He left the Colonial Service in November 1940, and joined the
RAF as a pilot. Aged 31, he was put on training duties, and became a
flying instructor at
Fairoaks, flying
Tiger Moths. He was transferred to the Middle East in 1942, shipped out on a freighter carrying disassembled
Spitfires. The aircraft were reassembled at
Takoradi on the
Gold Coast (modern
Ghana), and Spurway volunteered to fly one to Egypt, spending a week flying over the
Sahara Desert,
Chad and
Sudan. He became the commander of the Middle East Photographic Interpretation Unit in
Cairo, and then moved to Italy to join the Advanced Headquarters of the
Desert Air Force, where he commanded the Photographic Intelligence Cell. He was involved in the resettlement of refugees in Austria. By the end of the War, he held the rank of
Wing Commander, and had been
mentioned in dispatches and received the
OBE. He was captain of the Desert Air Force cricket team when it toured England in 1945. ==Post-war career==