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Elinor Florence (Company name) Elinor Florence

Bestselling Historical Fiction Author

Georgina’s RCAF Photo Album

Georgina Harvey’s RCAF photo album reveals a fascinating slice of life in the wartime air force, compiled by a young woman from a well-known family in Kelowna, British Columbia who joined up in 1943 and trained as a photographer.

Sepia photograph taken from her RCAF photo album of Georgina Harvey, a very pretty girl with curly blonde hair and full lips wearing an air force uniform, bare-headed, smiling.

Georgina Harvey was born in Kelowna to the distinguished Harvey family, still a well-known name in that community.

The stately brick house where she grew up was built by her uncle Charles in 1908, and then sold to her father George, a fruit rancher and taxidermist. George and his wife Beatrice had ten children, who became known locally as “The Harvey Ten.”

One of the downtown streets is named Harvey, and the handsome house where Georgina grew up, shown here, is now a historic site.

Stately two-storey brick house with a turret on one side and steps leading up to a broad verandah, surrounded by trees.

 

RCAF Photo Album

Georgie joined the Royal Canadian Air Force Women’s Division in Trail, B.C. on January 23, 1943. Like many members of the WDs, as they were called, she trained at No. 7 Manning Depot in Rockcliffe, Ontario.

From her RCAF photo album, here’s a photo of the rather grim-looking building at Rockcliffe, a former drill hall with offices and classrooms.

Sepia photo of long, low building that looks like a wartime hanger, with tall windows on every side, sitting in a bare field.

Men and women who were particularly bright and motivated were chosen to train in photography. Georgina trained in Photography Class 26. Here’s a photo of her classroom. (Notice the hat, perhaps Georgie’s, sitting on the table at the lower left corner of the photo.)

Sepia photo from an RCAF photo album shows the interior of a classroom at an air training base, with long tables and chairs facing a podium and a blackboard.

This RCAF photo album shows some of the equipment they used. Photography was a demanding subject and the trainees had to study hard. The most important tool of their trade was the F-24 Camera, which was mounted into an aircraft and used to take aerial photographs.

Sepai photo taken from an RCAF photo album shows a heavy camera mounted on a metal frame, designed to fit into an Anson aircraft, the handwritten notation says it weighs 25 pounds.

Georgie expressed her frustration at the inner workings of this huge camera in the caption written beside this photograph. “The gear box of the F-24 that causes me so much grief. We have to know how every little screw works and all their names.”

Sepia photo taken from an RCAF photo album shows a piece of machinery with gears and levers, the handwritten notation says it is "The gear box of the F-24 that causes me so much grief."

I love this photo from her RCAF photo album, Georgina wrestling with a camera in a tight spot. One of the more exciting aspects of photography was the time spent in and around the aircraft. Women weren’t allowed to pilot the aircraft, but they became pretty familiar with them. They learned how to mount the camera inside the aircraft, and they had to be strong — the camera weighed twenty-five pounds.

Candid photo from an RCAF photo album shows blonde woman in a khaki coverall, squeezed into a small cubbyhole in the side of an aircraft, a large camera in her hands.

Here’s her friend Elsie Livesay clambering around on an aircraft.

Wartime photo shows woman seated on top of an aircraft wearing her air force uniform of pants, shirt and hat, bending over a gun turret.

And here’s another one of her friend Rita Potticary. It’s a good thing the girls were allowed to wear pants as part of their uniform!

Wartime photo shows woman standing on the wing of an airplane, wearing her air force uniform of pants, shirt and hat, bending over a gun turret and laughing over her shoulder at the camera.

Georgie’s RCAF photo album reveals that they were surrounded by handsome pilots. This one, the dashing Photo Officer Crisp, rates a remark in Georgie’s photo album: “Owooo!” I think that’s supposed to be a wolf howl!

Wartime snapshot of a dashing air force officer at Rockcliffe School with his cap on one side of his head, one hand in his pocket, a dark moustache, and a brooding expression.

And speaking of wolves, I expect they were a daily occurrence on a base filled with young attractive women.

Cartoon from RCAF photo album shows a leering wolf with his tongue hanging out, and the caption: "Chivalry: That instinct in every man to protect every woman from every other man — except himself!"

Some of the pilots, though, didn’t receive such a high rating from the girls. This poor young man named Charko was the object of fun. (My apologies to P/O Charko if he or his family sees this!)

Sepia photo of smiling young man in air force uniform, his hat pushed back on his head, with large ears, and the handwritten caption: "P/O Charko Photo Officer. A real pain in the neck."

The station even had a mascot named Radar. Since many of the young people, both men and women, had pets back home, I expect the presence of a station dog helped to alleviate their homesickness. Don’t you love Radar’s little fur-trimmed cape, with the RCAF crest on it?

Candid photo found in RCAF photo album of a handsome black dog on a leash, wearing a vest with an air force crest on it, with the handwritten caption: "Radar, our station mascot."

When the course came to an end, Georgina passed with flying colours. Here’s a typical photo from almost every RCAF photo album, her graduation photo from Class 26.

Official photograph of the graduating Class 26 from the Royal Canadian Air Force School of Photography at Rockcliffe, Ontario in 1943.

After completing her training, Georgina was posted to Vulcan, Alberta, where she spent four months. She worked alongside a number of girls who became friends. Here’s one group, looking smart in their khaki coveralls. Georgie is on the top right.

(The girl seated in the front row on the left is named Yvonne Wildman, formerly Yvonne Valleau. Read her story here: RCAF Photographer Yvonne Valleau.)

Five young women in Royal Canadian Air Force khaki overalls pose for a group shot, three seated in front, and two kneeling behind, all with short curly hair.

And here’s another girl named Hazel MacPherson, very trim in her summer uniform, a lightweight khaki dress.

Young woman in Royal Canadian Air Force khaki summer dress uniform seated on a bench with her ankles crossed and hands folded in her lap, smiling and looking to one side, with a handwritten caption: "Hazel McPherson."

Georgie then moved on to the No. 8 Bombing and Gunnery School in Lethbridge, Alberta, where she served from August 14, 1943 to November 1944. Their purpose was to take photographs of bomb targets in order to determine whether the men training to become bomb aimers were striking their mark.

Perhaps the most exciting aspect of serving in the RCAF as an aerial photographer was the opportunity to fly! Remember, this was back in the day when most people had never flown at all. Georgina was thrilled by her first flight in an Anson, from Lethbridge over the Rocky Mountains.

Aerial photo of jagged snow-covered mountain peaks with a tiny aircraft in the foreground, and the handwritten caption "Anson Flying Over Rockies, Lethbridge."

Georgie had grown up surrounded by mountains, but it must have been an even greater thrill for a young man or woman from the prairies. I can picture Georgie focussing her camera through the window, pointing it at the other aircraft flying alongside.

Wartime aerial photo of jagged snow-covered mountain peaks with a tiny aircraft in the foreground bearing the Royal Canadian Air Force insignia.

They spent time around the larger aircraft, too. Here’s a photo of a Lancaster with nose art reading “Crazy Rabbit” that was on display at their base in Lethbridge, date unknown.

Sepia wartime photos of a Lancaster bomber parked in front of a hanger, with nose art showing an image of Bugs Bunny and the painted words "Crazy Rabbit."

It wasn’t all hard work. Here a dance on the base at Lethbridge. Some of the women are in uniform and others are wearing “civvies” — civilian clothing. Doesn’t it look like they’re having a great time?

Candid wartime snapshot of dance floor filled with dancing couples, the women in dresses or skirts and men wearing either suits or Royal Canadian Air Force uniforms.

Georgina captioned this photograph: “The whole gang relaxing after a hard day’s work.” She’s the only one who has her tunic off. I’m not sure where this photo was taken, but it looks like they were allowed to drink. Smoking, of course, was allowed pretty much everywhere back then.

Wartime photo shows four men and three women, all wearing air force uniforms, relaxed and smiling and holding glasses and cigarettes in their hands, several of them with their arms around each other.

After the war ended, Georgie met Stewart Irving, married and had five children: four boys and one girl. Her husband was a veteran himself who served with the Canadian Scottish and the Seaforths. He was captured in Italy and finished the war in a prison camp.

Georgina was a devoted wife and mother. Now 101, she lives in Coquitlam, B.C.

Georgina, thank you for taking the trouble to preserve these precious photographs. And thank you to her son-in-law, Ken Hallgren, for scanning and sharing the whole album with Wartime Wednesdays.

And thank you, Georgina, along with fifty thousand other Canadian women, for joining up and for serving your country during wartime!

 

* * * * *

STAR WEEKLY AT WAR

The Star Weekly was a Canadian newsmagazine published by the Toronto Star. This advertisement from inside the magazine, dated August 28, 1943, illustrates the effort to recruit women into the three branches of the armed forces. From not allowing them to serve for the first two years, the government began actively recruiting them in 1941.

I can’t imagine anyone being nicknamed “Frivolous Sal” but it’s supposed to show how a flighty girl settled down after she joined the armed forces!

See my entire collection of Star Weekly covers here: Star Weekly At War.

Wartime vintage magazine advertisement dated August 28, 1943 has black and white photo of laughing girl with her head thrown back and the caption: " . . . they called her Frivolous Sal," followed by a call to join Canada's armed forces.

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