Colour blind? Whether it was a criteria they used or not, he wasn’t colour blind, so we can forget about that possibility. After his release from service, he completed his studies and was awarded a Diploma of Art from Dundee Art College and a Diploma of Education and spent his working life as a secondary school art teacher, first in Scotland and, from 1959, in Australia. As I sit here at the computer, I have four of his paintings in the room, and they are, I think, evidence that his colour vision was not impaired.
The whole thing gets, to quote Lewis Carroll, curiouser and curiouser. It’s a pity that the records that could give us the answer no longer exist. Was it some odd thing he said during one of the aptitude tests that maybe led them to say this, or was it possibly something that marked him out as someone who might be more of an asset performing the sort of work that was undertaken in 367 and 368 Wireless Units?
He never said anything to me about the enlistment process (or for that matter, much about the war itself, although he did talk about the places he had been) so I don’t even know if he even wanted to be flying or not.
Jim