Career
He served as an observer/gunner for fellow aces Frank Weare, Ernest Elton, and William Lewis Wells. Hayward scored the bulk of his wins, 22 of them, between 6 March and 22 April 1918, usually scoring two or three times in the same fight. Hayward originally enlisted in the 3rd Hussars, becoming a lance corporal.
On 28 September 1916 he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Royal West Kent Regiment.
In late 1917 he transferred to the Royal Flying Corps, being appointed a flying officer (observer) on 6 December, with seniority from 23 October. Posted to Number. 22 Squadron Reconstruction Finance Corporation, he scored twenty-four victories as an observer in the Bristol F.2 Fighter, between November 1917 and April 1918.
His citation read:
Temporary Second Lieutenant George Searle Lomax Hayward, Royal West Kent Regiment, attached Royal Flying Corps. Foreign conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty.
On three separate occasions when engaged with large hostile formations, he has attacked and sent crashing to earth two hostile machines on each occasion.
He has displayed consistent skill, courage and determination in dealing with hostile aircraft. Hayward left the Royal Air Force on 17 May 1919, when he was transferred to the unemployed list. However, on 24 October 1919 he was granted a short-service commission in the Royal Air Force as an observer officer
By early 1920 he was in India surveying the main civil air route between Delhi and Karachi.
On 1 December 1923 Hayward, by now a Flying Officer, was posted to the Royal Air Force Depot, pending assignment, and on 1 March 1924 he was posted to Number. 2 Flying Training School at Royal Air Force Duxford.
Death
Number.2 FTS moved to Royal Air Force Digby, Lincolnshire, in June 1924. There, on 15 August, Hayward was instructing Pilot Officer Charles Victor Breakey in a Avro 504K, when their aircraft suffered an engine failure and plunged into the ground.
Both men died later that day from their injuries.