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Churchill contains:
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THRS The Papers of Archibald Henry Macdonald Sinclair, 1st Viscount Thurso, KT PC CMG (1890-1970)
TMSN The Papers of Sir George Paget Thomson
TODD The Papers of Lord Todd
TOMK The Papers of Vice-Admiral Wilfred Tomkinson
TRAV The Killing Ground: The British Army, the Western Front and the Emergence of Modern Warfare, 1900-18.
TREN Selected correspondence of Marshal of the RAF 1st Lord Trenchard
TRNR The Papers of Admiral Sir (Arthur) Francis Turner
TUCK The Papers of Oswald Tuck
ULTR Microfilm copies of "ULTRA" signals
URBN The Papers of George Urban
VILL The Papers of Vice Admiral Sir (John) Michael Villiers
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Selected correspondence of Marshal of the RAF 1st Lord Trenchard

Title Selected correspondence of Marshal of the RAF 1st Lord Trenchard
Reference GBR/0014/TREN
Creator Trenchard, Hugh Montague, 1873-1956, 1st Viscount Trenchard of Wolfeton, Marshal of the RAF
Covering Dates 1919–1949 (The actual photocopies were taken in 1968.)
Extent and Medium 1.5 archive boxes
Repository Churchill Archives Centre
Content and context

Hugh Trenchard was born on 3 February 1873, the second son of Henry Montague Trenchard, solicitor, and his wife, Georgina.

Trenchard entered the army in September 1893, as second lieutenant in the 2nd battalion, Royal Scots Fusiliers, first serving in India, then on the outbreak of the Second Boer War in October 1899, being sent to South Africa. Promoted to captain in February 1900, he was severely wounded, and invalided home to England in December, but insisted on returning to South Africa in May 1901. While on leave at the end of the war Trenchard was made assistant commandant of the South Nigeria regiment in October 1903, first as major, then as lieutenant-colonel. In 1908 he was appointed to command his regiment, but was again invalided home in 1910. On recovering, he rejoined the Royal Scots, dropped in rank to major, and served in Ulster until 1912.

In 1912, looking for a new challenge, Trenchard decided to learn to fly. After only two weeks of tuition, he qualified as a pilot on 31 July. The Royal Flying Corps having been formed in May of that year, Trenchard was sent to the RFC's Central Flying School at Upavon in Wiltshire. In spite of having only just qualified, he was appointed to the staff as assistant commandant.

On the outbreak of war in August 1914 Trenchard took command of Farnborough, Hampshire. A few months later in November, he was on the western front as an operational commander. From 1915 Trenchard pressed hard for more powerful aircraft, and particularly for more aggression among pilots. In August 1915 Trenchard succeeded Sir David Henderson as head of the Royal Flying Corps in France and was promoted to brigadier-general. Reluctantly, Trenchard became Chief of the Air Staff in January 1918, but resigned a few months later in April as a result of a campaign led by the Air Minister, 1st Lord Rothermere, against his hero General Sir Douglas Haig. Trenchard then returned to France later that month as head of a small force of bombers.

Trenchard was created a baronet in October 1919 and resumed his post as Chief of the Air Staff in May 1920. Trenchard was knighted again (GCB) in January 1924 and became the first Marshal of the RAF in 1927. He retired on 31 December 1929 and was made a baron next day. Although Winston Churchill offered him command of Britain's home forces and also a role in military intelligence during the Second World War, Trenchard refused both posts, but was tireless in promoting his belief in the bomber as the mainstay of air power.

In July 1920 Trenchard had married Katherine Isabel Salvin (d. 1959), having two sons. He died on 10 February 1956.

Xeroxed material used by Captain Stephen Roskill for his book "Hankey, Man of Secrets", consisting of Trenchard's correspondence with Winston Churchill, 1st Lord Hankey and Sir Samuel Wilson over air defence, particularly as relating to naval forces, and papers on his agreement with Vice-Admiral Sir Roger Keyes over relations between the Royal Air Force and Royal Navy.

The papers were given to Churchill Archives Centre by 2nd Lord Trenchard in May 1968.

The papers are owned by Churchill College, Cambridge.

Access and Use

The collection is open for consultation by researchers using Churchill Archives Centre, Churchill College, Cambridge. Churchill Archives Centre is open from Monday to Friday, 9am-5pm. A prior appointment and two forms of identification are required.

Researchers wishing to publish excerpts from the papers must obtain prior permission from the copyright holders and should seek advice from Archives Centre staff.

Please cite as Churchill Archives Centre, Selected correspondence of Marshal of the RAF 1st Lord Trenchard, TREN

Further information

A microfilm copy of the complete Trenchard archive is held at the RAF Museum, Hendon, http://www.rafmuseum.com.

A copy of this finding aid is available for consultation at Churchill Archives Centre, Cambridge, the National Register of Archives, London, and on the Janus website at http://janus.lib.cam.ac.uk.

This catalogue was prepared by Katharine Thomson of Churchill Archives Centre in March 2005, from an existing list. Biographical information was taken from Vincent Orange's essay, 'Trenchard, Hugh Montague, first Viscount Trenchard (1873-1956)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004.

The originals of the Trenchard Papers are retained by the Trenchard family.

Index Terms
Air Defence
Air Warfare
Trenchard, Hugh Montague (1873-1956) 1st Viscount Trenchard of Wolfeton, Marshal of the RAF
Royal Air Force
Churchill/TREN contains:
1 Correspondence between Trenchard and Winston Churchill. Subjects include: co-operation with the Admiralty over a naval air service; the possible abolition of the Air Ministry and uncertainty over the Royal Air Force's future; relations between the Admiralty and Air Ministry; aircraft carriers and the Fleet Air Arm; the defence of Singapore; expansion of the RAF.
1 file.
Apr 1919-Apr 1927
2 Correspondence and memoranda between Trenchard and 1st Lord Hankey. Subjects include: procedures of the Chiefs of Staff Committee; rebuilding the Fleet as relating to the safety of the Far East; the defence of Singapore; disarmament; the limitation of air armaments; pre-First World War differences between the Admiralty and War Office; the air base at Formosa [Taiwan]; Admiralty requirements for aircraft; the administration of Aden [Adan, South Yemen]; defence of ports in South Africa; the use of air power in war; protection of the Haifa-Baghdad railway and oil pipeline [Israel and Iraq]; the Channel Tunnel, as related to the French failure to destroy mountain tunnels during the Franco-Prussian War; admitting officers from the Irish Free State [later Ireland] into the Royal Air Force Staff College; air disarmament and prohibition of bombing; the worsening relations between Trenchard and Hankey over Trenchard's criticism of the Chiefs of Staff Committee; Hankey's account of the First World War, "The Supreme Command". Also includes notes and annotations by Stephen Roskill.
3 files.
Sep 1919-Apr 1949
3 Correspondence between Trenchard and Sir Samuel Wilson. Subjects include: sending naval assistance to Kuwait; reorganization of the Iraqi Army; reasons against an evacuation of troops from Iraq; the use of air power against invasion; naval air policy relating to the Empire.
1 file.
Feb 1919-Jul 1928
4 Trenchard-Keyes Agreement and related correspondence. Papers on the agreement between Vice-Admiral Sir Roger Keyes [Deputy Chief of Naval Staff] and Trenchard over relations between the Royal Navy and Royal Air Force, particularly on subjects including: giving naval commanders experience of air work; requirements of the Fleet Air Arm; radio and signal requirements; the status of air officers on board ship and of naval officers attached to the RAF; liaison between the Admiralty and Air Ministry.
2 files.
Apr 1924-Jul 1924

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