She looks like a beauty! Though the box art markings are most likely for a post war scheme of 56 squadron RAF.
Name: Captain Duncan "GM" Grinnell-Milne
Country: England
Service: Royal Flying Corps & Royal Air Force
Units: 14, 16, 56 (RFC)
214 (RAF)
Victories: 6
Died: November 1973
After serving with his brother in the 7th Royal Fusiliers, Grinnell-Milne was seconded to the Royal Flying Corps in 1915. After training, he joined 16 Squadron in France where he scored his first victory flying the B.E.2.
Toward the end of 1915, he was shot down and captured, spending more than two years as a POW before escaping back to France in early 1918. Later that year, Grinnell-Milne assumed command of 56 Squadron and scored 5 more victories as an S.E.5a pilot in the final weeks of the war. In 1919 and 1920, he served with 214 Squadron and 14 Squadron in Egypt. After serving as assistant Air-Attache in Paris, he left the Royal Air Force in 1926 with more than 2000 hours of flight time in various aircraft. During World War II, Grinnell-Milne returned to service, flying Wellington bombers over Libya in 1940 before health problems forced him out of the RAF. He took a job with the BBC, remaining there until 1946. In later life, he became a well known author, publishing several books including his memoirs "Wind in the Wires."
Named his S.E.5a (C1149) "Schweinhund." Recalling his time in the POW camp where his German captors used this name to address prisoners.Schemes / profiles provided are all for Wolseley Viper powered airframes.
S.E.5A, E1295/A, No 74 Sqn RAF, Major Edward “Mick” Mannock, (73 victories), Northen France, July 1918.
S.E.5A, C1904/Z, No 85 Sqn RAF, flown by Billie Bishop, (72 victories), Summer 1918, France.
RAF SE5a (with Wollseley Viper), C1149 “Sweinhund”, No.56 Sqn RAF, flown Captain Duncan Grinnell-Milne (Sqn CO), late 1918.
S.E.5A, D6856, No 84 Sqn RAF, Capt. A. Beauchamp-Proctor (54 victories), 1918.
RAF SE5a (with Wolseley Viper), F.8005, 25th Aero Squadron, USAS, late 1918.
potential releases.