No 242 Operational Conversion Unit, Royal Air Force

From Heraldry of the World
Revision as of 10:02, 15 October 2023 by Knorrepoes (talk | contribs) (Text replacement - "Category: " to "Category:")
Jump to navigation Jump to search

NO 242 OPERATIONAL CONVERSION UNIT, ROYAL AIR FORCE

History: Formed at Dishforth on April 16, 1951.


Coat of arms (crest) of the No 242 Operational Conversion Unit, Royal Air Force

Official blazon

Badge: A terrestial globe encircled by a chain surmounted in chief of a rose argent and in base two hunting horn in saltire.
Motto: Hic bene docit ubique volant = Having been taught well here, they ly everywhere.

Origin/meaning

The Unit was formed by amalgamation of Nos 240 and 241 Operational Coversion Units and wished to allude to both these Units in its Badge. Thus the Hunting Horns for Rutland alludes to No 240 OCU which was formed there. The Rose alludes to No 241 OCU. The Chain encircling the Globe symbolises the world-wide location of the trainees once graduated from the Unit. The badge was granted in July 1952.

Literature: Image from ebay.com

Logo-new.jpg
Heraldry of the World
United Kingdom.jpg
British heraldry portal
Civic heraldry of the United Kingdom
Unitedkingdom-flag.gif

  • Overseas possessions
  • Total pages in the British section : 15,572
  • Total images in the British section : 9,351

Contact and Support

Partners:

Your logo here ?
Contact us



© since 1995, Heraldry of the World, Ralf Hartemink Ralf Hartemink arms.jpg
Index of the site