The battalion comprised two
companies and a headquarters located at
Farnborough. The commander of the Air Battalion was Major Sir
Alexander Bannerman.
No. 1 Company, at Farnborough, was equipped with
airships and was under the command of Captain
Edward Maitland, an experienced
balloon and airship pioneer. He also helped pioneer the
parachute and in 1913 made the first parachute jump from an airship.
No. 2 Company, at
Larkhill on
Salisbury Plain, was equipped with aeroplanes and was commanded by Captain
John Fulton. A mechanical engineer from the
Royal Field Artillery, Fulton had been an early enthusiast of military flying and had attended the world's first
air show at
Rheims in 1909. He had earned his pilot's certificate, number 27, on 15 November 1910. On 17 September 1911, Lt.
R.A. Cammell, RE was killed in the crash of a
Valkyrie monoplane at Hendon airfield; a 1922 account of the formation of the RAF states this was the only fatal accident in the Air Battalion. On 14 February 1912, Lt. Barrington-Kennet flew a government-bought aeroplane – a two-seater
Nieuport monoplane with a 50 hp Gnome engine – 249.5 miles in 4 hours and 32 minutes, setting a record. ==Creation of the Royal Flying Corps==