About this deal
German Vessel Stopped: Incident at Queenscliff: Guard of Marines placed on Board", The Brisbane Courier, (6 August 1914), p.8. Smithers, A. J. (1991). Honourable Conquests: An Account of the Enduring Work of the Royal Engineers Throughout the Empire. Pen & Sword. ISBN 978-0-85052-725-4.
Commonwealth, Parliamentary Debates, House of Representatives, 30 August 2001, 30708 (John Anderson). Australian Flag raised at Kawieng, New Ireland: Lieutenant B Holmes, Australian Naval and Military Expeditionary Force". www.awm.gov.au . Retrieved 7 July 2018. The Argus, 'Australian flag hoisted at Kokoda, p. 9 < https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/12006560>. Sport [ edit ] Royal Engineers' Yacht Club [ edit ] Un-defaced Blue Ensign flown by members of the REYC. REYC Burgee. Hall, Lieutenant Colonel L. J. (1919). Inland Water Transport in Mesopotamia. Naval & Military Press. ISBN 1-84342-952-7.
The Regimental March of the Royal Engineers
The Royal Engineers: Colonel Richard Clement Moody". Archived from the original on 8 August 2016 . Retrieved 3 November 2016.
Changi flag finds home, 31 January 2008, Tweed Daily News< https://www.tweeddailynews.com.au/news/apn-changi-flag-finds-a/144988/> Sliz, John (2013). Commander Royal Engineers. The Headquarters of the Royal Engineers at Arnhem. Travelouge 219. ISBN 978-1-927679-04-3.
The regiment was first formed as 17 Port Training Regiment Royal Engineers, at the existing Marchwood Military Port (near Southampton), Hampshire in 1949. [2] Since the Second World War, military vessels have operated in support of many major operations, such as during the Suez Crisis, conflicts in Belize and Borneo and particularly in the Falklands War, where over 75% of all stores were landed by Mexeflote Rafts. [3] The Australian flag flying outside the residence of the Administrator of the Northern Territory, Charles Abbott, during the 19 February 1942 Japanese bombing raid on Darwin became the first to be damaged on home soil and is now on public display at the Australian War Memorial. [78] In 1946 it was displayed alongside the blue ensigns which had flown at Villers-Bretonneux in 1917 and onboard HMAS Sydney during her victory over the Italian cruiser Bartolomeo Colleoni in 1940 for the peace treaty ceremonies. [79] Rupert Goodman, Don't change our flag: An exposure of false and misleading arguments, Boolorong Press, 1998, pp. 21–22.