Thomas Albert Charles DAYMOND

DAYMOND, Thomas Albert Charles

Service Numbers: 429762, W68913
Enlisted: 30 December 1941
Last Rank: Flying Officer
Last Unit: No. 7 Squadron (RAAF)
Born: Wyndham, Western Australia, Australia, 17 September 1923
Home Town: Kalgoorlie, Kalgoorlie/Boulder, Western Australia
Schooling: Not yet discovered
Occupation: Clerk, Taxation Department, Perth, Western Australia
Died: Aircraft accident, Higgins Field, Queensland, Australia, Northern Territory, Australia, 2 July 1944, aged 20 years
Cemetery: Townsville War Cemetery, Queensland, Australia
E.D.13.
Memorials: Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour
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World War 2 Service

3 Sep 1939: Involvement Flying Officer, 429762
30 Dec 1941: Enlisted Australian Military Forces (Army WW2), Private, W68913, Infantry Training Battalions
21 Oct 1942: Enlisted Royal Australian Air Force, Aircraftman 2 (WW2), Aircrew Training Units
21 Oct 1942: Enlisted Royal Australian Air Force, Flying Officer, 429762
2 Jul 1944: Involvement Flying Officer, No. 7 Squadron (RAAF)

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Biography contributed by David Barlow

Beaufort A9-377 of Number 7 Squadron crashed 2 miles east of Higgins Field - the aircraft dived into the ground at a sharp angle from about 300 feet, having completed a normal turn down wind after take-off.  The aircraft had been delivered to the RAAF in July 1943.  All crew were killed in the loss:

Flight Sergeant John William Bracken - Pilot (423608) - Son of Richard Thomas Bracken and Agnes Elizabeth Bracken of Roseville, NSW

Flight Sergeant Andrew Frank (427618) - Son of Joseph Henry and Alice Frank & Husband of Eva Grace Frank of Narrogin, WA

Flying Officer Thomas Albert Charles Daymond (429762) - Son of William Albert and Evelyn May Daymond of Kalgoorlie, WA

Flight Sergeant Lionel Ernest James Parkes (413323) - Son of Ernest Stanmore Parkes and Anorah Marcella Parkes of Armidale, NSW

 

Higgins Field, previously known as Jacky Jacky and sometimes called Red Point, was located near the tip of Cape York Peninsula. On 3 June 1943, Lieutenant General Kenney renamed it Higgins Field in honour of Flight Lieutenant Brian Hartley Higgins 400620, killed on air operations on 25 May 1943.

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