17/09/2025
🚨Breaking News🚨
This week, the unit welcomed our new mascot, ‘Driver’, the Australian Terrier. Our current mascot, ‘Driver’ will be retiring in the very near future to a good home with one of our unit sappers, where he will be loved unconditionally as a friendly pet with an attitude.
The original ‘Driver’, a silky terrier puppy, was born in Sydney on 15 September 1915. Driver accompanied 4 Field Company Engineers as a mascot when they left Australia on the troopship, Suffolk, on 30 November 1915. He was smuggled aboard in the pocket of Driver Fred Roberts. The unit was reorganised in Egypt and became 7 Field Company Engineers, arriving in France on 19 March 1916.
After Roberts left the unit in 1916 Driver (later Sergeant) Leslie Ernest Ross took over ownership of the dog. He liked to sit on his owner's feet, ate anything offered and was great friends with the cook. Whenever the unit moved, Driver travelled in the officers' mess cart. Driver was an expert ratter and in 1917, on the Somme, members of the unit took him on ratting expeditions in the old trenches at Bazentin and Longueville. At the time of the German withdrawal to the Hindenburg Line in 1917 Driver went missing from the unit as it moved through Bapaume, only re-joining it, footsore and hungry, two days later at Favreuil. Ross claimed that Driver could tell the difference between the sounds made by German and Allied aircraft and would hide only when German aircraft passed over the unit.
Ross smuggled Driver aboard the troopship 'Castalia' on the return trip to Australia, arriving on 1 June 1919. During the voyage, both the ship's captain and the officer commanding troops became aware of Driver's presence and demanded that he be put down before the ship arrived in Australia. He was hidden during inspections and members of the ship's crew were paid to hide him in their quarters. It was suspected that, as Ross would leave the ship at his home port of Sydney, customs officials would be waiting for him when the ship docked. A volunteer was found to smuggle Driver off the ship in Melbourne. A kit bag was cut up to make a pocket to fit inside a greatcoat and the soldier disembarked carrying the coat over his arm. He laid it on the pier for 20 minutes during a kit inspection but Driver did not move. Driver was then forwarded to Sydney by rail. He lived the rest of his life with Ross's father and died on 31 October 1926.
Welcome puppy Driver to 2 CER – may the chew toy odds be forever in your favour!