Leonard A. Payne
Captain Leonard Allan Payne was a British First World War flying ace born in Swaziland. He was credited with 11 confirmed aerial victories while piloting a Bristol F.2 Fighter.
World War I
On 1 February 1917, Payne enlisted in the Royal Flying Corps while living in his native Swaziland. Payne was commissioned from cadet to temporary second lieutenant on 21 June 1917, and confirmed in his rank and appointed a flying officer on 24 August.Payne was posted No. 69 Squadron in England, flying a Bristol F.2 Fighter. He scored his first aerial victory on 29 October 1917, but would not win another triumph until 3 January 1918. His third win followed on 26 February 1918, when he set a German LVG aflame in midair. He drove down two Albatros D.V fighters out of control over Mont-d'Origny on 8 March, and was an ace. Four days later, he sent down a Fokker Triplane.
Payne was appointed a flight commander, with the temporary rank of captain, on 25 April 1918. He scored three victories in May, though it is unknown if he was leading the flight for any or all of them. However, on 30 May 1918, he destroyed a Fokker D.V to become a double ace.
However, when he won the Military Cross for his valour, the emphasis was not on his air-to-air victories. When the award citation was gazetted on 26 July 1918, it read:
On 4 November 1918, Payne scored his 11th victory; it was one of his squadron's final three wins of the war. Payne's personal tally came to three solo destructions of enemy aircraft, one shared destruction, and seven German aircraft sent down out of control.