Air Marshal Sir Thomas Walker Elmhirst
KBE, CB, CBE, AFC C-in-C, 15 Aug 1947 - 02 Feb 1950
The post-independence Indian Air Force
owes its independent status to one man, Air Marshal Sir Thomas Walker Elmhirst, who was
the first Commander-in-Chief of the Indian Air Force of Free India. It was Air Marshal
Elmhirst, who insisted that the Indian Air Force be an independent service under no
control of the Army, unlike previously when the Commander-in-Chief of the Indian Army
exercised control over the Air Force too.
Elmhirst was born in 1895, the fourth son
of a Priest. Completing his education from the Royal Naval College, he enrolled into the
Royal Navy and took part in World War I. He was involved in many a sea battle and having
survived them, he was among the select few of a batch of twenty sailors who formed a Naval
Airship Service raised to counter German Submarines. Elmhirst commanded a Naval Air ship
between 1915 to 1918, after which he took over command of a the 8th Airship Squadron.
In 1919, Elmhirst transferred to the
Royal Air Force. He flew seaplanes in the beginning, slowly transferring to flying boats,
and bombers. He commanded XV RAF Squadron flying the Hawker Hart. during this time, he
qualified at Staff college and also took a first class Air Navigator's license. Elmhirst
served a brief spell with the British embassy in Turkey as Air Attaché.
During World War II, Elmhirst commanded a
Bomber Wing, and as an Air Commodore, was on the staff of Fighter Command during the
Battle of Britain in September 1940. In 1941, he moved over to Egypt commanding a Group
there. When the Desert Air Force was formed, Elmhirst was the Senior Administrative
Officer with it, and he took part in the Battle of El Alamien, which turned the tide in
North Africa. Soon, He took over as the Senior administrative officer of the First
Tactical Air Force that participated in the invasion of Tunisia and subsequently Sicily.
After D-Day, Elmhirst took over the Second-in-Command position of the 2nd Tactical Air
Force under Air Marshal Tedder. After the end of the fighting in Europe, Elmhirst was
posted as Director Air Intelligence at the Air Ministry. In 1947, Elmhirst was posted to
India as the Chief of Inter Service Administration on the staff of the commander in chief
in India.
It was during his tenure as the Chief of
ISA that Lord Mountbatten and Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru requested Elmhirst to take
over as the Chief of the Royal Indian Air Force. Elmhirst accepted the offer, but put two
preconditions. The first was that the RIAF would be independent of Army control and the
second was to choose the services of half a dozen or so RAF Officers to help him in the
initial days of the task.
Prime Minister Nehru accepted both the
conditions and Thomas Elmhirst became the first Chief of the Independent India's Air
Force. At that time, the IAF was an air force only in name. It consisted of half a dozen
squadrons and some training institutions, with no establishment or administrative
infrastructure worth its name. No Commands or Group HQs existed. it was left to the
organising skill of Elmhirst to piece together a command and control structure. Ably
assisted by a team of handpicked British Officers and Senior Indian Officers like Air
Commodore S. Mukherjee and Gp. Capt. A.M. Engineer, the IAF soon took shape. Even though
fighting in Kashmir had broken out, the task of establishing the Air force did not get
delayed. Elmhirst raised an Operations Group (later Western Air Command) and a Training
Group. In addition to this Elmhirst carried out many sweeping reforms that laid the
foundation for the administrative set-up of the Indian Air Force of Today.
Elmhirst laid down office in February
1950, after commanding the air force for nearly three years. He had written an
autobiography and led a quite and uneventful life till his death on 6th November 1982.
It is to Air Marshal Elmhirst that the
credit goes for the achievement of turning an incomplete air force into a cohesive
fighting machine that had its teeth sharpened and tail strengthened. The IAF is forever
indebted to Air Marshal Elmhirst for his foresight and vision that led to its independent
status.
© Jagan
Pillarisetti |