Frederick George Miles

Frederick George Miles (22 March 1903 – 15 August 1976) was a British aircraft designer and manufacturer who designed numerous light civil and military aircraft and a range of prototypes. The name "Miles" is associated with two distinct companies that Miles was involved in and is also attached to many non-aviation products such as the Biro pen, photocopiers and book binding machinery. Throughout his life, he was known as "Miles" and never by his first name, even to his own family, although Don Brown refers to him as "F.G.", presumably to distinguish him from his brother George.[2]

Frederick George Miles[1]
F.G. Miles
Born(1903-03-22)22 March 1903
Worthing, Sussex, England
Died15 August 1976(1976-08-15) (aged 73)
NationalityBritish
Other names"Miles"
OccupationAircraft engineer,company director
Known forAircraft designs
Spouse(s)Maxine (Blossom) Thomas married 1932
Parent(s)Esther Miles & Frederick Gaston Miles
RelativesGeorge Herbert Miles (Brother / Aircraft Designer),

Reginald Howard Miles (Brother)
Dennis William Miles (Brother)

Jeremy Miles (Son)

Early life

Miles was born on 22 March 1903 in Worthing Sussex, the oldest of four sons of Frederick Gaston Miles, a laundry proprietor (Star Model Laundry, Portslade), and his wife Esther. Miles's father is noted in the 1901 census as being a 25-year-old laundry warehouseman but by the time of the next census in 1911, he is described as being the proprietor of the laundry, a business which continued into the 1970s. Miles's father was an astute businessman who was able to support Miles's early interest in aviation.

Miles left school early in 1916 and started a motorcycle rental business. He soon became interested in aircraft and in 1922, at the back of his father's laundry in Portslade, with some friends and his brother George, Miles designed, then built a small biplane called the Gnat[3] The aircraft was not flown.

Local pilot Cecil Pashley, who was persuaded to become a partner in a budding aviation business, taught Miles to fly in Pashley's Avro 504K at Shoreham Airport. The Pashley and Miles partnership led to a flying school and joyriding business known as the Gnat Aeroplane Co. In May 1927, the company was formally incorporated as the Gnat Aero Company, Ltd. with a share capital of £1,500. The first directors were F.G. Miles, C.L. Pashley and F. Gaston Miles.[4] The company soon expanded into aircraft repairs and then split into two separate operations: the Southern Aero Club and Southern Aircraft. One of the aircraft Miles acquired was an Avro Baby, which he modified to turn it into an aerobatic sports aircraft he called the Southern Martlet. Miles was later joined as a director in both companies by Magnus Herman Volk, the eldest son of Magnus Volk, who from an early age, had a keen interest in aviation.

Personal life

In 1930, Miles intended to emigrate to South Africa to remove himself from a difficult situation when he fell in love with one of his pupils, but he returned after a year and then married the former pupil, Maxine Freeman-Thomas. Blossom, as Maxine was known, was daughter of the actor Sir Johnston Forbes-Robertson. She was a pilot, a designer, draughtswoman, aerodynamicist and stress engineer and a director of a manufacturing company. She oversaw the development of the Miles Technical School.[5]

Miiles and Blossom owned Cudlow House, Rustington; this was the home of the Llewelyn Davies family, and inspired J. M. Barrie to write the Peter Pan story.[6]

1930s – Phillips and Powis

Together F.G. and Blossom designed a single-seat biplane in 1932 (the Miles M1 Satyr), which was built for them by George Parnall & Co of Yate, Gloucestershire.

In 1932, Miles met Charles Powis a motor engineer and owner of an aircraft business Phillips & Powis based at Woodley Aerodrome, Woodley near Reading. Miles agreed to design a cheap, but modern light monoplane which he called the Miles Hawk, built by Phillips and Powis at Woodley. The Hawk sold well and Miles joined the company as technical director and chief designer. His brother, George followed him as a test pilot and manager of the engine section. Other successful designs followed, including one "special" commissioned from Miles by Charles Lindbergh and known as the Miles Mohawk.[7]

In 1935, the Phillips and Powis became a public company with Rolls-Royce Limited becoming a major shareholder. Miles became chairman and managing director and his brother George, became technical director and chief designer. With the expansion of the Royal Air Force, the company in 1937 won a contract worth £2 million for the Miles Magister basic trainer.[8] This was followed by a similar order for 900 Master I aircraft in 1938,[9] followed by later large orders for 2,402 Master II and III aircraft[10] and 1,789 Martinet and Queen Martinet aircraft[11] were made for the RAF with a small number to the Royal Navy and overseas.

Aero Engine

C. F. Caunter designed a 60 hp two-stroke light aero engine. Miles built a test prototype of the Caunter engine and successful tests were carried out at the Woodley Aerodrome during the late 1930s. However, with the onset of the Second World War, the Powis & Phillips works turned their full attention to aircraft production and Caunter eventually sold his design to the Alvis company.

Miles Aircraft Limited

Rolls-Royce lost interest in the company and in 1941, Miles bought financial control of the company which he renamed Miles Aircraft Limited in 1943. Miles and his wife also started the Miles Aeronautical School to train apprentice technicians and draughtsman. The apprentices developed a test bed airframe known as the Miles Venture.

In 1943, Miles was shown a prototype ballpoint pen made by László Bíró and offered to produce them for the Royal Air Force. The ministry were concerned that it would distract from aircraft production but Miles eventually persuaded government officials to let him use 17 unskilled women to produce the Biro pen, which was the world's first commercially successful ballpoint pen.[12] At the end of the war, the Reading biro factory which would employ 700 people, became the Miles Martin Pen Company and the Biro was sold to the general public.[13]

With his brother, now Chief Designer for the aircraft, Miles concentrated on a design for a supersonic aircraft (the M.52) powered by the then secret Whittle jet engine. The government contract and the programme was cancelled in 1946. Data from this project was shared with the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA – later to become NASA), also at work on supersonic aircraft designs during this period.[14]

Problems with the return to civil production led to the collapse of Miles Aircraft in 1948. On 21 March 1950, following an investigation by the Board of Trade, Miles and Sir William Malcolm Mount, Bt. (former financial executive of the company) were formally committed for trial at Marylebone Magistrates' Court, the Old Bailey on summonses under the Prevention of Fraud (Investment) Act 1939. Bail of £500 was set in each case. The charges arose from alleged concealment of facts and misleading statements made in a share prospectus concerning the manufacture of Aerovan, Merchantman and other aircraft. Both men were later acquitted.

F.G. Miles Limited

Undeterred, in 1949, Miles started a new company "F.G. Miles Ltd" at Redhill, and in 1952 moved back to Shoreham.[15] In 1961, the aviation interests of the company became part of the new Beagle Group and Miles became the deputy chairman and his brother, chief designer. The Beagle group collapsed in 1969.[16]

The F. G. Miles group continued with subsidiary engineering companies involved with flight simulators, aircraft structures and other aviation projects. In 1975, Hunting Associated Industries acquired a controlling interest in F. G. Miles and all its subsidiaries. The company was renamed Hunting Hivolt and Jeremy Miles, the son of F. G. Miles (who founded the firm), became a non-executive director on the board.[17]

Miles died on 15 August 1976 in Worthing, Sussex.[18]

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References

Notes

  1. ""Miles." Flight, 28 August 1976. Retrieved: 26 April 2012.
  2. Brown 1970, p. 1 et sub.
  3. "Star Model Laundry (Miles) Limited." "No. 45685". The London Gazette. 25 May 1972. p. 43..
  4. "New Company Registered." Flight, 26 May 1927. Retrieved: 26 April 2012.
  5. "Miles Technical School." Flight, 18 April 1946, p. 398. Retrieved: 25 April 2012.
  6. "House that inspired Pete Pan for sale." theargus.co, 22 October 2004. Retrieved: 25 April 2012.
  7. "Miles M 12 Mohawk performance and specifications." pilotfriend.com. Retrieved: 25 April 2012.
  8. Jackson 1974, p. 69.
  9. Brown 1970, p. 114.
  10. Brown 1970, p. 170.
  11. Brown 1970, p. 191.
  12. "Miles." Flight International, 28 August 1976, p. 513.
  13. "The Biro Story." Archived 5 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine comcast.net. Retrieved: 25 April 2012.
  14. Hallion, Richard, P. "Chapter 10: The NACA, NASA, and the Supersonic-Hypersonic Frontier." NASA's First 50 Years. (NASA), 7 September 2011, p. 231.
  15. Brown 1970, p. 346.
  16. "From All Quarters: Beagle Developments." Flight , 2 December 1960. Retrieved: 27 April 2012.
  17. "Industry International: Hunting Associated Industries." Flight International, 27 November 1975, p. 804. Retrieved: 27 April 2012.
  18. "Miles." Flight International, 28 August 1976, p. 511.

Bibliography

  • Amos, Peter. Miles Aircraft: The Early Years, The Story of F G Miles and his Aeroplanes, 1925–1939. Tonbridge, Kent, UK: Air-Britain (Historians) Ltd, 2009. ISBN 978-0-85130-410-6.
  • Amos, Peter. Miles Aircraft: The Wartime Years, 1939 to 1945. Tonbridge, Kent, UK: Air-Britain (Historians) Ltd., 2012. ISBN 978-0-85130-430-4.
  • Brown, Don Lambert. Miles Aircraft Since 1925. London: Putnam & Company Ltd., 1970. ISBN 0-37000-127-3.
  • Buttler, Tony. Secret Projects: British Fighters and Bombers 1935 -1950 (British Secret Projects 3). Leicester, UK: Midland Publishing, 2004. ISBN 1-85780-179-2.
  • Jackson, A.J. British Civil Aircraft since 1919, Volume 2. London: Putnam, 1973. ISBN 0-370-10010-7.
  • Temple, Julian C. Wings Over Woodley – The Story of Miles Aircraft and the Adwest Group. Bourne End, Bucks, UK: Aston Publications, 1987. ISBN 0-946627-12-6.
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