Arthur Henry (Harry) COBBY CBE, DSO, DFC+2Bars, GM, MiD

COBBY, Arthur Henry

Service Numbers: Commissioned Officer, O251334
Enlisted: 10 January 1916
Last Rank: Air Commodore
Last Unit: Royal Australian Air Force
Born: Prahran, Victoria, 26 August 1894
Home Town: Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria
Schooling: University College, Armadale, Victoria, Australia
Occupation: Bank employee
Died: hypertensive cerebrovascular disease, Heidelberg, Victoria, 11 November 1955, aged 61 years
Cemetery: Springvale Botanical Cemetery, Melbourne
Cremated
Memorials: Sydney Reserve Bank of Australia (Commonwealth Bank) Honor Roll WW1
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World War 1 Service

10 Jan 1916: Enlisted Second Lieutenant, Commissioned Officer, Australian Flying Corps (AFC)
17 Jan 1917: Embarked Second Lieutenant, Commissioned Officer, No. 4 Squadron, Australian Flying Corps, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '1' embarkation_place: Melbourne embarkation_ship: RMS Omrah embarkation_ship_number: '' public_note: ''
15 Mar 1917: Involvement Lieutenant, Commissioned Officer, No. 4 Squadron, Australian Flying Corps, AFC / RFC operations Western Front / Middle East

World War 2 Service

25 Jul 1940: Enlisted Royal Australian Air Force, Air Commodore, O251334
19 Aug 1946: Discharged Royal Australian Air Force, Air Commodore, Royal Australian Air Force

Distinguished Service Order


'On 16th August this officer led an organized raid on an enemy aerodrome. At 200 feet altitude he obtained direct hits with his bombs and set on fire two hangars; he then opened fire on a machine which was standing out on the aerodrome. The machine caught fire. Afterwards he attacked with machine gun fire parties of troops and mechanics, inflicting a number of casualties. On the following day he led another important raid on an aerodrome, setting fire to two hangars and effectively bombing gun detachments, anti-aircraft batteries, etc. The success of these two raids was largely due to the determined and skilful leadership of this officer.'
Source: 'Commonwealth Gazette' No. 31
Date: 4 March 1919

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DFC and Bar


'An Officer whose success as a leader is due not only to high courage and brillant flying, but also to the clear judgment and presence of mind he invariably displays. His example is of great value to other pilots in his squadron. During recent operations he shot down five machines in eleven days, accounting for two in one day.'
Source: 'Commonwealth Gazette' No. 23
Date: 12 February 1919

DFC and Second Bar

Citation

'One evening this Officer, in company with another machine, attacked five Pfaltz scouts, destroying two; one fell in flames, and one broke up in the air. The officer who accompanied him brought down a third machine out of control. While engaged in this combat they were attacked from above by five triplanes. Displaying cool judgment and brilliant flying, Captain Cobby evaded this attack, and returned to our lines in safety, both machines being undamaged. A determined and most skilful leader, who has destroyed twenty-one hostile machines or balloons, accounting for three machines and two balloons in four days.'
Source: 'Commonwealth Gazette' No. 23
Date: 12 February 1919

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Biography contributed by Steve Larkins

Used with permission by the Australian Dictionary of Biography

 Arthur Henry Cobby (1894–1955)

by Keith Isaacs

This article was published in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 8, (MUP), 1981

Arthur Henry Cobby (1894-1955), airman and administrator, was born on 26 August 1894 at Prahran, Victoria, the second of four sons of Arthur Edward Stanley Cobby, tramway conductor, and his wife Alice, née Nash. Harry, as he became known, was educated at a state school and at University College, Armadale. He gained a commission with the 46th Infantry (Brighton Rifles) in 1912, while working as a clerk with the Commonwealth Bank, Melbourne. He joined the Australian Imperial Force in 1916 and was posted to the Central Flying School, Australian Flying Corps, Point Cook, and completed his initial instruction in December.

Lieutenant Cobby embarked with No.4 Squadron, A.F.C., in January 1917 and arrived in England in March. The squadron flew its Sopwith Camel fighters to France in December, and Cobby shot down his first enemy aircraft on 3 February 1918. Frederick Cutlack considered that 'Cobby was one of the most daring spirits in the Australian air service', and describes in detail his many encounters with enemy aircraft. Cobby shot down 29 aircraft and 13 balloons between February and September 1918, and was the leading A.F.C. ace. He was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross in June, two Bars to the D.F.C. in July, the Distinguished Service Order in August, and was mentioned in dispatches. He was then posted to England as an instructor. Captain Cobby returned to Australia in 1919 and was discharged from the A.I.F. on 24 July. He married Hilda Maude Urban on 24 April 1920 at Caulfield, Victoria.

Cobby joined the Australian Air Force on 31 March 1921 with the rank of flying officer, and was promoted wing commander on 1 May 1933. He left the R.A.A.F. on 6 May 1935, and became a member of the Civil Aviation Board and its controller of operations in March 1936. He had contributed a chapter on the psychology of flying to Australian Airmen, by E. J. Richards (Melbourne, no date), and an article to Popular Flying (London) in February 1935. His autobiography, High Adventure (Melbourne, 1942), was based on his World War I experiences.

Wing Commander Cobby rejoined the R.A.A.F. in 1939 on the outbreak of World War II, and was promoted to group captain and air commodore. He was director of recruiting (1940), air officer commanding headquarters North-Eastern Area (1942), commandant, R.A.A.F. Staff School, in 1943, A.O.C. No.10 Operational Group (1944) and of the 1st Tactical Air Force in 1944-45. He was awarded the George Medal in March 1944; although injured, he rescued two officers when a Catalina crashed at Townsville, Queensland, on 7 December 1943. He was also appointed C.B.E. for the direction of air operations in New Guinea in 1942-43.

A crisis arose in April 1945 when eight senior officers, who considered the high losses sustained by 1st T.A.F. operations to be militarily unjustifiable, tendered their resignations to Cobby at Morotai Island. He was relieved of his command on 10 May. An inquiry under (Sir) John Barry, K.C., found that, inter alia, widespread discontent existed and that 'the A.O.C., 1st T.A.F., failed to maintain proper control over his command'. On 28 May 1948 Cobby was presented with the United States of America Medal of Freedom with bronze palm, for meritorious wartime service.

In 1946 Cobby returned to the Department of Civil Aviation, was appointed regional director, New South Wales, in 1947-54 and next year became director of flying operations. He died suddenly of hypertensive cerebro-vascular disease on 11 November 1955 in the Heidelberg Repatriation General Hospital, survived by his wife, son and daughter. He was accorded full military honours at St Mary's Church of England, Caulfield, and was cremated. His estate was declared for probate at £4858. Portraits by William McInnes are held at the Australian War Memorial, Canberra, and by his son.

General Sir Thomas Blamey regarded Cobby as 'one of the most loved and most gallant of our airmen …'. Cobby also possessed a delightful sense of humour, and historian Arthur Bazleyre called that 'he was always an imp of mischief'. Air Marshal Sir Richard Williams paid tribute to him as 'a man whose personal story is threaded through the entire history of Australian service and civil aviation'.


Select Bibliography
F. M. Cutlack, The Australian Flying Corps in the Western and Eastern Theatres of War, 1914-1918 (Syd, 1923)
O'M. Creagh and E. M. Humphris (eds), The V.C. and D.S.O., vol 3 (Lond, 1924)
L. A. Strange, Recollections of an Airman (Lond, 1933)
G. Odgers, Air War Against Japan, 1943-1945 (Canb, 1957)
D. N. Gillison, Royal Australian Air Force, 1939-1942 (Canb, 1962)
K. Isaacs, Military Aircraft of Australia, 1909-1918 (Canb, 1971)
A. W. Bazley, ‘Celebrities of the A.I.F., Captain A. H. Cobby’, Reveille (Sydney), Nov 1937
Sydney Morning Herald, and Advertiser (Adelaide), 12 Nov 1955
J. V. Barry, Commission of Inquiry into Affairs Relating to the R.A.A.F. (1945, National Archives of Australia).

Citation details

Keith Isaacs, 'Cobby, Arthur Henry (1894–1955)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/cobby-arthur-henry-5700/text9635, published first in hardcopy 1981, accessed online 2 April 2018.

This article was first published in hardcopy in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 8, (MUP), 1981

 

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Biography contributed by Virtual Australia

Arthur Henry Cobby, who went by the name of Harry, was a highly decorated Australian fighter pilot, who was born at Prahan in Victoria on 26 August 1894. He was the son of Arthur Cobby snr and Alice Cobby (nee Nash) and was one of four brothers.

Harry Cobby was employed as a bank clerk at the Melbourne office of the Commonwealth Bank of Australia when war was declared in 1914. Two years earlier, at just 18, he had gained a commission in the Army with the 47th Infantry, but had not yet embarked on a full military career.

In 1916, at the age of 22, he joined the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) and, despite having little prior knowledge or experience of flying, was posted to the Central Flying School, Australian Flying Corps (AFC) at Point Cook, Victoria. Cobby completed his initial training there in December 1916 and graduated as a 2nd Lieutenant, No.4 Squadron.

In January 1917 he departed Australia with his Squadron, arriving in Plymouth, England, in March that same year. Nine months later, after further training, he was flying fighter planes, including the famous Sopwith Camel, over the battlefields of France. His courage and abilities were soon noted and it was not long before he was regarded as one of the most capable and daring of the Australian airmen.  Cobby was credited with the downing of 29 aircraft and 13 balloons; the highest number attributed to any Australian during the First World War. His exploits earned him the Distinguished Flying Cross, later with two bars, the Distinguished Service Order and mention in dispatches. The citations accompanying these awards praised his gallantry, courage, brilliant flying ability, clear judgment, presence of mind, determination, skill and success as a leader.

Cobby’s exploits were widely reported back home in Australia. At the Commonwealth Bank, reports of his courage and flying prowess were greeted with immense pride. Cobby, in writing to the Bank’s staff magazine Bank Notes towards the end of the war, was more philosophical about his successes. He was, he wrote, ‘more to be congratulated on being alive than doing anything special, as the whole AFC strive after good results, and of course some go west, and those that live reap the benefits of the whole’.

Harry Cobby returned to Australia in May 1919 as a household name. He became the representative of the AFC and a portrait of him, by William McInnes, was commissioned for the Australian War Museum. The Commonwealth Bank, in recognition of his distinguished war service, sent letters of welcome to him from each of its state branches. The Bank noted that his great successes were not unexpected ‘for we were all well aware that his temperament and courage eminently fitted him for distinction as a daring and successful aviator’.

In 1921 Cobby joined the Australian Air Force as a full-time flying officer, before eventually rising to the rank of Wing Commander. He fought with the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) during the Second World War, and was awarded the George Medal and appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire. After the war he held several distinguished posts, including with the Department of Civil Aviation.

In 1920 Harry Cobby had married Hilda Maude Urban. The couple had one son and one daughter. He died in Melbourne in November 1955, still a national hero, and was accorded full military honours at his funeral.

https://museum.rba.gov.au/exhibitions/from-bank-to-battlefield/profiles/index.html#cobby-container (museum.rba.gov.au)

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