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Pinky the pilot
21st Apr 2009, 11:28
And once again we remember those who served and those who made the ultimate sacrifice.
http://i75.photobucket.com/albums/i319/Pinkythepilot/course96number15sfts.jpg

Course 96 Graduation. No. 15 SFTS Claresholm, Alberta, Canada.
Wednesday, May 3rd. 1944

My Late Father, 39814 Baum; RW, Front row, fifth from left.

Any fellow Ppruners recognise anyone?
http://i75.photobucket.com/albums/i319/Pinkythepilot/course96.jpg
List of graduating Pilots

http://i75.photobucket.com/albums/i319/Pinkythepilot/darcykrieg.jpg

And this was Mrs Pinky's Dad. Leading Seaman Krieg; Darcy Carl.
Served as the gun leader of a 'pom pom' crew on HMAS QuickMatch.

In an action off the French coast his gun took a direct hit from a shore based gun, possibly an 88mm.

Severely wounded, he was the sole survivor of his gun crew.

Lest we forget.

Buster Hyman
21st Apr 2009, 12:45
Thanks for sharing Pinky!:ok: I must scan my Grandads photo & put it up one day. Up on the wall, but times like this I think its good to put a human face on the diggers past.

Now, all I have to do is sort out the whinging F*@%#!s at my work who are moaning about the lack of a public holiday!:mad:

ForkTailedDrKiller
21st Apr 2009, 12:56
http://www.fototime.com/8E26FF77F4986E4/standard.jpg

At 19 years of age, my Father (on the right) was a wireless operator/air gunner (WAG) with 459 Squadron RAAF - The Desert Scorpians, on Hudsons, Venturas and Baltimores (below).

http://www.fototime.com/17624F54DFA0ED7/standard.jpg

Based in the Middle-East, mostly Egypt, 459 Sqaudron's operations ranged from anti-submarine and convoy escort patrols in the Mediterranean to low-level anti-shipping strikes and formation bombing raids.

Sir Bob Norman, the founder of Bush Pilots, was a pilot with 459 Sqdn.

Dr :8

slackie
22nd Apr 2009, 00:17
This is a tribute I put together for my wife's great [great?] uncle...I had the priviledge to visit the battlefields at Galipoli where John Dellow died in the forward trenches of Chunuck Bair on the 8th August 1915, exactly 50 years to the day before I was born...he enlisted on my wife's birthdate 21st December but 55 years earlier in 1914...spooky!!
B-d3Z5EAFvo
Unfortunately the "copyright police" have disabled the soundtrack that included (along with a commentary) the moving Brothers in Arms by Dire Straits.

Disco Stu
22nd Apr 2009, 05:31
In remembering the debt we owe to our forefathers (and Mothers) that went before us, let us also remember those currently doing their duty and in harms way wherever the ADF are at this time.:ok:

Disco Stu
ex Green Machine

lilflyboy262
22nd Apr 2009, 08:16
Least we forget.

I would love it if anyone could post up some stories from the war time era's.
Every now and again we get old gents coming through work that were ex A/F. The tales of adventure and heroism of a by-gone era are amazing and inspiring.

hightower1986
22nd Apr 2009, 08:53
Can anyone fill me in on the protocol with regards to ANZAC day, Im not a native and a few pointers would be nice. Did i read that the memorial service is at dawn? thanks

Boomerang_Butt
22nd Apr 2009, 12:20
As a Gen Xer, I'm sometimes disappointed at how little some of my generation appreciate just what was done by these men and women.

My grandfather served in the Navy (Both Australian & on service to the RAN in the UK) during the war and until the 70's, saw service in the Mediterranean, and more significantly, on the Arctic convoys in the final years of the war.

On his 90th birthday last year he finally started to speak about what happened in those years (he never did previously, even when my mum and her brothers asked about it). Now we are happy to know he will be on tv in a documentary and has spoken on record for over an hour about everything that he saw.

My grandmother was a WRAN and my great-grandfather served in France in WW1. Knowing this only makes me appreciate all the more what went on and for the first time I'm attending the dawn service. I'm only ashamed I haven't gone sooner. A visit to the AWM in Canberra is a must.

If you can't go in person, Australian War Memorial (http://www.awm.gov.au)

I appreciate the sentiment of an RSL-sponsered ad on the radio tonight, where a young man says the thing that shocks him the most is not that those marching are old, but that at the time they went to war, they were his age, and if one of his mates was one of the people lost to war, he would expect people of his generation to give a moment's silence and respect.

Lest We Forget.

No Further Requirements
22nd Apr 2009, 16:47
All my grandparents served in WW2, three in the army and one in the RAAF. My grandfather was in the 2/2 Pioneers. They were captured as POWs in SE Asia and shipped to Changi Jail, then to the Burma Railway and then onto the coal mines near Nagasaki, Japan. Somehow he made it back and raised a family. He is sadly no longer with us. I hope my 10 years service did him proud.

To those who have served, are serving or will do so in the future, you have the thanks of a grateful nation.

To those who don't come back....we will remeber them.

NFR.

The Voice
22nd Apr 2009, 21:37
Lest we forget

I am a defence spouse and very proud of my husband and his mates whether they're in the colours of the army; airforce or navy.

My former father in law (RIP Bobby) was carried down the Kakoda track and would never talk about what he heard and saw. Come Anzac Day he would retreat for a few days into a dark place.

God forbid I may ever know the grief of losing anyone in some god forsaken hell hole.

Trojan1981
23rd Apr 2009, 01:02
Lest we forget.

My Great Grandfathers both served in WWI with the British Army and Royal Navy. One, James, was deployed on the worlds first true aircraft carrier, HMS Argus. He served right to the end of WWII. My other Great Grandfather served at Ypres and never spoke of his experiences.
My Grandfather (son of James, also James) served with the Britsh Army in Egypt and my great Uncle served in Egypt and Cypress with the RAF. At least one member of every generation has served in either the Australian or British Military, Including my Mother in Iraq in 2002-3 with the RAN and myself (Gen Y) with the Army in East Timor.
I do not believe modern, volunteer, professional soldiering is a cause for praise or hero worship, however, For those who once fought to protect the sovereignty of this country and our close allies including those who were killed;
Lest we forget:(

Old 'Un
23rd Apr 2009, 01:53
"They shall not grow old, as we that are left grow old,
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We shall remember them."

Keep it so.

RIP Dad.

Le Vieux

aveng
23rd Apr 2009, 02:30
My thoughts on anzac day go to a good friend of mine who was killed during military service albeit not during war. He was working night shift at Edinburgh and at dawn they were pre-flighting the search and rescue Orion when he was killed when the tug he was driving collided with the aircraft. My thoughts are also with all those military people killed during training accidents etc. The military can be a dangerous place even when people aren't shooting!

RIP Fish

jr51xx
23rd Apr 2009, 04:28
Harry,

Blessings on your father and his fellow soldiers that were captured at Singapore and suffered through hell in Burma, being torpedoed during transit, recaptured and finishing out the war as slave labor in Japan.

I will miss ANZAC day this year but will remember a moment of silence. For your dad and mine.

JR

Fris B. Fairing
23rd Apr 2009, 04:44
Mrs Fairing is currently walking the Kokoda Track. She carries with her several small flags in honour of fallen friends. Her group will be holding a Dawn Service at Isurava and walking the final stage to Kokoda on ANZAC Day. Am I proud of her? You bet!

Go Maureen.

Edit: Dawn Service is at Isurava not Kokoda

Capt W E Johns
24th Apr 2009, 10:18
Bless 'em all. Both my Grandfathers fought in WW2, and I'm ex-Air Force, having served with Aussies and Kiwis in NZ & Aust and many countries abroad. There's no better combination than the ANZAC's, unless we're the only ones around - then we fight amongst ourselves! Long may it continue. I'll spare a thought at dawn tomorrow.

teresa green
24th Apr 2009, 11:19
To the Airmen of the armed forces, of both Australia and New Zealand, to the young men who never came home, to the airmen who spent years in POW camps, to the young men who survived and forged a path to the Airlines of today, those that follow will always be in your debt. LEST WE FORGET.

bushy
24th Apr 2009, 13:12
Lest We Forget And Do It All Again

Diesel Fitter
24th Apr 2009, 13:24
Hearty Amen to both of the above posts! :D

Fliegenmong
24th Apr 2009, 18:42
04:40 local, and off to dawn service now....Lest we forget

The Voice
24th Apr 2009, 18:55
Lest we forget ..

Old Fella
24th Apr 2009, 21:01
Just home from the Dawn Service and the speech given by the local High School Captain was worth getting up for. There can be no doubt that the younger generations have a great appreciation of what ANZAC day means and why we remember.

tail wheel
24th Apr 2009, 21:52
Miss you Dad!

RAN 1940 - 1945: HMAS Swan

Disco Stu
24th Apr 2009, 22:41
Just returned from the Coolum-Peregian RSL Dawn Service.

The drill standard of the Honour Guard of School Cadets was a pleasure to watch. The local school band and drums also added measurably to the ceremony.

The local paper reported 6000 people attended this service.



AND: My thanks go to the young boy and his sister who came up to me (and many others) after the service, shook my hand and said "Thanks Mister".

EchoNovemberTango
25th Apr 2009, 03:21
Lest We Forget
Rest In Peace

wardie
25th Apr 2009, 21:47
I visited the War Memorial at The Entrance yesterday. What really gladdened my heart was a group of young (18-22yo) people were talking to a 94 year old veteran. The way they were talking to him I thought that they knew him but after listening to them thank him for his time and service I realised they didn't. Their respect brought tears to my eyes.

They are on the left of this shot

http://www.jmbphotography.com.au/gallery2/d/1646-1/IMG_6629.jpg

Wardie

Gnadenburg
26th Apr 2009, 06:29
http://i236.photobucket.com/albums/ff187/coronatower/fp.jpg

THIS MEMORIAL MARKS THE SITE OF A PRISON CAMP OF SURVIVORS OF THE FIRST DEATH MARCH FROM SANDAKAN TO RANAU FROM JANUARY TO APRIL 1945.

OF THE 2000 AUSTRALIAN SOLDIERS OF THE 2 ND A.I.F. AND 750 BRITISH SOLDIERS OF THE BRITISH ARMY WHO LEFT SANDAKAN ONLY 6 AUSTRALIANS SURVIVED.

ON THIS ACTUAL SPOT, VX 52128 GUNNER ALBERT NEIL CLEARY, 2/15 TH FIELD REGIMENT, ROYAL AUSTRALIAN ARTILLERY, WAS CHAINED TO A STAKE AND BEATEN AND STARVED FOR 11 DAYS BEFORE HE FINALLY DIED ON 20 TH MARCH 1945, AGED 22 YEARS.

THIS MEMORIAL ALSO COMMEMORATES THE COURAGE AND BRAVERY OF THE LOCAL PEOPLE OF SABAH, WHO SO GALLANTLY ASSISTED THE PRISONERS-OF-WAR AGAINST OVERWHELMING ODDS.

LEST WE FORGET

http://i236.photobucket.com/albums/ff187/coronatower/ranau2-1.jpg

In Ranau yesterday. RIP.

Diesel Fitter
1st May 2009, 07:39
Nicely done slide show here -
Slideshow Player - Lest we forget: Anzac Day - The Warrnambool Standard - rural news, classifieds and community (http://www.standard.net.au/slideshowplayer.aspx?id=6161)

ampclamp
2nd May 2009, 22:27
My Dad fought in PNG in WW2 and his Dad at Gallipoli.
Both somehow survived but are now gone.

I didn't need to fight anywhere.
I guess that sums it up.

Thank you.

Cilba
3rd May 2009, 10:49
A great uncle lost at Gallipoli, an uncle lost in WW2, my dad a digger in WW2 (now on his last legs), my mum a full time volunteer nursing aid in WW2 (now on her last legs), I'm a Viet Nam vet, my son has served in the Solomons, Timor, and Iraq.
We live in peace and freedom.

Lest we forgot

Cilba