Fájl 54 - Royal Canadian Air Force blazer crest.

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Főcím

Royal Canadian Air Force blazer crest.

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Leírási szint

Fájl

Levéltár

Jelzet

SCA195-GA424-6-54

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A lépték ismertetése (építészeti)

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Dátum(ok)

Fizikai leírás adatcsoport

Fizikai leírás

1 crest : wire and cloth embroidered on felt ; 9 x 9 cm

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Iratleírás adatcsoport

Iratképző neve

(1920-1988)

Életrajz

Cameron "Cam" Clare Hill was born on November 17, 1920 to Britton L. Hill and Grace Mildred Huff in Winnipeg, Manitoba. He was raised alongside his two siblings; Lewis Eugene Hill (1909-1976) and Margaret Elizabeth Hill (1911-1990).

Cameron and his family moved to Kitchener, Ontario in 1930 and lived in a house at 49 Simeon Street.

Cameron attended Suddaby Public School, originally known as Central School, and then Kitchener Waterloo Collegiate and Vocational School. As a teenager, Cameron enjoyed skiing and was a member of the Chicopee Ski Club in Kitchener, Ontario.

On June 27, 1940, Cameron enlisted to serve with the Royal Canadian Air Force Special Reserve during the Second World War. Cameron's attestation papers are dated October 14, 1940. He was assigned ID # R75616.

Subsequently, Cameron was enrolled in the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan (BCATP), a joint military aircrew training program created by the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and New Zealand during the Second World War. Between 1940 and 1941, Cameron Hill was stationed at three different airbases and received specialized training in the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan (BCATP). He was certified as a Bomb Aimer & Air Gunner at the Royal Canadian Air Force Station Jarvis in the No. 1 Bombing and Gunnery School. He was also certified as an Astronomical Navigator at the Royal Canadian Air Force Station Rivers (later renamed CFB Rivers) in the No. 1 Air Navigation School. In addition, he was certified as an Observer at the Royal Canadian Air Force Station Malton in the No. 1 Air Observer School. Cameron celebrated his BCATP Wings Parade on June 7, 1941 and was promoted to the rank of Flight Sergeant.

On August 15, 1941, Cameron Hill sailed with a convoy transporting Allied troops from Halifax Harbour in Halifax, Nova Scotia to Liverpool, England. The convoy briefly stopped over in Iceland. Cameron was temporarily stationed in England from September 1941 to May 1942 to complete additional training. He was assigned to No. 11 Operational Training Unit RAF (11 OTU) on September 30, 1941.

Shortly after, he was assigned to the No. 40 Squadron of the Royal Air Force and eventually was deployed from England to the Middle East in May 1942. The No. 40 Squadron of the Royal Air Force was based near El Alamein, Egypt less than 100 kilometers from the cities of Cairo and Alexandria. The Squadron commenced operations near El Alamein on June 23, 1942 and carried out raids to Tobruk, Libya, Beersheba, Israel, and El Dabaa, Egypt.

On October 7, 1942, Cameron and fellow aircrew left the base at El Alamein, Egypt to complete a flight operation flying towards Tobruk, Libya. During the flight, the aircraft propeller fell off and the engine failed. All aircrew members were forced to bail out of the Vickers Wellington aircraft by parachute in the early morning hours on October 8, 1942. Cameron and fellow crew member, Pilot Bowhill, were separated from the other four members of the aircrew during the crash landing and set out on foot for British lines. Cameron and Bowhilll were captured by Axis powers on October 11, 1942.

Between October 1942 and May 1945, Cameron Hill was held in custody as a prisoner of war (POW) and sent to POW camps in Libya, Italy, Austria, Prussia, Poland, and Germany. In May and September 1942, Cameron received two rank promotions to Commissioned Officer.

In the early months of 1945, Cameron Hill was forced to march westward across Germany along with many other Allied prisoners of war during the final stages of the Second World War. On May 2, 1945 Cameron was near the town of Kittlitz when a patrol of vehicles of the British Second Army arrived and liberated the Allied prisoners of war.

Cameron returned to England on May 11, 1945 and was repatriated back to Canada on June 1, 1945. Cameron was honourably released from service on September 21, 1945 and transferred to the Reserve, General Section, Class "E." He received five medals for his service during the Second World War including the 1939-1945 Star, Africa Star, Defence Medal, Canadian Volunteer Service Medal, and the War Medal 1939-1945.

After the war, Cameron completed some business courses at the University of Toronto with benefits from the Veteran's Charter. Eventually, he joined his father in the family business, Bernardo Hill Tile & Terrazzo (later Hill & Glasser Ltd.)

Cameron married Jean Margaret Thompson on May 19, 1948 and together they had three children; James Cameron Hill (b. May 13, 1949) and twins Barbara Jean Hill and Gregory John Hill (b. May 7, 1951). Cameron was actively involved with the Kitchener-Waterloo Young Men's Christian Association and received the YMCA's highest honour, the Lou Buckley Award, after forty years of service.

Cameron died on October 31, 1988 in Kitchener, Ontario.

Iratképző neve

(1924-)

Szervtörténet

The Canadian Air Force (CAF) was established in 1920 as the successor to a short-lived two-squadron Canadian Air Force that was formed during the First World War in Europe. In 1923, the CAF became responsible for all flying operations in Canada, including civil aviation. In 1924, the Canadian Air Force, was granted the royal title, becoming the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF).

A megőrzés története

Tárgy és tartalom

A Royal Canadian Air Force blazer crest that was likely purchased by Cameron Hill after the Second World War.

Megjegyzések adatcsoport

Fizikai állapot

Levéltárba kerülés/Gyarapodás

Donated by the Hill Family in 2019.

Szerkezet

Nyelv

  • angol
  • latin

Anyag írásrendszere

Eredeti helye

Egyéb formák elérhetősége

Hozzáférés korlátozása

A használatra, reprodukcióra és publikációra vonatkozó feltételek

Segédletek

Kapcsolódó anyagok

Kapcsolódó anyagok

Jövőbeni gyarapodás

Általános jegyzet

The Royal Canadian Air Force blazer crest was available to air force veterans for private purchase after the Second World War.

Általános jegyzet

Following the ascension of Queen Elizabeth II on February 6, 1952, the Tudor Crown (or King’s Crown) was replaced by the St. Edward's Crown (or Queen's Crown) on Canadian military insignia. The presence of the Tudor crown on this badge indicates manufacture dating prior to 1952.

Fizikai leírás

The blazer crest features gold and silver embroidered decoration on a black background including the Royal Canadian Air Force crest, motto, and service title as well as a Tudor style crown.

The Royal Canadian Air Force crest depicts an eagle with outstretched wings in the centre of a white and blue cloth roundel. Each portion of the roundel is outlined in gold wire. The outer blue portion of the roundel features the motto, "Per Ardua Ad Astra" (through adversity to the stars). This was the motto of the Royal Air Force that was adopted by the Royal Canadian Air Force in 1924. The motto is embroidered in gold wire. The service title appears below the roundel on a blue scroll and is also inscribed in gold wire. A Tudor style crown appears above the roundel.

The blazer crest was meant to be worn on the pocket of a navy-blue blazer.

Alternatív azonosító(k)

Szabványos szám adatcsoport

Szabványos szám

Kapcsolódási pontok

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Hely kapcsolódási pontok

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Állapot

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A leírás készítésének, felülvizsgálatának és törlésének ideje

Described by NM in May 2019.

Leírás nyelve

  • angol

Leírás írásrendszere

Források

Information about material in this file was, in part, gathered from the following sources:

The Canadian War Museum’s Military History Research Centre

The National Air Force Museum of Canada

Canada. Department of Canadian Heritage

Gyarapodási adatcsoport

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