John Moffat was born in the
village of
Swinton in the
Scottish Borders county, to Mary and Peter Moffat. When he was a child his parents moved to
Earlston where his father opened the first
garage. John's father, Peter, had served in the
Royal Navy during the First World War, joining in 1914 to qualify as an
aeronautical engineer for the
Royal Naval Air Service (RNAS). Peter served in No. 2 Wing RNAS under Wing Commander
Charles Rumney Samson, the first man to fly an aircraft off a ship. Peter Moffat served in Belgium and was posted to the
seaplane carrier, , which sailed to the
Mediterranean to take part in the
Gallipoli Campaign. Peter left the service in 1917 and married Mary in 1918. Mary Moffat was an amateur
opera singer. Moffat's mother encouraged him to take up playing
musical instruments. Owing to this, John learned to play the
violin and
piano by the age of 10. During his teenage life Moffat took up
equestrianism and followed the riders during
fox hunting, which "did not go down well with his parents". In 1929 Moffat saw an
Avro 504 aircraft fly over Kelso, triggering a lifelong passion for flying. The pilot was offering rides for 10
shillings. Moffat described the pilot as a
Biggles look-alike and was impressed by him. Moffat flew that day for the first time. Moffat described his feeling of his first flight: Moffat passed the
entrance examination for
Kelso High School and finished his preliminary education there. Moffat excelled at
rugby and was selected for the school's
first team. Moffat had wanted to go to the
University of Edinburgh but owing to the
Wall Street crash of 1929, the Moffats could not afford the
university tuition fees. Moffat applied for a bursary, took examinations and attended interviews, but failed to make the grade and was not offered assistance. Moffat had no choice but to leave school at 16, to make his living working for a bus company, which he disliked, and using his musical talents playing at weddings. By 1938, Moffat was bored with life at the bus depot and decided to apply for a position as a naval pilot in the reserve having seen an advertisement which promised to train him as a pilot while offering him a substantial wage. Moffat had not pursued a flying career earlier, believing it to beyond the aspirations of ordinary people, but now seized the opportunity and applied to join the
Fleet Air Arm. Moffat heard nothing from the Navy and moved to
London. After failing to find work in the
Rhodesian police force through their
High Commission in London, he received a letter from the Navy offering him a part-time job in the reserves. Moffat accepted the Navy's offer and was ordered to report to HMS
Frobisher in
Portsmouth. Moffat had been on leave in Kelso on 1 September 1939 when
Germany invaded Poland. On 3 September 1939
Great Britain and
France declared war on Germany. The following day, Moffat was ordered to the St Vincent Barracks
Gosport, on the west side of Portsmouth Harbour, which was one of the
Royal Navy Boy's Training Establishments. ==Fleet Air Arm==