Prestwick's
Pioneer is a Portrait of David F. McIntyre, one of Scotland's
aviation heroes - the first man to fly over Everest and founder of Scottish
Aviation.
David F. McIntyre is one of Scotland’s unsung heroes, perhaps
known for his Everest achievement, but less well known for his role
in developing a thriving aircraft and airline industry in Scotland.
A quiet man of vision and determination, he followed a dream of a Scottish
industry leading the world…
He was born in Govan, Glasgow in 1905 and grew up in a period when
aviation was blossoming. At the time of his birth Scotland’s aviation
history had hardly begun but it would not be long before the success
of the Wright brothers at Kittyhawk, North Carolina in 1903 inspired
Scots engineers. The Barnwell brothers in Stirling, the Gibsons in Edinburgh
and Preston Watson in Dundee were all to achieve powered flight by 1910.
This book looks at the life of David McIntyre through those pioneering
years of aviation and also his distinguished career in No. 602 ‘City
of Glasgow’ Squadron in the early 1930s
During World War Two Prestwick became an important training centre
for RAF pilots and David was heavily involved with this and with the
later development of Prestwick into an international airport.