Lawrence of Arabia's Secret Air Force (Paperback)
Based on the Diary of Flight Sergeant George Hynes
Imprint: Pen & Sword Aviation
Pages: 160
Illustrations: Approx 20 mono in plates
ISBN: 9781399020619
Published: 6th February 2023
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X Flight was designated the task of giving close air support to the desert army formed and commanded by Lawrence of Arabia. It flew from advanced desert landing grounds on reconnaissance, liaison, bombing and ground attack missions. The existence and deeds of the flight were kept secret, so much so that even the RFC Paymaster was unaware of their existence.
George Hynes was an aircraft mechanic and became responsible for keeping the flights somewhat elderly aircraft airworthy whilst working in the most difficult desert conditions on hastily constructed landing strips and living and working under canvas in temperatures that froze at night and rose to 100 degrees plus at noon.
His diary gives a clear insight into the conditions endured, the actions that took place and the many almost insurmountable problems that occurred as they followed Lawrences steady advance against the numerically superior Turkish Army and Air Force. George personally encountered Lawrence on many occasions and maintained contact with him after the war.
The diary is supported with the Flights weekly operational records, perspectives of the battle scenarios and other background information.
"This book offers an intriguing insight into World War I aerial operations that are rarely discussed."
The Journal of the Air Force Historical Foundation
It is a useful research tool when dealing with TE Lawrence’s influence, or lack thereof, on the Arab Revolt. Which side of the fence you fall on for that will very much depend on your personal disposition towards Lawrence and Britain’s role in the Arab world.
Beating Tsundoku
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Featured in
Great War IPMS Newsletter, Cher Ami - December 2022
So, a detailed book that is hard work unless you’re a Lawrence fan, but excellent scholarly stuff nevertheless, where else can you learn that a fast camel-postman can make it from Medina to Mecca in 3 days?
Army Rumour Service (ARRSE)
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Individual diaries from both world wars continue to be discovered and published, to our collective benefit. Their personal narratives offer a new perspective on major events and in some ways provide the freshness and colour that are so often missing from better known and, generally, better crafted accounts.
Royal Airforce Historical Society
"Lawrence of Arabia's Secret Air Force" is a fascinating account of the life of a JNCO serving with No 14 Sqn in the Sinai during the First World War. This is a story that deserves to be told and sheds new light on a campaign that continues to fascinate.
The best bits are certainly the original diary entries. They provide an important insight into the life of a technical NCO within the Royal Flying Corps. Too few such accounts have survived and this is an excellent addition to the corpus.
I would recommend the book as an important addition to the story of flying operations in the First World War.
Designated the task of keeping the more elderly aircraft airworthy in the most formidable conditions of the Arabian desert; George Hynes was an aircraft mechanic, who personally encountered Lawrence of Arabia on numerous occasions, and even maintained contact with with him post-war. This diary recounts The Royal Flying Corps' 14 Squadron X Flight, which was ascribed the duty of providing tight aviation support to Lawrence's steadily advancing desert army. With prescribed missions of attack, surveillance and exploration, bombing, and liaison; for all of which the deeds of flights were kept secret, Hynes recites a clear insight into the endured conditions, insurmountable problems, and the actions that were implemented as he followed the army's progress. Supported with the perspectives and recollections of unfolding battle scenes, the Flight's weekly operational records, and other additionally compelling background information, Hynes diary provides a truly engaging read.
James Tweal
Lawrence of Arabia's Secret Air Force is the story of George Hynes, an aircraft mechanic attached to X flight in Aqaba. The dry and terse accounts in the official war diaries were carefully written in difficult conditions and it is regrettable that the same care was not applied to the transcriptions used for this book. I noticed several errors. Captain Furness-Williams was not in the Turkish garrison of Ma'an on 4 March 1918; he was at Aqaba. Captain Siddons wrote his report for the week-ending 10 March in 1918, not 1928. The description of the Ma'an landscape is unrecognisable to anyone who has actually been there. And so on.
Military Times, Jan 2011
However, the errors have to be endured for the comprehensive and detailed first-hand accounts written by George Hynes. These give an astonishingly detailed view of what life was really like, not just the hardships of desert warfare, but also the lighter moments that made life bearable. One such account is of the Commanding Officer flying from Aqaba to Suez and back on Christmas Day in 1917, with crates of beer strapped to the bomb-racks of his machine for the men and bottles of whisky for the officers.
This is a book based on the diary for Flt Sgt George Hynes who was serving with X Flight, a detachment of No.47 Squadron. As such, it is an interesting memoir of his time in the desert maintaining the handful of aircraft operating on the right flank of the British and Commonwealth army that was advancing up through Palestine to Lebanon and Syria.
Aeromilitaria, Winter 2010
It is difficult to connect X Flight to Lawrence as it was engaged in reconnaissance and bombing to the east of the Jordan and while if provided transport on occasions to Lawrence, its operations were defined by the RFC and RAF and were not restricted only to supporting the Arab army that eventually won the race to be first into Damascus.
George Hynes seemed to be worth his weight in gold by keeping X Flight aircraft in the air, being a very good mechanic. There was not too much gold available to him as the RFC accountants seemed to have lost track of X Flight and a lot of pay never arrived. Pursuing the question after the end of the war met with a stone wall and George was short of several thousand pounds.
He met Lawrence a couple of times and after three years in desert conditions, the war ended and he was shipped back to the UK, first in a crammed ship to Taranto where, after waiting for a train to take them to the Channel ports, the other ranks were crammed into freight cars and chugged across Italy and France to Cherbourg for twelve days in freezing temperatures with little food. Some passengers did not survive the trip and after waiting for a cross-channel ship, he eventually arrived at Blandford Camp where personnel awaited posting. Not surprisingly, he did not choose to re-enlist in the RAF!
The buzzwords in the title, Lawrence and Secret, seem to have been for publicity purposes as X Flight was not secret and had only a passing connection with Lawrence.
About James Patrick Hynes M A
James Hynes is the nephew of Flight Sergeant George Hynes.