He was born in Leicester, the son of Aberdeen-born Congregational minister the Rev. Joseph Davidson Carnegie and his wife who was born Ella Gertrude Vaughan-Pryce. For many years afterwards his parents lived in Stamford, Lincolnshire. David Carnegie was educated at Wyggeston Grammar School in Leicester. He was to marry Kathleen F Pugson in Florida in August 1942 and make their home in the new house he had built just before the war at Dundargue Castle near Fraserburgh. They had two daughters. After the war he described his hobbies as golf, fishing and restoring his castle home.
Flying boats
He began his flying career in the Royal Naval Air Service in 1917 and until the armistice served as a pilot in North Sea patrols. The RNAS became the Royal Air Force at the beginning of April 1918. Following his wartime service he was awarded a permanent commission in the rank of Flying Officer in October 1919. After serving in the Mediterranean with 202 and 267Flying Boat Squadrons he spent three years on flying boat test and experimental duties with MAEE.
Carnegie joined the Singapore-based RAF Far East Flight in May 1927 as captain of Supermarine Southampton II flying boat S1150 studying the feasibility of long-distance flights by flying boat to Australia and the Far East, He subsequently remained in Singapore until early 1930, amongst other things helping set up the Singapore Flying Club.
Calshot
In 1930–1931 Carnegie was Officer Commanding the sea plane training squadron at RAF Calshot on Southampton Water, the United Kingdom's main seaplane/flying boat development and training unit. David Carnegie was able to maintain his involvement with flying boats and sea planes until promoted to headquarters in 1932.
With the outbreak of war in September 1939 he was immediately posted to Air StaffFighter Command then in 1941 to Washington D.C. as Director of British Flying Training, a part of the RAF delegation. By war's end, 16,000 RAF aircrew had been trained in the United States. In September 1942 he was appointed Director of Flying Training at the Air Ministry. Late in the war he was appointed Acting Air Vice-Marshal then Air Commodore in 1946
Following some years as British Oxygen's Air Liaison Officer he was appointed director of Burghley House, Stamford, Lincolnshire. David Carnegie died at his home, Sibson House near Peterborough in August 1964, soon after taking up his Burghley House appointment, leaving a widow and two daughters.