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Thursday, 13 November 2025

Why I looked crummy serving the Queen

Joining the RAF for two years’ National Service (1955 – 1957) meant I would wear a uniform, a word with several implications. Obedience is one, something I’d never shone at during the previous nineteen years. Another is invariance, a further intellectual discouragement since variety is surely the spice of life. 

Would I disappear into the human sludge that is the ideal basis for a military force? Or would my untamed tongue get me into trouble?

These matters were to some extent put on hold. At a height of 6 ft 1½ in. I was taller than the physical norms of the average recruit and would have to wait months to be properly dressed. In the interim I wore the shabby sports jacket and even shabbier trousers (standard journo turn-out) I wore when I signed on at RAF Cardington. Made marginally more sartorially acceptable when hidden by a khaki boiler-suit.

The new kit took some time to arrive. And six weeks’ square-bashing (Initial training. US: boot camp) wreaked havoc on my “civvies”. But there was one advantage: I was left out of any marching for formal occasions. Think badly stuffed scarecrow.

What happened next was heavily ironic. Against my expectations and my formal education the RAF decided I would train to be a wireless (ie, radio) technician in a course lasting eight months, mostly sitting at a desk wrestling with Kirchoff’s Laws and the calculus associated with the hysteresis curve. By now I was uniformed, but not appropriately. The rest of the class wore Working Blue whereas I wore Best Blue, my Working Blue had still to arrive.

RAF Working Blue. More compact
battledress format, despite its name,
was more fitted for sedentary work

Here’s the irony: Working Blue has a battledresss format jacket ending with a tightly belted midriff. By contrast the Best Blue jacket is much longer reaching halfway down the bum. Battledress or not, Working Blue is much more resistant to crumpling for those doing deskwork. The speed with which my Best Blue started to wear out was horrifying, given that I would have had to pay for a replacement.

RAF Best Blue. Flounced 
bottom half of jacket tended
to get crumpled and worn
when 
wearer worked at a desk

Happily, Best Blue lasted out the course and I was posted to Far East Air Force there to wear lightweight shirt and shorts. National Service done, I hung Best Blue on my bedroom door back home in Bradford and the moths finished off the abrasivon resulting from desk work at the technical training camp.


CODA: My Working Blue finally arrived but it distorted my appearance: seemed as if my belly started at my sternum and stretched halfway down my thighs. Being a techie helped just a bit. 

4 comments:

  1. You may be saving your USA employment/uniform saga for another post?

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  2. Sir Hugh: I've posted about what I wore for the USA several times. Since I wasn't entirely sure that I would get the Pittsburgh job I bought a Savile Row suit in London in order to be well-prepared for any subsequent interviews. As things happened I got the Pittsburgh job and this was an unnecessary expenditure.

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  3. I am referring to an interview you had elsewhere when the company concerned wanted you to wear their uniform and predictably that was a suggestion you were not up for.

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  4. Both wool I suspect. And Best Blues were to be worn with a dress shirt and tie? Yes I’ve flown to wiki and done a bit of poking around. An astonishing number (literally numbered)of different uniforms. I’d have figured “mess blues” for mess halls and gravy exposure, not formal wear for high end affairs. I’m reminded of a song I heard as a child - “The U.S. Air Force Blue”. I did look it up - composed in 1957 ( obviously as a recruiting tool). The published lyrics (verse one - the only one I recall) differ from my recollection as follows:

    They took the blue from the skies
    And a pretty girl's eyes
    And a touch of Old Glory's hue,
    And gave it to the men who proudly wear
    The U. S. Air Force Blue,
    The U. S. Air Force Blue.

    But I always thought there was another line, thus:

    They took the blue from the skies
    And a pretty girl's eyes
    And a touch of Old Glory's hue,
    And gave it to the men who proudly wear
    The U. S. Air Force Blue,
    And you can wear it too boys,
    The U. S. Air Force Blue.

    A snappy march - it may be familiar to you.

    ReplyDelete