
In the churchyard of St Mary’s, East Boldre, Hampshire, is a headstone dedicated to Second Lieutenant RR Brown of the Royal Air Force, who died on the 18th June 1918, at the age of 24.
The Commonwealth War Graves Commission confirms his father as William Brown of Lynnville, Ontario Canada. The 1901 census return confirms his forenames as Robert Ray and his mother as Annie Brown. William was a general labourer, but there is little further information about his son’s early life.
What can be confirmed is that, by the summer of 1918, Robert had stepped up to serve the Empire. He had gained a commission in the Royal Air Force, but it is unclear which part of the Canadian Expeditionary Force he had served with previously. Second Lieutenant Brown was, however, based at the 73rd Training Squadron in Hampshire.
On 18th June 1918, Robert was piloting a Sopwith Camel across the New Forest and out towards the Isle of Wight. His aircraft stalled, and fell into the Solent, and he was killed instantly. The RAF report card on the incident stated that: “The cause of the accident was, in our opinion, 1) The machine getting over the vertical in a dive. 2) Stalling on completion of a half-roll and nose diving into the Solent.”
The body of Robert Ray Brown was brought back to shore. He was laid to rest in the graveyard of St Mary’s Church, East Boldre, not far from the airfield he had called home.