Arthur Whitten Brown was born in Glasgow to American parents; his father had been sent to Scotland to evaluate the feasibility of siting a Westinghouse factory on
Clydeside. His father, Arthur George, was an electrical engineer, After his birth, the family moved to Chorlton, and lived at 'Ellerslie', 6 Oswald Rd. The factory was eventually sited in
Trafford Park in
Stretford,
Manchester, and the family subsequently relocated there. Both of the Atlantic pilots attended the Central High School for Boys, mostly known as Manchester Central High School. Alcock left at 16. Brown began his career in engineering before the outbreak of
World War I and undertook an apprenticeship with
British Westinghouse in Manchester. In 1914, he enlisted in the ranks of the
University and Public Schools Brigade (UPS) for which he had to take out British citizenship. The ranks of the UPS were full of potential officers and Brown was one of those who sought a commission to become a
Second Lieutenant in the
3rd (Reserve) Battalion, Manchester Regiment. After service in France, Brown was seconded to
2 Squadron Royal Flying Corps as an observer. Brown's aircraft was shot down by anti-aircraft fire over
Vendin-le-Vieil in France while on artillery observation duties. He was sent back to England to recuperate but returned only to be shot down again, this time with a punctured fuel tank, near
Bapaume in
B.E.2c (number
2673) on a reconnaissance flight on 10 November 1915. Brown and his pilot, 2nd Lt. H. W. Medlicott, were captured by the Germans. (In June 1918 Medlicott was shot by the Germans while attempting to escape for the fourteenth time). Later interned in Switzerland, Brown was repatriated in September 1917. After a period of leave he went to work with Major Kennedy RAF in the
Ministry of Munitions. This led Brown to meet Kennedy's daughters, one of whom he later married. He married (Marguerite) Kathleen Kennedy, the daughter of Major David Henry Kennedy of 'Norbiggen' of 26 Oakley Avenue in Ealing on Tuesday 29 July 1919 at the
Savoy Chapel, by Rev
Hugh Chapman, with the reception at the nearby hotel. Major Kennedy flew with the RFC, and was born at 306 Bensham Rd on 20 August 1869, and died in November 1940. His wife was born in Gateshead on 6 April 1896, and died on 1 May 1952 in Swansea, and was buried at
Tylers Green. Her parents had moved to Sweetthorpe Cottage at
Penn, Buckinghamshire in 1919. After the war Brown sought various appointments that would give him the security to allow him to marry. One of the firms he approached was
Vickers, a consequence of which was that he was asked if he would be the navigator for the proposed
transatlantic flight, partnering
John Alcock, who had already been chosen as pilot. ==Transatlantic flight==