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The Sir Ross and Sir
Keith Smith Fund commemorates the achievements of two distinguished South
Australian pioneer aviators - Captain Sir Ross Smith K.B.E., M.C., D.F.C.,
A.F.C., and his brother Lieutenant Sir Keith Smith K.B.E.
In 1919 the Australian
Prime Minister Billy Hughes announced the now famous ‘AIR RACE’. A prize
of £10,000 was to be awarded for the first machine to fly from London to
Australia in 30 days or less. Taking up the challenge, Ross Smith applied
to the British company Vickers to supply a Vickers Vimy bomber for the race,
and the Smith brothers flew their way into Australian folklore.
Landing in Darwin
on December 10th, 1919, the Smith brothers and their two mechanics,
Sergeant W.H. Shiers A.F.M. and Sergeant J.M. Bennett A.F.M., M.S.M.,
completed the flight from Hounslow in 27 days and 20 hours. The brothers
received a cheque for £10,000 which they insisted on sharing equally with
their two mechanics. They also each received a knighthood for the achievement.
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Sir Ross
Macpherson Smith
Sir Ross
Smith was born in Adelaide in 1892. In World War I he served in
the Australian Light Horse at Gallipoli and in 1916 he transferred
to the Australian Flying Corps. In a distinguished career he was
awarded the M.C., D.F.C. and A.F.C.
In 1922 Sir
Ross Smith was killed in a tragic accident while flying a Vickers
Viking in preparation for an around-the-world flight.
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Sir Keith
Macpherson Smith
Sir
Keith Smith was born in Adelaide in 1890 and became a pilot when
he joined the Royal Flying Corps in Britain in 1914. After the war
and their historic record-breaking flight Sir Keith became the Vickers
manufacturing company’s representative in Australia and subsequently
a director of several airlines and other public companies. Sir Keith
Smith died in 1955.
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From
left to right: Sergeant W.H. Shiers, Lieutenant Sir Keith Smith, Captain Sir
Ross Smith & Sergeant J.M. Bennett.

The
cheque for £10,000 the two brothers received after winning the now famous
‘AIR RACE’.
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