Honorific Prefix: | Brigadier |
Helm Roos | |
Death Place: | Cape Town, Cape Province |
Nickname: | "Paul" |
Rank: | Brigadier |
Unit: | 4 Field Regiment |
Commands: | |
Battles: | Operation Savannah |
Spouse: | Jill Roos |
Relations: | Wife |
Laterwork: | Honorary ColonelCape Town Rifles |
Brigadier Helm Roos (19301992) was a senior officer in the South African Army from the artillery . He was a qualified who served as OC 7 Division and Western Province Command before his retirement in the seventies.[1]
He was born in 1930 and grew up in the East Rand and matriculated from Potchefstroom High School for Boys in 1947.
He joined the Defence Force in 1948 and served as an artilleryman in 4 Field Training Regiment and 14 Field Regiment. As a major, he completed the British Army Command and Staff course in 1960. Chief Instructor at the School of Artillery and Armour. Officer Commanding 14 Field Regiment at Bethlehem until 1967. Col Roos was appointed as the Military Attaché in Portugal during 1969 to 1971. Second in Command and Commander Divisional Artillery at Headquarters 7 Division. He was in command of the management team in Angola during the "Bridge 14" operation circa 1974 during the cold-war era power vacuum left by the Portuguese evacuation. OC Western Province Command. He was retained on Reserve List of Officers and served as officer in charge of National Key-points for the South African Defence Force over period 1977-1992. He was appointed as an Honorary Colonel of The Cape Town Rifles (Dukes) between 1991 and 1992.
He was recruited by the Royal Dutch Shell Oil company at retirement from the Army to the position of, where he served the remainder of his life espousing the principle of "being the harder nut to crack". He succumbed to prostate cancer in 2 Military hospital in 1992.