Stephen Melville

      Stephen Alexander Melville
      Stephen Melville.jpg
      Born 31 December 1904
      Matatiele, Natal
      Died June 17, 1977(1977-06-17) (aged 72)[1]
      Pretoria, South Africa
      Allegiance  South Africa
      Service/branch South African Air Force
      Years of service 1924-1960
      Rank General
      Awards Star of South Africa (Decoration)
      Order of the British Empire

      General Stephen A. Melville SSA OBE (1904-1977) was a South African military commander. During World War II he commanded air force formations in East Africa, North Africa, Madagascar, and Italy.

      He matriculated from Grey College, Bloemfontein before going to work in a bank. He joined the Merchant Navy as a stoker. He joined the SAMR in 1924 as a trooper before transferring to the Artillery. In 1929 he was trained as a pilot and transferred to the South African Air Force[1]

      He served as Air Chief of Staff from 1954 to 1956, as Inspector-General from 1956 to 1958, and as Commandant-General,[2] i.e. head of the Union Defence Forces, from 1958 to 1960.

      He later served on the Armaments Board until 1974. He was also the Government's representative on the Rand Water Board[3]

      Awards and Decorations

      Then Colonel Melville was Mentioned in Dispatches in July 1943[4]

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      References

      1. ^ a b Uys, Ian (1992). South African Military Who's Who 1452-1992. Fortress Publishers. p. 152. ISBN 0-9583173-3-X. 
      2. ^ "Leaders through the years (1912-1982)". Scientaria Militaria 12 (2): 95. 1982. 
      3. ^ Uys, Ian (1992). South African Military Who's Who 1452-1992. Fortress Publishers. p. 153. ISBN 0-9583173-3-X. 
      4. ^ http://www.london-gazette.co.uk/issues/36083/pages/3092
      Military offices
      Preceded by
      Hendrik Klopper
      Chief of the General Staff of the South African Defence Force
      1958 – 1960
      Succeeded by
      Pieter Grobbelaar
      Preceded by
      Harold Willmott
      Chief of Staff of the South African Air Force
      1954-1956
      Succeeded by
      Barend Viljoen


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      Last modified on 11 June 2013, at 10:31