Joseph Smith (aircraft designer)

{{Short description|Aircraft designer}}

{{about|the aircraft designer|other persons|Joseph Smith (disambiguation)}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2018}}

{{Use British English|date=March 2018}}

{{Infobox engineer

|image =Joseph Smith Designer At Vickers Supermarine.jpg

|image_width =

|caption =

|name = Joseph Smith

|nationality = English

|birth_date = {{Birth date|1897|05|25|df=yes}}

|birth_place =

|death_date = {{Death date and age|1956|02|20|1897|05|25|df=yes}}

|death_place =Chandler's Ford

|education = Yardley Secondary School
Birmingham Municipal Technical School

|spouse =

|parents =

|children =

|discipline =

|institutions =

|practice_name =

|significant_projects = Supermarine Spitfire

|significant_design =

|significant_advance =Aircraft design

|significant_awards =CBE
Silver medal of the Royal Aeronautical Society

}}

Joseph Smith CBE (25 May 1897 – 20 February 1956) was an English aircraft designer who took over as Chief Designer for Supermarine upon the death of R. J. Mitchell and led the team responsible for the subsequent development of the Supermarine Spitfire.Price 1986, page 15.

Career

=Early life=

Joseph Smith was educated at the Yardley Secondary School and Birmingham Municipal Technical School. Beaver, page 30 After leaving school he gained an apprenticeship with the Austin Motor Company at Longbridge, Birmingham in 1914.

Following the outbreak of World War I he joined the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve (RNVR) in 1914 and served on motor launches in the Mediterranean.

After serving in the RNVR, he went back to Austin to finish his apprenticeship. After it was finished, he was appointed junior draughtsman in the aircraft department in 1919. He worked on the Austin Whippet which was designed to be an inexpensive single-seater aircraft. After the Whippet failed to attract sufficient sales Austin decided in 1920 to abandon aircraft production.

Smith who wished to continue his involvement in the aviation field moved in 1921 to Supermarine as a senior draughtsman, reporting to Chief Draughtsman Frank Holroyd.Pegram, page 28.

Over the following years Smith took on more responsibility leading to in 1926 Frank Holroyd being formally designated as Assistant Chief Engineer, and Smith was designated as Chief Draughtsman.Pegram, page 66. From then on Smith was involved in all of the Supermarine designs during the late 1920s and 1930s.

By 1927 Smith had a staff of 38 employees working under him in the drawing office.Pegram, page 96.

Working under chief designer R. J. Mitchell, Smith was heavily involved with the early design of the Spitfire. Following the death of Mitchell in June 1937 his deputy Harold J. Payn was appointed chief designer.Beaver, page 32.

Following the placement of government orders for the Spitfire Smith was heavily involved in the design of the airframe's structure and preparation of production drawings.

=Chief Designer=

As war clouds gathered a security check in September 1939 identified that Payn had a German-born wife. Concerns about the risk this posed to a major war programme saw Payn dismissed. Beaver, page 33 Smith was appointed acting manager of the design department and finally appointed chief designer in 1941 following approval from the Ministry of Aircraft Production.Pegram, page 206.

Smith was confident that the Spitfire had great development potential and was unwilling to consider developing a replacement aircraft until the maximum capability had been obtained from the Spitfire. As a result he oversaw the development of the Spitfire and its naval version the Seafire through numerous variants, including introduction of the Rolls-Royce Griffon-engined series, all of which ensured that it remained a front-line fighter until superseded by jet fighters.

The final development of the Spitfire was the Supermarine Spiteful and its naval version the Supermarine Seafang which retained a Spitfire-like fuselage, married to a new straight-tapered laminar flow wing, which gave Smith the opportunity to fit a wide-track inward-retracting undercarriage.{{cite web | title = The final development of the Spitfire | publisher = BAE Systems | date = | url = https://www.baesystems.com/cs/Satellite?c=BAEHeritage_C&childpagename=UK%2FBAELayout&cid=1434588206393&pagename=UKWrapper

| accessdate = 29 January 2018 }}

=Post-war activities=

Following his piston-engined aircraft Smith designed the first British naval jet fighter, the Supermarine Attacker, using the Spiteful wing, which saw service with the Royal Navy. {{cite journal | title = Joseph Smith C.B.E., Fellow 1898 -1956 | journal = The Journal of the Royal Aeronautical Society | volume = 60 | issue = 546 | pages = 361–362 | publisher = Royal Aeronautical Society | date = June 1956 | doi = 10.1017/S0001924000122109 | doi-access = free }}

Following the Attacker he oversaw the design of the Type 510 a swept-wing jet fighter which was developed into the Supermarine Swift. Following the Swift came the Supermarine 525 and Supermarine Scimitar.

While he was mainly involved in the development of fighter aircraft in the post-war era he was also the chief designer of the Seagull, an amphibian flying boat.

Smith was appointed as a special director of Vickers-Armstrongs Ltd in 1948 and served as chairman of the Technical Board and Technical Executive Committee of the Society of British Aircraft Constructors from 1948 to 1951.

He also served as Chairman of the Aircraft Industries Standards Committee, and as a member of the Engineering Divisional Council of the British Standards Institute.

He died of cancer at Chandler's Ford on 20 February 1956.

Honours

He was awarded a CBE in 1946 in recognition of his war efforts.

In 1950 he was awarded the silver medal of the Royal Aeronautical Society.

In 1956 the Royal Aeronautical Society posthumously awarded Smith the British Gold Medal for work of an outstanding nature in aeronautics.

Notes

{{reflist}}

References

  • {{cite book | last = Beaver | first = Paul|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kWT4rQEACAAJ | title = Spitfire People: The men and women who made the Spitfire the aviation icon | location= Sherborne, Dorset | publisher = Evro Publishing | date = 2015 | format = Hardback | isbn = 978-1-9105050-5-2 |ref=none}}
  • {{cite book |last=Pegram |first=Ralph |title=Beyond the Spitfire - The Unseen Designs of R.J. Mitchell | location=Brimscombe Port |publisher=The History Press |year=2016 |isbn=978-0-7509-6515-6 |ref=none}}
  • {{cite book |last=Price |first=Alfred |title=The Spitfire Story |location=London |publisher=Arms and Armour Press Ltd |year=1986 |isbn=0-85368-861-3 |ref=none}}
  • {{cite book |last=Roussel |first=Mike |title=Spitfire's Forgotten Designer: The Career of Supermarine's Joe Smith |location=Brimscombe Port |publisher=The History Press |year=2013 |isbn=978-0-7524-8759-5 |ref=none}}

{{Supermarine Spitfire}}

{{Supermarine aircraft}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Smith, Joseph}}

Category:1897 births

Category:1956 deaths

Category:English aerospace engineers

Category:Commanders of the Order of the British Empire

Category:Supermarine Spitfire

Category:Aircraft designers

Category:Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve personnel of World War I