Alliot Verdon Roe & Groves & Whitnall
Alliot Verdon Roe was born in 1877 in Patricroft, Manchester. His father was a
Doctor and his mother was later famous for her work in organising and setting
standards for day nurseries.
His father had hoped that his son would follow in his profession but the boy was
more keenly interested in engineering. When he was fourteen he set off to Canada
to work in a civil engineering firm, but the job did not last long. The young
Alliott then engaged in an apprenticeship in Portsmouth dockyard which he duly
completed. After studying marine engineering at Kings College, London as well as
the dockyard the young man joined the ship S.S.Inchanga as fifth engineer. It
was during this time that Alliott first turned his mind to the possibility of
actually building a flying machine.

He began with small models and in this he was quite successful. When the Wright
brothers made the very first flight in a heavier than air machine at Kittyhawk,
U.S.A. he was almost immediately in correspondence with them. He applied for and
took a job with the Royal Aero Club. Then found a job in the U.S.A. with a firm
trying to build a gyrocopter. The machine was a failure and Alliott was back in
Britain. But not discouraged.
It was in 1906 that he patented the first aircraft control column, as previously
two levers were required. It was as well he patented the idea as many years
later a Frenchman tried to claim copyright and £1,000,000 damages.
When Lord Northcliffe of the Daily Mail offered a prize of £250 for a model
capable of sustained flight Alliott took the prize. Thus encouraged he designed
and built his own real aircraft. He set up shop at Brooklands, near Weybridge.
On the 8th June, 1908 A.V. Roe actually flew for the first time, but his short
flights were not registered officially by the Royal Aero Club and Lord Brabazon
took the honour of registering first. Roe pressed on regardless. It was a
challenging time as he had to learn so much. Designing, building and flying all
at once! It was dangerous because things kept breaking. Controls were not
correctly understood and engines were unreliable. On the plus side the aircraft
of those days could glide and crashes were often not fatal.
After being evicted from Brooklands, and then Hackney Marshes Alliott Roe set up
his flying operations at Wembley Park, Middlesex, as it then was. Alliott's
brother, Humphrey, who was later to marry Marie Stoppes, came into the business
and on New Years Day 1910 A.V. Roe became the first company ever to be
registered as an airplane manufacturer.. The learning curve was so fast, that
hardly ever were two aircraft built that were exactly the same. Improvements
came along at a breathtaking pace.

Above: The Avro 504 Aircraft
Manufacturing moved to Manchester and with Brooklands under new management an
Avro flying school was set up there, later moving to Shoreham. Other
money-earning ventures were the founding of an aircraft spares warehouse and the
invention and marketing of a turnbuckle for tightening the bracing wires used on
aircraft in those days.
With the coming of the First World War, A.V. Roe and Co. had a first rate
aircraft for the forces. It was the Avro 504. A good basic design that leant
itself to a variety of engines. So good was it that it became a standard trainer
after the war and soldiered on until 1940 during the Second World War.
After the First World War military orders dried up to a trickle and even with
new designs Avro Avianorders were small. The civil market was hotly contested
and Avro's most successful aircraft was the Avro Avian. Even before this a
considerable financial investment had been made in the company by the Groves
family of Groves and Whitnall Ltd. the Manchester brewers. In 1920 Crossley
Motors bought three fifths of the shares in the company.
In 1928 control of the company passed to the Armstrong Siddley Development
Group. As a result both of the Avro brothers, Alliott and Humpfrey, left to join
S.E. Saunders Limited of Cowes, Isle of Wight. Saunders were exponents of the
flying boat. The company became known as Saunders Roe and they produced a series
of well know aircraft culminating with the "Saro Princess". They also produced
the very successful "Skeeter" helicopter and the experimental rocket fighter,
the SR-53.
Alliott was Knighted in the New Year Honours list of 1929. AV, as he was known,
became a strong supporter of Oswald Mosley during the 1930's, and continued his
support after the war with Union Movement. He was a great believer in monetary
reform and thought it was wrong that banks should be able to create money by
"book entry" and charge interest on it when they lent it out. In this respect he
shared the same enthusiasm for reform as the American poet Ezra Pound, who also
wrote for the Mosley press.
Below: Taken From The Book: The World of Wings and Things! By Alliott
Verdon-Roe


