Robert McLaughlin (RAF officer)
Lieutenant Robert McLaughlin was a British World War I flying ace credited with six aerial victories.Military service
McLaughlin was commissioned from cadet to temporary second lieutenant on the General List of the Royal Flying Corps on 2 August 1917, and was confirmed in his rank on 15 November.
He was posted to No. 201 Squadron in France, flying the Sopwith Camel single-seat fighter. He gained his first aerial victory on 9 May 1918 by destroying an Albatros D.V over Bapaume. On 15 May he repeated the feat, which he shared with Major Charles Dawson Booker, Captain Samuel Kinkead, Lieutenants Maxwell Findlay, R. Hemmens, James Henry Forman, Hazel LeRoy Wallace, Reginald Brading, and R. S. S. Orr. On 30 May he drove another D.V down out of control over Achiet-le-Grand.
On the morning of 8 August, he was shot down in flames, and although slightly injured, insisted on flying another combat patrol that afternoon. For his actions on that day he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross, which was gazetted on 1 November 1918. His citation read:
On 12 August McLaughlin shared with Captain H. R. de Wilde and Lieutenant Ronald Sykes in the destruction of two Fokker D.VIIs over St. Christ. He was appointed a flight commander with the temporary rank of captain on 27 August. His sixth and final victory was on 16 September when he drove down another Fokker D.VII south-east of Cambrai.
McLaughlin was transferred to RAF's unemployed list on 8 March 1919, and relinquished his commission on the 14th.