Garfield Finlay

Garfield Finlay (7 September 1893 – 1961) was an Australian flying ace during World War I. He served with distinction in the Gallipoli Campaign as a noncommissioned officer in the Light Horse. After transferring to the Australian Flying Corps, he was commissioned and served as an aerial observer. In this role he was credited with eight aerial victories before training as a pilot. As part of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force under Edmund Allenby, he was also instrumental in the use of air power to inflict a costly defeat on Ottoman Empire forces in September 1918.

After a civilian career in the advertising industry between the wars, he returned to his country's service during the Second World War, rising to the rank of Wing Commander in the Royal Australian Air Force.

Early life
Garfield Finlay was born on 7 September 1893 in Glebe, New South Wales. His mother was Mrs. Elizabeth Finlay. Before World War I, he lived in West Perth, Western Australia and worked as a wool-classer. Before enlisting he had a successful swimming career. In 1911, he won the Australian breaststroke championship and the international King's Cup of the Royal Life Saving Society in London. The King of Sweden invited him to Sweden where he won the Swedish championships, receiving two magnificent solid silver cups engraved with Primus Bland Simmagistrar 1911. He served two years in the Mounted Police before enlisting into the First Australian Imperial Force on 22 January 1915. However, at the time of enlistment, he was working as a labourer.

World War I
Finlay joined "B" Squadron, 12th Light Horse Regiment, 4th Light Horse Brigade on 22 January 1915. He was living in Darlinghurst at the time, and listed his mother Elizabeth living in Perth as his next of kin. On 13 June 1915, Finlay was a corporal when he embarked on HMAT Suevic to depart Sydney. He was promoted to sergeant in October. He served with distinction in the Gallipoli Campaign, rising to the rank of Staff Sergeant Major. As the campaign came to an end, he was attached to the 7th Light Horse Regiment, and was Mentioned in Despatches twice – on 19 December 1915, as well as on 5 January 1916 – for his actions as one of the last 25 men evacuated from the peninsula. He was returned to the 12th Light Horse on 21 February 1916.

Finlay then served and served in a machine gun section of the Imperial Camel Corps. He was commissioned in March 1917. A visit to a friend serving in the Royal Flying Corps sparked Finlay's transfer to aviation in July 1917. He remained in the Middle East, being assigned to No. 1 Squadron AFC. On 29 November 1917, he scored his first aerial victory while flying as an aerial observer in a Royal Aircraft Factory RE.8.



Finlay was wounded twice by anti-aircraft shrapnel on a flight that took place between 10 January and 20 January. On 1 February 1918, The Sydney Morning Herald reported Lieutenant Garfield Finlay as being wounded in action but remaining on duty, with no date given for the wounding. Finlay scored his second confirmed victory on 29 March 1918, and would run his victory tally to eight confirmed and eight more unconfirmed by 22 August 1918.

Finlay's aerial victories came during the Allied drive for air superiority over Axis pilots flying for the Ottoman Empire. While Australian and British pilots fought aerial battles when necessary, their emphasis was on reconnaissance for Allied ground troops, destruction of enemy aircraft and aviation facilities, and other ground attack missions on enemy infantry and cavalry. In this Allied airmen were so successful that they were virtually without air opposition when they supported Allenby's final smashing drive at the Battle of Megiddo. There were several instances during this drive of Turkish units being mauled into collapse by Allied air power.

On 21 September 1918, as part of the Megiddo action, Garfield Finlay, his pilot Alan Brown, and another air crew discovered that several miles of the road leading out of Balata was crowded with Ottoman transport and troops retreating from Allenby's army. The two air crews bombed the front and rear of the column, immobilizing it. A radio message back to their airfield brought on follow-up air strikes. One Allied bomber squadron flew six bombing sorties. Forty-four thousand rounds of machine gun ammunition were expended during the raids. Constrained by cliffs on one side of the ancient Roman highway and trackless hills on the other, the Turks suffered heavy casualties. Friendly ground forces sweeping the area later found about 800 horse-drawn wagons abandoned along the road, along with 90 artillery pieces, 50 lorries, and half a dozen automobiles, along with assorted water carts and field kitchens. This notable action was mentioned in Finlay's award citation for the Distinguished Flying Cross, for which he was recommended on 2 October 1918. In his career as an observer, Finlay was credited with eight confirmed aerial victories, before undertaking pilot training late in the war.

List of aerial victories
See also Aerial victory standards of World War I

Confirmed victories are numbered and listed chronologically. Unconfirmed victories are denoted by "u/c".

Post World War I
Garfield Finlay's Distinguished Flying Cross would not be gazetted until 8 February 1919, in conjunction with Alan Brown:


 * "On 22nd August (1918) Captain Brown, with Lieutenant Finlay as his observer, attacked an enemy two-seater, forcing it to land in our lines. On four other occasions these officers have engaged and destroyed enemy aircraft, displaying marked gallantry and skill. In addition, they have rendered most valuable service in attacking enemy cavalry, antiaircraft guns and other ground targets, inflicting heavy loss.

Another belated honour was his third Mention in Despatches for his services in the Egyptian Expeditionary Force, which would not come until 12 January 1920.

Once released to civilian life in March 1919, Finlay spent ten years in the United States, working in advertising. Garfield Finlay was one of those men who if you told all that he had done, no one would believe you until you proved your words. He was an entrepreneur who tried many business ideas including flying box kites advertising Lucky Strike cigarettes in the US. He brought the American idea of advertising on bus stops to Australia as well as the fedora hat. He returned to military service at the beginning of the Second World War; a 24 February 1940 news article mentions him serving as the adjutant of a Royal Australian Air Force training depot at Laverton, ranked as a Flying Officer. He would rise to the rank of Wing Commander, serving in the 1st Tactical Air Force's headquarters before being discharged on 16 July 1945.

On 21 April 1949 he dissolved a partnership in a popcorn company in Western Australia, with the intent of continuing it as an individual enterprise. After World War II, he also set up a potato crisp and salted roasted peanut factory in Williamtown, Melbourne. He manufactured Finlay's chips and peanuts until his death from a heart attack. He was a heavy smoker and nicotine stains can be seen on his fingers in photographs, even when he was a young man in World War I.