'' (1911) Cammell was born in
Inverness in Scotland in 1886, the oldest of three children of Katherine Marion
née Orr (1860–1947) and Archibald Allan Cammell (1856–1911), an old Etonian formerly of the 21st Foot but serving as a lieutenant in the 14th Hussars when the couple married in
Bangalore in India in 1880. Reginald Cammell's grandfather was the industrialist
Charles Cammell (1810–1879) of Brookfield Manor in
Hathersage,
Derbyshire, whose company later became part of
Cammell Laird. In 1891 aged 5 'Reggie' Cammell was living with his parents and younger siblings in
Merrow in
Surrey. The family had a governess, a nursery nurse, a cook and a parlour maid. His parents divorced in early 1911 as a result of his father's adultery with various women. Reginald Cammell joined the
Royal Engineers and was appointed second lieutenant on 25 July 1906, and promoted lieutenant on 22 November 1908. The test required that he make three separate flights of three miles around a circular course without the aircraft touching the ground. At the end of each flight the engine had to be stopped in the air and the aircraft glided in to land within 150 yards of a location previously decided by the pilot and indicated to the officials. He gained his
Royal Aero Club certificate on 7 January 1911 with the low number of 45 (making him the 45th man in Great Britain to qualify for his pilot licence). Cammell inherited Brookfield Manor on the death of his father in March 1911, In April 1911 he became involved in test flying early aircraft and went to the Bleriot school at
Étampes where he met "with commendable success" flying the
Blériot XI, afterwards making numerous cross-country flights in England, first on single-seater, and later a two-seater, his aggregate mileage on the Bleriots approximating 2,000. In July 1911 he took part in the
Daily Mail Circuit of Britain air race but only completed the first stage, retiring after a forced landing east of
Wakefield. ==Flying career and fatal accident==