JOWETT, Arthur Craven
| Service Numbers: | Not yet discovered |
|---|---|
| Enlisted: | Not yet discovered |
| Last Rank: | Captain |
| Last Unit: | Royal Flying Corps |
| Born: | Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 10 June 1889 |
| Home Town: | Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria |
| Schooling: | Melboure CofE Grammar School, University of Melbourne, Trinity Collge, Cambridge University |
| Occupation: | Engineer |
| Died: | Natural Causes, Toorak, Victoria, Australia, 20 April 1974, aged 84 years |
| Cemetery: |
St Kilda Cemetery, Victoria Baptist, Compartment A, Grave 213 |
| Memorials: | Balranald Military Heritage Trail |
World War 1 Service
| Date unknown: | Involvement Captain, Royal Flying Corps |
|---|
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Arthur Craven Jowett was born on 10 June 1889, the son of Edmund Jowett, a Captain in the British Army and a wool valuer for Australian Mercantile Land and Finance Co. Ltd., and his wife Annette McCallum. He was educated at Melbourne Grammar School, Melbourne University, and Trinity College, Cambridge. Arthur and his younger brother Eric were in England when the First World War broke out, and they felt it was their duty to join up. Arthur first joined the Northumberland Fusiliers, and later the Royal Flying Corps. On 8 July1916 Eric Jowett was shot down over Germany, and died of his burns in a German hospital the following day.
Arthur Jowett married Miss Evelyn Frances Hill on 10 April 1915. At the end of the war he was offered a job with British engineering firm Vickers Ltd. Oliver Vickers [1968], son of the owner, had also served with the Royal Flying Corps and was painted by de László in his uniform in 1917. It is not impossible that they knew each other. Vickers’ took over the civil aviation branch of the company and may have wanted the sitter’s flying expertise to contribute to the early experiments in transatlantic flight, first achieved in 1919.
Jowett decided to return to Melbourne to help his father run his sheep properties in New South Wales and Queensland. He was devoted to his native country, and only returned twice to visit Britain, in 1948-9 and in 1966, for the wedding of his granddaughter Zoë. He was a keen tennis player and a member of a genealogy club in Melbourne. He died in Toorak, Melbourne, in 1974.