Early life and background Gamon was the second of three sons born to John Percival Gamon (1865–1934), a
solicitor and
notary, and his wife Margaret Alice (née Geddes), of Chester, Cheshire. His elder brother, Captain Sydney Percival Gamon (1895–1918) served in the
Cheshire Regiment before joining the
Royal Flying Corps. Posted to a Home Defence squadron, he was killed in a flying accident, aged 23. The youngest brother, Geoffrey Alexander Percival Gamon (1901–1934), was also killed in an accident in Cairo.
World War I Gamon entered the
Royal Naval Air Service as a probationary temporary flight sub-lieutenant, being commissioned as a flight sub-lieutenant on 30 July 1916, five days after his 18th birthday. Assigned to No. 5 Squadron RNAS, flying the
DH.4, Gamon gained his first victory on 8 December 1917 forcing down an
Albatros D.V over Aertrycke airfield. Gamon's next victory came on 30 March 1918 when he destroyed a
Fokker Dr.I during the
First Battle of Villers-Bretonneux, Two days later, on 1 April, the Royal Naval Air Service and the Army's Royal Flying Corps were merged to form the Royal Air Force, and No. 5 Squadron RNAS was renamed No. 205 Squadron RAF. Gamon was promoted to captain on 4 April. He accounted for two more enemy aircraft on 23 April, and shared two more on 3 May, all over
Chaulnes. His seventh and final victory came on 20 May, destroying a
Pfalz D.III over Mericombe.
World War II Gamon returned to military service during World War II, being commissioned as a probationary pilot officer "for the duration of hostilities" in the
Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve on 27 September 1940. He was confirmed in his appointment, and promoted to the
war substantive rank of flying officer on 27 September 1941. He was promoted to flight lieutenant on 1 January 1944. He remained in the Air Force Reserves after the war, finally relinquishing his commission on 10 February 1954, being permitted to retain the rank of flight lieutenant. Gamon died on 5 December 1976, and he, alongside his father and brothers, is commemorated in a window in the
cloister of
Chester Cathedral. ==References==