No. 1 School of Technical Training RAF

http://dbpedia.org/resource/No._1_School_of_Technical_Training_RAF an entity of type: Thing

No. 1 School of Technical Training (No. 1 S of TT) is the Royal Air Force's aircraft engineering school. It was based at RAF Halton from 1919 to 1993, as the Home of the Aircraft Apprentice scheme. The Aircraft Apprentice scheme trained young men in the mechanical trades for aircraft maintenance, the graduates of which were the best trained technicians in the RAF and would usually progress to Senior NCO ranks. However, ninety one ex-apprentices went on to achieve Air Rank. Many more became commissioned officers, including Sir Frank Whittle "father of the jet engine", who completed his apprenticeship at RAF Cranwell, before the move to RAF Halton. Graduates of the Aircraft Apprentice scheme at RAF Halton are known as Old Haltonians. rdf:langString
rdf:langString No. 1 School of Technical Training RAF
rdf:langString No.1 School of Technical Training
xsd:integer 3262895
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rdf:langString Pitchfork, Graham . The Royal Air Force Day by Day. Stroud, UK: History Press, 2008. .
rdf:langString School badge
rdf:langString Royal colour awarded 1952
rdf:langString United Kingdom
xsd:integer 1919
rdf:langString Location
rdf:langString RAF Halton, where the school was formed, is overlooked by a beech tree woodland.
rdf:langString A beech tree bearing fruit on a grassy mount
rdf:langString Badge heraldry
rdf:langString Badge
xsd:integer 150
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Crescentes Discimus
rdf:langString Aircraft engineering training
xsd:integer 2000
rdf:langString Defence training school
rdf:langString No.1 School of Technical Training
rdf:langString No. 1 School of Technical Training (No. 1 S of TT) is the Royal Air Force's aircraft engineering school. It was based at RAF Halton from 1919 to 1993, as the Home of the Aircraft Apprentice scheme. The Aircraft Apprentice scheme trained young men in the mechanical trades for aircraft maintenance, the graduates of which were the best trained technicians in the RAF and would usually progress to Senior NCO ranks. However, ninety one ex-apprentices went on to achieve Air Rank. Many more became commissioned officers, including Sir Frank Whittle "father of the jet engine", who completed his apprenticeship at RAF Cranwell, before the move to RAF Halton. Graduates of the Aircraft Apprentice scheme at RAF Halton are known as Old Haltonians.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 8964
xsd:gYear 1919
xsd:string RAF Halton, where the school was formed, is overlooked by a beech tree woodland.
xsd:string Abeech treebearing fruit on agrassy mount
xsd:string 2,000 students annually
xsd:string ()
xsd:string Crescentes Discimus
xsd:string Aircraft engineering training

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