In 1923, Gloster modified a
Gloster Sparrowhawk fighter trainer with new wings to test a layout proposed by chief designer
Henry Folland, combining a thick, high-lift section upper wing and a thinner, medium-lift lower wing, with the intention of combining high lift for takeoff with low drag. After the Grouse demonstrated that the new layout was a success, the British
Air Ministry placed an order for three prototype fighters based on the Grouse (and therefore derived ultimately from Folland's
Nieuport Nighthawk fighter of 1919), but powered by a
Armstrong Siddeley Jaguar III
radial engine, as the "Nighthawk (thick-winged)". The first of the prototypes (Gloster built a fourth machine as a company-owned demonstrator), by now known as the Grebe I, flew during May 1923. The performance of these prototypes during testing at
RAF Martlesham Heath was good, and the Air Ministry decided to order the type into production as the Grebe II, this having a Jaguar IV engine. Like the
Sopwith Snipe it replaced, the Grebe was a single-seat, single-engined
biplane of fabric-covered wood construction. The
fuselage had
ash longerons and
spruce stringers joined to
plywood formers, while the single-
bay wings (which had a considerable overhang outboard of the struts), had fabric-covered spruce
spars and
ribs. Two
synchronised .303 in (7.7 mm)
Vickers machine guns were mounted on the fuselage top decking. ==Service history==