WRAF - definitie. Wat is WRAF
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Wat (wie) is WRAF - definitie

THE WOMEN'S BRANCH OF THE BRITISH ROYAL AIR FORCE
Womens Royal Air Force; Women's Royal Airforce; Women's RAF; WRAF; Women's Royal Air Force (1949-1994)
  • Dame Felicity Hanbury]], the first Director of the Women's Royal Air Force, at [[RAF Hawkinge]].
  • DH.9A]].

WRAF         
¦ abbreviation (in the UK) Women's Royal Air Force (until 1994).
Shirley Jones (WRAF officer)         
BRITISH SENIOR WRAF OFFICER
Shirley A. Jones
Air Commodore Shirley Ann Jones was director of the Women's Royal Air Force (WRAF) from 31 January 1986 to 1989.

Wikipedia

Women's Royal Air Force

The Women's Royal Air Force (WRAF) was the women's branch of the Royal Air Force. It existed in two separate incarnations: the Women's Royal Air Force from 1918 to 1920 and the Women's Royal Air Force from 1949 to 1994.

On 1 February 1949, the name of the First World War organisation was revived when the Women's Auxiliary Air Force, which had been founded in 1939, was re-established on a regular footing as the Women's Royal Air Force. The WRAF and the RAF grew closer over the following decades, with increasing numbers of trades opened to women, and the two services formally merged in 1994, marking the full assimilation of women into the British forces and the end of the Women's Royal Air Force.

The Central Band of the WRAF, one of only two all-female bands in the British Armed Forces, was disbanded in 1972. Some of its musicians transferred to the Band of the Women's Royal Army Corps.

Voorbeelden uit tekstcorpus voor WRAF
1. As an NCO air traffic controller she made an outstanding impression, and left the WRAF in 1'5' after four years service with a commendation.
2. The south coast of England is bristling with retired WRAF officers living together in domestic bliss, but you never see them in magazines.
3. She left at 16, and after working for a short time as a shorthand typist, joined the WRAF (1'55–5'), where she was an air traffic controller, a job she continued to do in a civilian capacity with the Ministry of Aviation (1'5'–63). She then married John Blatch, a former RAF test pilot who became an accountant, and gave birth to four children, including son–and–daughter twins, in four years; one of her sons died while young.
4. At yesterday‘s launch Dame Joan Varley, then a bank clerk who went on to join the WRAF, vividly recalled spending the first night of the Blitz at her family home in Streatham, south London: "A stick of three bombs fell in the middle of our road; there was a moment – it seemed like an age but it was probably a second or two – of utter silence, and then there was a most unearthly wail, which added greatly to the terror of the moment.