Robert Leslie Chidlaw-Roberts was a British World War I flying ace credited with ten aerial victories. During his aerial combat career, and in different dogfights, he engaged two famous German aces; he was one of the British pilots who downed Werner Voss, and on 9 January 1918, he shot down and killed Max Ritter von Muller. He also served in the Royal Air Force during and after World War II.
Biography
Early life
Robert Leslie Chidlaw-Roberts was born in Tywyn, Wales in May 1896.
Chidlaw-Roberts attended the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, and from there was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Hampshire Regiment on 16 June 1915. He was seconded to the Royal Flying Corps on 21 October 1915, as a flying officer. His first aerial duty was six months spent as an observer/gunner with No. 2 Squadron RFC. He then underwent pilot training, receiving the Royal Aero Club Aviator's Certificate No. 2527 on 23 January 1916, and on 21 April 1916 he was appointed a flying officer. Chidlaw-Roberts served in No. 18 Squadron RFC from 18 May to 4 December 1916 as a Royal Aircraft Factory FE.2b pilot; During this stretch, he also received promotion to the temporary rank of lieutenant on 1 September 1916. He then transferred to No. 60 Squadron RFC in August 1917. He was one of the combatants who engaged Werner Voss in the German ace's last stand on 23 September 1917. Later, on 9 January 1918, he shot down and killed a German ace with 36 victories, Max Ritter von Müller. Shortly after this, he was rotated to England for a rest, and was assigned to No. 28 Training Squadron. Chidlaw-Roberts was awarded the Military Cross on 1 February 1918. In Summer 1918, he returned to the front as the flight commander of A Flight, No. 40 Squadron RAF.
Between the wars
Chidlaw-Roberts was one of the RAF pilots who served in Russia in 1919. In January 1920 Flight Lieutenant Chidlaw-Roberts relinquished his temporary RAF commission and was restored to the establishment of the Hampshire Regiment with the rank of lieutenant, but on 23 March 1920 Chidlaw-Roberts left the Hampshire Regiment, and was assigned to the General Reserve of Officers as a lieutenant with seniority from 3 July 1916.