Actions

Difference between revisions of "No. 11 Personnel Despatch & Receiving Centre RAAF"

From Our Contribution

(Passing through)
(Passing through)
Line 25: Line 25:
 
===Passing through===
 
===Passing through===
 
* [[Phillip Herbert Martin DFC & Bar]] 28 May - 5 Jul 1943 & 21 - 29 May 1945
 
* [[Phillip Herbert Martin DFC & Bar]] 28 May - 5 Jul 1943 & 21 - 29 May 1945
 +
* † [[Maxwell Wellman Marsh]] 5 Jun - 4 Jul 1943
 
* [[Colin Lindsay Ottaway DFC]] 1 Aug - 13 Sep 1943
 
* [[Colin Lindsay Ottaway DFC]] 1 Aug - 13 Sep 1943
 
* † [[Ernest Ronald William Oliver]] 16 Oct 1943 - 20 Mar 1944
 
* † [[Ernest Ronald William Oliver]] 16 Oct 1943 - 20 Mar 1944

Revision as of 12:39, 26 February 2024

11 PDRC.jpg
Metropole Hotel, Brighton pre ww1


Brief History

No. 11 (RAAF) Personnel Despatch and Reception Centre was formed at Bournemouth in July 1941, but it moved to Brighton in May 1943. Brighton was on the coast in Sussex about 80 kilometres south of London. This Unit was the receiving station for Royal Australian Air Force non-commissioned air crew arriving in the United Kingdom. In Brighton the Unit occupied both the Grand Hotel and Metropole Hotel on the beach front. However, many of these hotels’ luxury fittings had been removed to make way for service style billets. RAAF air crews arriving in the United Kingdom would wait at Brighton for up to 3 or 4 months before being posted to training or other units. No 11 (RAAF) PDRC also occupied facilities at RAF Charmy Down in Somerset. No 11 PDRC closed in March 1946.


Although it was mostly the case that New Zealanders went to the Grand Hotel and Australians went to the Metropole, there was inevitably some overlap between the two. The Metropole also served as a reception centre for Australian aircrew. Either they were fresh from Australia, or they had completed training under the Empire Air Training Scheme, or they were between postings. An idea of the size of the establishment can be gauged from the figures recorded on 16 June 1943 - 20 officers, 25 NCOs and 33 other ranks on the permanent staff, with 947 aircrew and 206 officers passing through.


On 12 July 1945 the Hotel Metropole took on a new role as a Red Cross centre for repatriating newly released prisoners of war. The men were physically examined and de-briefed by intelligence officers. By the end of June 1945 some 937 Australian prisoners of war had passed through the Metropole. Eventually, the Metorpole was empty and the authorities handed it back for civilian use in 1946. No 11 PDRC closed in March 1946.


Passing through

Notes

Primary source of information is "Hove in the Past" at http://hovehistory.blogspot.com/2016/10/hotel-metropole-brighton-1940-2016.html accessed 22 Jul 2020.


External Links