The Cadburys were
Quakers, and thus
pacifists, but on the outbreak of the war, Cadbury left Cambridge and volunteered to join the Royal Navy, serving as a seaman aboard the HMY
Zarifa, a yacht converted to an armed patrol vessel, manned mainly by Cambridge graduates, while his older brother Laurence joined the
Friends' Ambulance Unit. as a probationary flight sub-lieutenant, being confirmed in his rank on 31 May 1915. He was granted
Royal Aero Club Aviators' Certificate No. 1343 on 19 June, after soloing a
Grahame-White Biplane at the
Grahame-White Flying School at
Hendon. Cadbury was posted to the
Naval Air Station at South Denes,
Great Yarmouth,
Norfolk, where one of his
ground crew was
Henry Allingham. Cadbury first saw action on 9/10 August 1915, flying a Sopwith aircraft against four Zeppelins with no success. He later complained in a letter to his brother Laurence that the Sopwith gave him "cold feet". In September, Cadbury expressed his regret at "the murder of war", having lost several close friends in the squadron. In a letter of May 1916, he wrote that he was "sick of the war", expressing his distaste for the Government who "are not being able to use their brains". He also believed that an aircraft would never shoot down a Zeppelin "unless it catches it unawares". On 27 November 1916, ten Zeppelins set out in two groups, heading for the Midlands and the North of England. One, the
L.21, crossed the English coast at
Atwick at 21:20, and then turned north to evade patrolling aircraft before heading to
Leeds, where it was driven off by heavy anti-aircraft fire. An effective
blackout shielded
Barnsley from attack, so the airship headed southwest to
the Potteries where it dropped a number of bombs on industrial targets in Stoke, causing some damage, but no casualties. At 01:30, it headed for home, setting a course towards Great Yarmouth. It was spotted by two RNAS aircraft north of
Peterborough, but managed to evade them. Over
East Dereham, it was spotted by Flight Lieutenant W. R. Gaynor, who was forced to abort his attack after suffering engine failure. However, reports of the
L.21s movements had reached Great Yarmouth, so at dawn Cadbury and Flight Sub Lieutenant Gerard W. R. Fane took off in their
B.E.2c fighters to intercept. They were joined by Flight Sub Lieutenant Edward L. Pulling from
RNAS Bacton. Cadbury later reported: I saw the Zeppelin approaching the coast and immediately chased after it. It was flying about 5,000 feet when I first saw it and it immediately climbed to 8,000 feet. I went after it. I approached from the stern about 3,000 feet below and fired four drums of explosive ammunition in to its stern, which immediately started to light. At the same time one of the other pilots was flying over the Zeppelin and to his horror he saw a man in the machine-gun pit run to the other side and leap overboard. Having seen the Zeppelin circle down to the sea in a blazing mass – a most horrible sight – I went back to Yarmouth. I could not say I felt very elated or pleased at this; somehow I was overawed at the spectacle of this Zeppelin and all the people aboard going down into the sea. Later that month, Cadbury became engaged to Mary Forbes Phillips, the daughter of the Reverend A. Forbes Phillips, the vicar of
Gorleston. They were married by Reverend Phillips at Gorleston on 12 February 1917, and would go on to have two sons. On 1 April 1918, the Royal Naval Air Service was merged with the Army's Royal Flying Corps to form the
Royal Air Force, and the same day, Cadbury was appointed a squadron commander with the acting rank of major. On the evening of 5 August 1918, Cadbury again engaged Zeppelins. Earlier that afternoon, the
L.70 took off from
Friedrichshafen with four other airships. They headed for the east coast of England, timing their flight to arrive off the coast just after dark. The commander of
L.70 was
Fregattenkapitän Peter Strasser, the
Führer der Luftschiffe ("Leader of Airships", the commander of all Naval airships). However, the airship squadron was spotted out at sea by the Lenman Tail lightship, which signalled their course and position to the Admiralty. Cadbury was attending a charity concert at which his wife was performing when an RAF orderly found him. Cadbury drove back to the airfield, where he was informed that three Zeppelins had been reported about to the north-east, and knowing there was only one aircraft available, an
Airco DH.4, he grabbed his flying kit and ran for it, beating a rival pilot to the cockpit by a split-second. With Captain
Robert Leckie in the rear gunner's seat, Cadbury climbed up to over by jettisoning his reserve fuel and some small bombs, where he saw three Zeppelins ahead and above him. He later recounted: Cadbury wrote to his father the next day: "You will have heard probably before this reaches you that my lucky star has again been in the ascendant, and that another Zeppelin has gone to destruction, sent there by a perfectly peaceful live-and-let-live citizen, who has no lust for blood or fearful war spirit in his veins." ==Post-war career==