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By Chris Jobson.
This year (2008) marks the 33rd
Official Farewells for Warrant Officers and
Senior Non Commissioned Officers from the Regiment. The first such
occasion was conducted at the Regimental
Sergeants’ Mess, at North Head, in 1975 and,
with the recent death of a former gunner, it’s
both appropriate and fitting to now look back on
the origin of an activity which is conducted
annually by most corps within the Army.
In 1975 the then RSM of the School, Warrant
Officer Class One Don Donkin, was walking
through the city of Sydney when he came across
an old mate, a former Warrant Officer Class One,
who was just down from Brisbane and who’d
recently discharged from the Army. During the
ensuring conversation the mate mentioned that
after 31 years service in the Regiment his
‘official’ farewell from the Army had been
conducted by an Ordnance Corps major in a mess
at Enoggera Barracks.
Don Donkin thought that this type of farewell
was entirely inappropriate and unbefitting for a
senior soldier who had given so much long, loyal
and dedicated service to the Guns. As a result
and after a discussion with his Mess Secretary,
it was decided to conduct an annual official
Regimental Farewell for Warrant Officers Class
One who discharged with 20 or more years
service. The first such Farewell was held in the
Regimental Sergeants’ Mess that year (1975) and
the mate in question, and two other former
Warrant Officer Class Ones, all in attendance
as invited guests, were formally recognized and
thanked for their service to the Regiment.
A couple of years later the Farewells were
amended to include the qualifying Warrant
Officers Class Two and Senior Non Commissioned
Officers, and then the
Regimental Officers’ Mess began conducting a
similar event for retired gunner officers. This
method of honouring former members was then
quickly adopted by the Sappers and then the
Infantry, and over time it spread across the
Army.
Sadly last week a funeral was
conducted in Brisbane for Tom Bandfield, a
former Gunner Warrant Officer Class One; Tom was
the mate that Don had run-into in Sydney, back
in 1975; the one who had been farewelled by the
Ordnance Corps major.
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