brown and other pilots in 209 Squadron became involved in a dogfight with a German squadron including top ace Manfred von Richthofen and his cousin, novice pilot Wolfram von Richthofen. The Red Baron broke off to pursue Canadian pilot “Wop” May, who was on the tail of his cousin. Brown saw that his friend was in trouble and disengaged to attack Richthofen. He fired a long burst from behind and pulled out of a steep dive to avoid a collision. Richthofen continued over Allied territory and was fired at by British and Australian soldiers until he crashed into a field.

Four days later, Brown was grounded and hospitalized with severe food poisoning and extreme exhaustion, then sent to England to recover. Soon afterwards, he was recommended to receive the Distinguished Service Cross with Bar. Released from hospital on June 6, Brown reported for duty as an instructor with No. 2 School of Aerial Fighting and Gunnery in Yorkshire. On July 15 just after takeoff, his engine failed, the aircraft stalled and crashed. Seriously injured again, Roy spent eight months in hospital before being sent back to Canada on March 8, 1919 and was released from the Royal Air Force in April 1920 with the rank of Captain. Captain Brown tried to join the Royal Canadian Air Force when the Second World War began, but was rejected

Inscription

CAPTAIN A. ROY BROWN, D.S.C.
1893-1944

Victor in aerial combat over Baron Manfred von Richthofen,
the First World War's leading fighter pilot and German
national hero. Arthur Roy Brown was born at Carleton
Place. In 1915 he qualified as a civilian pilot and was
commissioned in the Royal Naval Air Service. In the thick
of vicious air fighting in 1917-18 Brown is credited
with at least 12 enemy planes earning the Distinguished
Service Cross and Bar. Though the Canadian's downing
of Richthofen was contested by Australian ground gunners,
the official award was given to Captain Brown. Over-
coming severe war injuries, he returned to civilian life
and later organized an air transport company which
served Northern Ontario and Quebec.

Ontario Heritage Foundation, an agency of the Government of Ontario

Location
Captain A. Roy Brown, D.S.C. Plaque

101 Beckwith Street
Carleton Place
Ontario
GPS Coordinates
Lat. 45.1396842
Long. -76.1444812

Captain A. Roy Brown, D.S.C. Plaque

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