Places | |
---|---|
Accession Number | REL/02982.007 |
Collection type | Heraldry |
Object type | Badge |
Physical description | Brass |
Maker |
Rooke, Raymond |
Date made | c 1943-1945 |
Conflict |
Second World War, 1939-1945 |
Propeller badge : Leading Aircraftman R Rooke, 7 Squadron RAAF
Metal badge in the shape of the sleeve propeller worn as a symbol of rank by leading aircraftmen. The main body of the badge has been shaped from one piece of brass. Attached to the centre of the badge is a central boss made from a circular piece of brass. It has an impressed circle in the centre with three engraved lines extending from the small circle and appears to have been made from the ground down base of a bullet. On the reverse of each of the propeller blades is soldered the remains of a pin that was attached to the badge.
Badge made by 71331 Leading Aircraftman (LAC) Raymond Rooke for his sister Maria. Rooke was born at Ashfield, New South Wales on 18 February 1914, the son of James Edward Rooke and Edith May Philpott. Rooke worked for two years as a munitions worker, manufacturing shell fuzes at Amalgamated Wireless (Australasia), before he enlisted in the Royal Australian Air Force on 14 October 1942. He had married Essie Mercer Simmons on 29 June 1940 and they had a daughter, Mary Ann. He was an Aircraftman 1 upon enlistment and was later promoted to LAC on 13 April 1943. LAC Rooke served with 7 Squadron RAAF from March 1943 to January 1945. Equipped with Beaufort aircraft the squadron operated out of Ross River, near Townsville, in 1943, undertaking escort patrols over northern Australian waters. In April 1944 the squadron moved to Horn Island, and then in November 1944 to Tadji, in New Guinea, where it remained until the end of the war. Rooke was discharged from 8 Operational Training Unit on 18 December 1945.