While the recently assembled parts and their bonds are drying. Lets talk abot the man credited with flying the old girl. From the Aerodrome biographies we have;
Name Lloyd Samuel Breadner
Nationality : Canadian
Rank: Major
Service: Royal Naval Air Service & Royal Air Force
Units: 3W, 3N (RNAS) 204 (RAF)
Victories: 10
Born: 17 July 1894
Place of Birth: Carleton Place, Ontario
Died: 14 March 1952
Place of Death: Boston, Massachusetts.
In 1915, after paying for flight lessons at the Wright Flying School in Dayton, Ohio, Lloyd Samuel Breadner enlisted in the Royal Naval Air Service. In 1917, he was assigned to 3 Naval Squadron which was attached to the Royal Flying Corps. Flying the Sopwith Pup, he scored his fourth victory by shooting down a Gotha G.III on 23 April 1917. It was the first Gotha bomber shot down by a British fighter over the Western Front. Upon the formation of the Royal Canadian Air Force in 1924, Breadner was recommissioned and served as commanding officer of Camp Borden in Ontario. In 1939 he went to England as a technical advisor and was promoted to Air Marshal in 1941. In 1943 he returned to England as air officer commanding the R.C.A.F. overseas. Promoted again, shortly before he retired in 1945, Air Chief Marshal Breadner achieved the highest rank ever awarded in the R.C.A.F. Suffering from ill health, he died in a Boston, Massachusetts hospital in 1952. He was 58 years old.
For his DSC (Distinguished Service Cross) Flt.-Lieut. Lloyd Samuel Breadner, R.N.A.S.
For conspicuous gallantry and skill in leading his patrol against hostile formations. He has himself brought down three hostile machines and forced several others to land. On the 6th April. 1917, he drove down a hostile machine which was wrecked while attempting to land in a ploughed field. On the morning of the 11th April, 1917, he destroyed a hostile machine, which fell in flames, brought down another in a spinning nose dive with one wing folded up, and forced a third to land. Supplement to the London Gazette, 23 May 1917 (30088/5053)
--------Date ---Time- Unit------Aircraft --------------Opponent ---------Location
1 06 Apr 1917 1020 3N Sopwith Pup (N5199) Halberstadt D.II (DES) Bourlon Wood
2 11 Apr 1917 0845 3N Sopwith Pup (N6181) Albatros C (DESF) Cambrai
3 11 Apr 1917 0855 3N Sopwith Pup (N6181) Albatros D.III (DES) Cambrai
4 23 Apr 1917 1030 3N Sopwith Pup (N6181) Gotha G.II (CAP) Vron
5 23 Apr 1917 1730 3N Sopwith Pup (N6181) Albatros D.III (OOC) Bourlon Wood
6 29 Apr 1917 1115 3N Sopwith Pup (N6181) Albatros D.III (OOC) SE of Cambrai
7 23 May 1917 1345 3N Sopwith Pup (N6197) Albatros D.III (OOC) Awoignt-Bourlon
8 03 Sep 1917 0725 3N Sopwith Camel (B3782) Albatros D.V (DES) Belhutte
9 03 Sep 1917 0730 3N Sopwith Camel (B3782) Albatros D.V (OOC) Belhutte
10 11 Sep 1917 1150 3N Sopwith Camel (B3782) Albatros D.V (OOC) Thorout Flt. Lt. Breadner was later given command of Naval N3 in late 1917 and throught early 1918.
The machine depicted in Eduard's profile is of course B 3782 and was used by him through Sept. 1917. Not the date given by Eduard. In late 1917 - early 1918 he flew B6401 in a rather decorative motif. More on this machine later.
Several pilots wound up flying B 3782 and it had a long illustrious career. FSLt G Harrower, Lloyd Samuel Breadner , James Alpheus Glen, all of N3. Then John De Camborne Paynter (of Naval N13 and actually flew her in Feb. 1918.)