Ernest Mustard
Lieutenant Ernest Andrew Mustard was a World War I flying ace credited with five aerial victories. He returned to service during World War II with the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF). Lt. Mustard flew Avro Lancaster bombers during World War II with a mixed crew of RAAF and Royal Canadian Air Force personnel. One bomb aimer on his crew was named Alexander Philip Mustard. Lt. Mustard was also responsible for the first aerial survey of Australia's Barrier Reef.[1]
Ernest Andrew Mustard | |
---|---|
Nickname(s) | Pard |
Born | Oakleigh, Melbourne, Australia |
Died | 10 October 1971 Queensland, Australia |
Allegiance | British Empire |
Service/ | Signals, infantry, then flying service |
Rank | Lieutenant |
Unit | No. 1 Squadron AFC |
Battles/wars | Australian Battalion at Gallipol before he transferred to the Australian Flying Corps in 1917. awards =Distinguished Flying Cross |
Relations | = |
Sources of information
gollark: BTW interfaces aren't proper generics.
gollark: most things!
gollark: The CPU is going to be doing some weirdness to convert it to its internal RISC representation or whatever insanity they do now, but that's interpretation.
gollark: Machine code has *no* compile time.
gollark: Or random bits of initialization like DB connections.
References
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