Background
A son of William Birks, the owner of the Canadian jewelers Henry Birks and Sons, he was descended from a Yorkshire farming family.
A son of William Birks, the owner of the Canadian jewelers Henry Birks and Sons, he was descended from a Yorkshire farming family.
A son of William Birks, the owner of the Canadian jewelers Henry Birks and Sons, he was descended from a Yorkshire farming family. He was educated at Montreal High School and McGill University.
World War I
He originally enlisted in the Canadian Expeditionary Force on 31 August 1915. He was wounded on the Somme in 1916. After transferring to the Royal Flying Corps, he soloed during pilot"s training with only 21⁄2 hours stick time.
Nevertheless, he had the considerable experience of 138 hours in his pilot"s logbook when he shipped out to join 66 Squadron and its Sopwith Camels in Italy.
He was assigned to C Flight, and became a favored wingman of famed fellow Canadian ace Billy Barker. Birks" first aerial victory came on 18 March 1918, when he destroyed a Rumpler reconnaissance plane over Pravisdomini, killing an Austro-Hungarian named Shneeberger.
Six days later, he set another recce machine afire, killing the crew of Poelzi and Suski. His third victory would not come until 2 May 1918, when he wounded Leutnant K. Kosiuski and drove him into a crashlanding that destroyed his Albatros Doctorate.V. Two days later, Birks shot down and killed ace Karl Patzelt, as well as F. Frisch.
In addition to killing both Austro-Hungarian pilots, he destroyed both their Albatros Doctorate.Vs.
They were credited as "captured" because they fell within Italian lines. The new ace flamed another Doctorate.V a week later, on 11 May. He destroyed two Berg fighters in five minutes on a morning patrol on 19 May.
The following day, he ruined another.
On 24 May 1918, while flying wing with the redoubtable Barker, Birks was credited with shooting down Hungarian ace Lieutenant József Kiss, Colorado of Flik 55j.
Birks thus became a double ace. On 9 June 1918, Birks set another Albatros Doctorate.V afire in midair.
On the 21st, he capped his list of triumphs by destroying another Doctorate.V over Motta.
Most unusually for a British pilot, he had no "soft" victories, such as "driven down out of control". "Foreign conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty in destroying six enemy aeroplanes, two of which fell on our side of the lines."
"Foreign conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty in destroying four enemy aeroplanes, two of which were destroyed in one fight."
Birks was placed on the Royal Air Force"s unemployed list on 13 March 1919. After the war, he became a patron of the arts, and was an active painter until his death.
He died in 1991 in Toronto.