No. 1 Wireless Unit RAAF

No. 1 Wireless Unit RAAF

No. 1 Wireless Unit RAAF was an Australian signals intelligence unit of World War II. The Unit was established on 25 April 1942.

This name which was the formalised name given to the small RAAF Intercept Station operating in two back to back houses at 21 Sycamore Street and 24 French Street in the suburb of Pimlico in Townsville established by Wing Commander Booth in March 1942.

1 Wireless unit became part of the larger Central Bureau established under Macarthur and comprised 7 RAAF, 1 AMF and 4 United States Army personnel in No. 1 Wireless Unit at Townsville. Flight Lieutenant Blakely was the first Commanding Officer. He was assisted by Captain H. Brown, US Army, and four US Air Force sergeants who were experienced in Sigint and who had escaped to Australia from the Philippines.

Contents

History

The first seven RAAF personnel to be trained as part of No. 1 Wireless Unit in a "special intelligence" course were trained at Victoria Barracks in Melbourne in July 1941. They were the first personnel in No. 1 Wireless Unit which was to be involved in the interception of Japanese Naval and military traffic. They were all qualified radio operators and extremely proficient in international Morse code.

The six members of the unit who completed training were sent to Darwin. They set up two intercept radios (Kingsley AR7's on the top floor of the "Camera Obscura" building at the RAAF Darwin airfield. They worked in continuous 4 hour shifts intercepting Japanese naval "point to point" and "aircraft to ground" traffic from Japanese at the following locations:-

Their intercepts were sent to the navy cryptology section in Melbourne via RAAF Signals Darwin. They enciphered their messages to Melbourne in a secret cipher before passing them over to the RAAF Signals personnel. This ensured that their intercepts of Japanese Kana code or encoded messages were not apparent to other military personnel to protect the secrecy of their intercept operation.

In the mean time the RAAF began to establish their own small administrative and intelligence group in Melbourne. H. Roy Booth was in charge of this new group. Their task was to start to learn how to process the intercept information sent from Darwin.

The RAAF Kana operators in Darwin intercepted many important transmissions leading up to the attack on Pearl Harbor. The Darwin intercept group was reduced to four due to illness.

Darwin bombing

The early morning shift detected abnormal traffic on the morning of 19 February 1942 from Kendari in the Southern Celebes and between aircraft and possible aircraft carriers. The abnormal traffic was passed on to Group Captain Scherger, the Commanding Officer of RAAF Darwin.

Unfortunately no precautions were taken at Darwin on that fateful day. 188 carrier-based aircraft attacked Darwin in the first raid followed by 54 land based bombers in the second raid. There were 243 killed and about 350 injured on this tragic day.

Orders were sent from Melbourne for the four healthy Kana operators in Darwin to disperse to civilian radio stations across the northern parts of Australia as follows:-.

  • "Snow" Bradshaw - Wyndham, WA
  • Alf Towers - Broome, WA
  • G. "Taff" Davis - Groote Eyelandt, NT
  • "Clarrie" Hermes - Groote Eyelandt, NT

Snow Bradshaw was evacuated to Wyndham in Western Australia onboard a De Havilland Rapide. The Rapide was attacked while landing at Wyndham airfield by a flight of Japanese Zeros during the first enemy air raid on the town on 3 March 1942.

The crew and passengers abandoned the Rapide, which trundled along the runway on fire. It stopped at the end of the runway where it burnt itself out. A group of nine "Betty" bombers then bombed the Wyndham airfield leaving a number of large mud holes in the runway.

Alf Towers was slightly luckier than Snow Bradshaw. He had departed Wyndham airfield just prior to the Japanese air raid in a Lockheed 10A piloted by Jimmy Wood. They landed at Broome in Western Australia about 30 minutes after a very large Japanese bombing raid on the town in which at least 70 people were killed.

The use of the civilian radios proved totally unsuccessful as the Kana operators could only use the radio receivers when not being used by the civil air radio service. This meant it was impossible to keep a constant watch on Japanese activities.

Pimlico and the South Pacific

Map of Pimlico houses

Then on 7 March 1942, a top secret small RAAF Intercept Station was set up in 2 houses at Pimlico in Townsville under Wing Commander Booth. The two houses backed on to each other, one being at 21 Sycamore Street, Pimlico and the other being at 24 French Street, Pimlico. Operators based in these houses would intercept Japanese wireless signals and break the Japanese KANA code. Radio equipment was installed in No. 24 French Street.

On 25 April 1942 this small RAAF Unit was given its new name of No. 1 Wireless Unit and then became part of General Douglas MacArthur's new joint American-Australian Sigint organisation called Central Bureau in Ascot, Brisbane. Under some American pressure on the RAAF No 1 WU accompanied the American forces, going to Port Moresby in 1943, and Nadzab, Owi & Biak in 1944 (they were the only Australians on Biak). The WU could give up to 3 hours warning of Japanese air raids. Bleakley then went with No 5 WU to the Philippines in 1945.[1]

References

  1. ^ Bleakley page 156, 159

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • No. 13 Signals Unit RAAF — was a Royal Australian Air Force signals unit during World War II. The unit formed at Mount Druitt Aerodrome, Mount Druitt, New South Wales on 22 November 1943. On 3 December 1943, the unit travelled to No. 2 Embarkation Depot at RAAF Bradfield… …   Wikipedia

  • No. 1 Operational Training Unit RAAF — A group portrait of the members of two training courses conducted at No. 1 Operational Training Unit in 1942 No. 1 Operational Training Unit (1OTU) was an operational training unit of the Royal Australian Air Force formed at Nhill, Victoria on 8… …   Wikipedia

  • RAAF Station Narromine — was a Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) station located at Narromine, New South Wales, Australia. Narromine Airfield was requisitioned in July 1940 as part of the Empire Air Training Scheme during the Second World War. No. 5 Elementary Flying… …   Wikipedia

  • RAAF Station Parkes — was a Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) station located at Parkes, New South Wales, Australia. Formed in 1941 as part of the Empire Air Training Scheme as a training station during the Second World War. After the conclusion of hostilities, the… …   Wikipedia

  • RAAF Station Mascot — was a Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) station which operated from Sydney s civilian aerodrome at Mascot, New South Wales during World War II. History No. 4 Elementary Flying Training School (4EFTS) operated from RAAF Station Mascot between 1940 …   Wikipedia

  • No. 466 Squadron RAAF — No. 466 Squadron A No. 466 Squadron Halifax B.III with its crew after their return from a raid on Germany in January 1944 Active 15 October 1942 – 26 October 1945 …   Wikipedia

  • No. 14 Squadron RAAF — Members of No. 14 Squadron RAAF Active 6 February 1939 – 10 December 1945 Country …   Wikipedia

  • List of World War II topics (N) — # N Force # N. G. L. Hammond # N. H. Gibbs # Nabatingue Toko # Nabetari # Nacht und Nebel # Nachtigall Battalion # Nada Dimi? # Nadar (photographer) # Nadia Boulanger # Nagai Naoyuki # Nagant M1895 # Nagara class cruiser # Nagasaki Atomic Bomb… …   Wikipedia

  • Central Bureau — The Central Bureau was one of two Allied Sigint organisations in the South West Pacific area (SWPA) during WWII. Central Bureau was attached to the HQ of the Allied Commander of the South West Pacific area, Douglas MacArthur. The other unit was… …   Wikipedia

  • Portal:Military of Australia — American Civil War · American Revolutionary War · Battleships · Biological warfare …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”