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ALAN ERNEST SWEETING (1911-1916 :
20), Lieutenant in the Royal Air Force, was the only child of Mr & Mrs H
Sweeting, of Whittier Place, Wednesfield. He
entered the school with a scholarship and was placed in the Remove, from which
he rose to the Upper Sixth and the office of Prefect.
He was a boy of remarkably amiable disposition, diligent in his studies,
serene in his outlook, sincere in his many friendships, and possessed of great
moral strength. Acknowledging a
heavy debt to the school, he sought to repay it by zealous work and loyal
service. He accepted his duties as a Prefect with full consciousness
of the responsibility involved and in the same spirit he brought to his work as
Sergeant in the O.T.C., determination to serve the contingent with the full
measure of his gifts. His skill at
musketry was shown by his winning the Wyatt Edgell Cup in both 1915 and 1916.
His military career began in the Artist Rifles in February 1917.
In July he was transferred to the Royal Flying Corps and a month later he
received his commission as Second Lieutenant.
After training at Reading, Thetford, London Colney and Turnberry, he went
to France in January 1918, as a pilot scout with the 1st Squadron of
the R.F.C., based at Bailleul. During
a German offensive at Easter 1918, he was wounded by shrapnel but continued in
action until his ammunition was exhausted and then succeeded in taking his
machine safely back to the aerodrome. Sixteen
weeks in hospital at Anstey Grange followed and then came promotion to full
Lieutenancy in the Royal Air Force and appointment to the Wireless Experimental
Establishment at Biggin Hill, Kent. For
eleven months Sweeting was stationed here, learning with avidity and instructing
with enthusiasm. He had been chosen
as one of those who were to give a demonstration in wireless telephony to the
House of Commons last summer, and on August 2nd he was testing a
machine for use in the display. Through
a cause that it has been impossible to explain, his aeroplane got out of control
when only some 30 feet from the ground, and crashed, and Sweeting was
instantaneously killed. In him was
lost "a splendid officer in every respect, a great gentleman, a highly
skilled pilot”, the most loving
and loved of sons, and one of whom the school may well be proud. One of his last actions was to send a donation of £10 to the
School War Memorial.
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