Private: 229 Thomas Henry BURNS.

35th BATTALION - 34th BATTALION AIF

Private: 229 Thomas Henry BURNS.


Born:  Wickham via Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. Birth Cert:14437/1895.

Married: 22nd January 1916. Wickham, New South Wales, Australia. Marriage Cert:2341/1916.

Wife: Bertha Mary Burns. nee: Parry. (18..-1965) Died at Macksville, New South Wales, Australia. Death Cert:22709/1965.

Died: 1 June 1955. Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. Death Cert:13865/1955.


Father: Thomas "Paddy" Tavis Burns. (1867-1948) Died at Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. Death Cert:13765/1948.

Mother: Mary Burns. nee: Sault. (1870-1943)  Died at Newcastle Hospital, Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. Death Cert:29049/1943.


INFORMATION

Served and suffered during The Great War, resting at Sandgate Cemetery.
69 years ago today, on the 3rd June 1955, Private Thomas Henry Burns, referred to as Sonny, 34th Battalion (Reg No-229), wheeler (Australian Agricultural Company (A. A. Company) Sea Pit, Bull Street, Cooks Hill, N.S.W., closed Friday 20.10.1916 due to exhausted reserves), from William Street, Smedmore, New South Wales, father of three (Tom, Marie, Evie), was laid to rest at Sandgate Cemetery, age 60. ANGLICAN 2-123. 68.
Born at Merewether, New South Wales on the 9th March 1895 to Thomas (Paddy) Tavas, died 5.4.1948, Newcastle, N.S.W., age?, buried at ANGLICAN 1-49. 28 - http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article134335420https://www.findagrave.com/.../178431021/thomas-tavis-burns, from 29 Downie Street, Smedmore, N.S.W., and Mary Burns nee Sault, died 3.12.1943, Newcastle Hospital, N.S.W., age?, sleeping at ANGLICAN 1-49. 28 - http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article133426565http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article133416218https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/178430983/mary_burns, from 29 Downie Street, Smedmore, N.S.W.; husband of Bertha May Burns nee Parry, married 22.1.1916, Wickham, N.S.W., died 1965?, Macksville, N.S.W., Sonny enlisted on the 24th January 1916 at Newcastle, N.S.W.
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article137094810 - report that Sonny had received a gold medal with 11 other Smedmore boys at the Smedmore Mechanics' Institute.
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article137104341 - report of a farewell to Sonny and 12 other Smedmore boys by the Smedmore Ladies' Social Club.
Unit embarked from Sydney, New South Wales on board HMAT A20 Hororata on the 2nd May 1916.
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article123518831 - report of a letter from Sonny expressing thanks from the Smedmore boys for the boxes of comforts received on the 31st October 1916.
Wounded in action - 25.1.1917 (GSW head, face, both legs, severe), 5.4.1918 (GSW right wrist).
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article133748183 - report that Sonny had been wounded in France. (1st occasion).
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article123515344 - the 273rd Australian Casualty list, N.S.W., Pte. T. H. BURNS, Smedmore, wounded (1st occasion).
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article138150538 - report that Sonny had been wounded, 2nd occasion.
Invalided to England 11.2.1917.
Admitted to hospital 10.9.1917 (rheumatism).
Granted furlough from 20.12.1917 to 3.1.1918 and 2.5.1918 to 16.5.1918.
Commenced return to Australia 15.9.1918.
Sonny arrived home invalided on the 17th November 1918, being discharged medically unfit (GSW right wrist) on the 3rd March 1919.
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article137489021 - report of a welcome home on the Friday evening of the 22nd November 1918 for Sonny at the Smedmore Hall.
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article139653100 - report of impending public welcome home for Sonny.
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article139652652 - report of a public welcome home for Sonny and 2 other Smedmore boys at the Smedmore Literary Institute.
Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners' Advocate (NSW : 1876 - 1954), Monday 13 January 1919, page 5

SMEDMORE.

A welcome home was tendered to Private: 584 Thomas  Henry BURNS, - Private: 115 William HOLDWAY, and Private: 67910 John. McATEER by a large gathering in the Smedmore Literary Institute on Saturday. The function was arranged by the Smedmore Soldiers' Farewell and Presentation Committee. The hall and tables had been tastefully decorated with flags and foliage. The Mayor of Wickham (Alderman R. J. Bond) welcomed the soldiers, ex pressing his pleasure at having them home again. congratulating them on the part they had played, and the name they had helped to make for Australia. He wished them long life, happiness, and prosperity for the future. The Mayoress then presented the soldiers with gold bars with their battalion's colours attached, the gift from the committee. At the supper tables, the Rev. W. F. James said grace. Private HOLDWAY, in responding to the toast of his health, said 'that he was pleased to be1 home, and thanked the people for their reception. He also thanked the ladies of the comforts fund for parcels received from them while at the front, the contents: being greatly appreciated by them, especially after a hard time in the trenches. Private BURNS also returned thanks.

Privates BURNS and HOLDWAY left with the 35th Battalion, seeing service in France, and have been returned sick and wounded. Private McATEER also thanked the committee, but said he did not 'think he deserved such a reception, as he did not get to the front sailing in the Medic, which was returned by the authorities on the signing o[ the armistice. Private McATEER made other attempts to enlist previous to acceptance, but was turned down, not being up to chest measurement, but after training was passed for foreign service. The toast of "Our Boys at the Front," and "The Allies" was moved by the Rev. T. K. Taylor, and responded to by Private: 115 William HOLDWAY. Songs were rendered be Mrs Jeston, Rev. T. K. Taylor, Miss Camps, and a duet by Mesdames Griffin and Walker all being well received. After a vote of thanks to the Mayor and Mayoress, and t' those who has assisted, the tables were cleared, and dancing occupied the remainder of the evening. Mr. Lacey made an efficient M.C. and Mrs Camps and Miss Deneby (piano and violin) supplied the music.

http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article140073396 - report that Sonny had been presented with a War Certificate.
Mr. Burns’s name has been inscribed on the Tighes Hill Public School Honour Roll, Smedmore Roll of Honour, Wickham Municipal District Roll of Honour Board (1) and The Capt. Clarence Smith Jeffries (V.C.) and Pte. William Matthew Currey (V.C.) Memorial Wall.
I have placed poppies at William’s gravesite in remembrance of his service and sacrifice for God, King & Country.
Service record states Died after Discharge, 1/6/1955.
Officially commemorated 2.2.1956– https://connect.dva.gov.au/commemsoawg/commemoration/viewCommemoration.html?commemorationId=NjQ4Nzkx.
Contact with descendants would be greatly appreciated.
For more detail, see “Forever Remembered “
http://www.commemoratingwarheroes.com/cemetery-main-search/
Lest We Forget.
Gary Mitchell: June 2024.
Family Information
Thomas was a single 21 year old Wheeler in the care of Mr J Laing, William Street Smedmore via Newcastle, New South Wales upon his enlistment with the AIF.  Thomas served with the Senior Cadets with the 15th and 16th Infantry prior to his enlistment. 
Military Records

Under Construction: 11/06/2024.

Private: 1275 John Harold WILLIAMS.

35th BATTALION AIF

Private: 1275 John Harold WILLIAMS. MM


Born: 22nd January 1895. Carrington via Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. Birth Cert:8877/1895.

Married: 15th December 1918. Barnett Registry Office. Hertfordshire, England.

Wife: Eva Kate Williams. nee: Clark. nee: Dore. (1896-1989)

Died: 23rd April 1972. Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. Death Cert:80810/1972.


Father: John Williams. (1876-....)

Mother: Catherine Williams. nee: Christiansen. (1872-....)


INFORMATION

John Harold Williams served with the 16th Infantry (Newcastle) prior to his enlistment with the AIF on the 24th December 1915 at Newcastle, New South Wales.  John was marched in the the Broadmeadow Army Camp at Newcastle where he was allocated to D Company 35th Battalion AIF. 

The first ANZAC Day commemorated at Newcastle on 25th April 1916 was attended by thousands of people. A Parade in the morning was followed by several church services and afterwards the 35th and 36th Battalions re-formed and returned to the Gardner Memorial in Hunter Street for wreath laying. In the evening a Concert was held in King Edward Park.

This was surely a poignant day in Newcastle, for as the citizens gathered to remember the young men who had fallen at Gallipoli, they knew that before the end of the month the men of 35th regiment (Newcastle's Own) and the 36th regiment - their sons, brothers, husbands, sweethearts and friends, would embark on their own voyage towards the perils of war.

Newcastle yesterday paid impressive tribute to the memory of the Anzac landing, and the Australians and New Zealanders who fell in that historic fight on Gallipoli. From early morning crowds thronged into the city from the suburbs and from the adjacent centres. Business was practically suspended during the forenoon, for major attention was devoted to the observances arranged by the committee, headed by the Mayor, and the Returned Soldiers' Association.

But though crowds thronged the city streets, there was no appearance of carnival, rather there was an appropriate air of quiet reverence, though the tinge of pride in the achievements of the Australians and New Zealanders was not absent. The services held in churches of all denominations after the military procession were very largely attended. A great many of the ships and other business places, as well as vehicles, were draped in black and purple, and there was also a free display of bunting, all flying at half-mast, and in which the public offices and the ships in port participated.

The procession was formed up at the junction of Porcher street and Hunter street West, and proceeding through the city, was composed of the Naval Band, Naval Contingent, Returned Soldiers. Veterans, Naval Reserves, 35th Battalion with band, 36th Battalion and band, 16th Infantry Band, and Military Cadets. It was a lengthy procession, and the marching of the sailors and soldiers excited admiration. The returned soldiers were greeted with lusty cheering. which was doubled in honour of a number not sufficiently recovered to be able to walk, and a couple of whom were blind, who were conveyed in motor cars.

The two battalions - the 35th and 36th, in training at Broadmeadow were also greeted with encouraging cheers. All the various units of both battalions were in the parade. As the procession passed the Gardner memorial to fallen soldiers in front of the Post Office, beside which were Alderman M. J. Moroney, Mayor of Newcastle, Commander Frank Gardner, the donor, senior military officers, and relatives of deceased soldiers - were impressively saluted. As the procession left Hunter-street and proceeded up Watt street, contingents of men fell out, and were marched to their respective churches, whilst the remainder proceeded to the Cathedral. The soldiers attended the memorial services in large numbers, and so did the civilians.

After the church services the procession was re-formed in Hunter-street, and assembling in the neighbourhood of the Gardner memorial awaited the striking of midday. At that hour a gun was fired from Fort Scratchley, and immediately the band of the 36th Battalion played the National Anthem, all traffic was suspended, and 60 seconds silence was observed. The various units in the procession were immediately afterwards dispersed. During the forenoon proceedings a large number of wreaths were placed on the Gardner memorial, over which was spread the Union Jack and the Australian ensign. The wreaths included tributes from the Mayor and Mayoress, the Northern Branch of the New South Wales Rugby League, Returned Soldiers' Association, the ladies' committee of the Soldiers' Club, the Newcastle Police, the Newcastle Surf Club, numerous citizens and relatives of soldiers who had fallen.

Free settlers a last farewell

Broadmeadow Station 1st May 1916

The 35th Battalion left Sydney on the 1st May 1916 bound for the United Kingdom aboard the H.M.A.T. A24 "BENALLA" with 28 Officers and 991 other ranks. The original 35th Battalion had regimental numbers between 1-1513. Compiling of Headquarters, Machine Gun Section, A Company, B Company, C Company and D Company. Arriving in England in early July, the Battalion spent the next four months in training.

During the voyage at Capetown, John was Charged (1)  Breaking Ship (2) A.W.L. from 17:00 11.6.16 till 10:00 13.6.16. Award 21 days detention by O.C. Troops "Benalla" Total forfeit 24 days pay. 

John was marched in to the 9th Training Battalion on the 22nd July 1916.  

John proceeded overseas for France via Folkstone on the 23rd January 1917 and went into billets before being marched out to the lines on the 29th January 1917. 

12th October 1917

THE BATTLE OF PASSCHENDAELE I

At 1:30 am rain showers began. By 2:30 am it was raining lightly but steadily, by 3:30 fairly heavily. the infantry moved through the pitch dark in single file. In some battalions each man held on to the equipment of the man ahead of him; if touch was broken, those in front had to come back. The news that the line as reported by the 66th division was not held only just reached the incoming troops. Accordingly, in the right brigade (9th) the leading Company Commanders Captain: Clarence Smith JEFFRIES. V.C. and Captain: Telford Graham GILDER M.C. both of the 34th Battalion stopped their men at the entrance to Broodseinde railway cutting, and themselves went to make sure that their column might not run into the enemy.

At Keerselaarhoek Cemetery they found the tape duly laid, and met the officer of the 36th Battalion who had laid it, and by 3:00 am the time set, the 34th battalion was extended on its jumping-off position. But during the previous halt and afterwards, as it lay on the tape, the battalion was persistently shelled and suffered many casualties.

The first shell killed three signallers. Lieutenant: Albert Leslie WATSON. a signal officer of the 34th Battalion, a brave and enterprising leader who also was at the head of the column was severely wounded and all his staff hit. After establishing a forward command post Lieutenant: Thomas Fraser BRUCE 36th Battalion was also killed. Lieutenant Colonel: John Alexander MILNE. 36th Battalion supervising the assembly was knocked down by a shell but continued to command. Captain, Chaplain: Charles MURPHY was also wounded.

(BEAN; History of World war 1 Vol IV p911) Charles Edwin Woodrow BEAN

Only one Australian Division, the 3rd, was wholly employed in the days offensive. but the division was to capture Passchendaele an in spite of the depressing conditions, it was eager to achieve the distinction of doing so. One unit carried the Australian flag, to be planted in Passchendaele, and although officers and men in general were not enthusiastic concerning such "stunts" the Commander-in-Chief had been informed, and had told General: MONASH that, when this flag was planted, the news would be immediately cabled to Australia.

Some keen spirits looked on the operation simply as a dash for Passchendaele. One young company commander of Monash's reserve battalion, the 33rd, in face of a strict prohibition, led on his company as soon as the barrage fell. Starting from a line 350 yards in rear of the general alignment, the 3rd Division was out of touch with its neighbours from the outset. The heavy shelling on the tapes had made orderly disposition there almost impossible, as German Machine-Guns, undisturbed by the barrage now opened immediately, no opportunity offered of restoring proper formation.

The 9th Brigade went forward in the utmost confusion and a terrible mix up as reported by Captain: Robert Derwent DIXON D.S.O 35th Battalion at 6:40 am and "Great Confusion" was the description given by Captain: Henry Vince CARR 35th Battalion. Even on the ridge, the mud was difficult, the hope, if there ever was one, of catching up before the quick barrage finished.

The 9th Infantry Brigade's intended direction lay not along the ridge and the Passchendeale road, but diagonally across them, and parallel to the railway, which most of the brigade could not see. As the jumping-off line was practically at right angles to the ridge, the brigade tendered to advance alone the heights. The Machine-Gun fire at the start came, on the 9th Brigade's right, from the ruined house near Defy Crossing; on its center from, "Hillside Farm"; and on its left from Augustus Wood.

The pillbox opposite the center was supported from the rear by a trench in which were Germans with Machine-Guns, and here occurred a delay which threatened to wreck to whole attack. it was not until an hour after the program time that these places were rushed by the neighbouring portion of the line under Captain: Henry Vince CARR and Captain: Robert Derwent DIXON. D.S.O of the 35th Battalion. The trench contained 35 Germans and 4 Machine-Guns. Part of the line was also held up by a pillbox close to Passchendaele road near the highest point of the ridge.

Here there was practically no shelter from attack, but Captain Clarence Smith JEFFRIES. V.C. of the 34th Battalion managed to organise a party, with Sergeant: 21 James BRUCE and another N.C.O Corporal: 2036 Vere Cummings STEVENSON and a dozen men, and outflanking it, charged the place from the rear, capturing 25 Germans and 2 Machine-Guns. These actions set free the advance. The pillbox captured by Captain Clarence Smith JEFFRIES. V.C. being not far short of the first objective, the 34th Battalion dug in there.

Great loss had been uncured; the 34th Battalion had only three officers left and there were wide gaps in the line. The right flank had swung far away from the railway, along which the 4th Division was attacking, but on the left Captain: Telford Graham GILDER M.C. of the 34th Battalion who had been wounded by a Machine-Gun bullet, but was carrying on found the 10th Brigade digging in slightly to his left under Captain: LATCHFORD, 38th Battalion, and fell back seventy yards to join it.

The Advance to the second objective was to begin at 8:25, the low clouds had opened, and fleecy cirrus with patches of blue were widening overhead and the sun had come out. The 9th Brigade had been so late in reaching the first objective that, while most of the 34th Battalion dug in, the 35th Battalion, allotted for the second phase, moved straight on. Standing on the Passchendaele road, Captain: Henry Vince CARR and Captain: Robert Derwent DIXON. D.S.O of the 35th Battalion endevoured to decide where the barrage then was; at first Carr thought it may be behind them, but finally decided that it was ahead.

The confusion at the start had split the brigade into mixed parties of all battalions and many of the 34th went on with the 35th, the main body of which, about 100 in all, now advanced along the south-eastern side of the ridge in order to catch the barrage. The hour was probably a little before that for the second advance. A German Machine-Gun in the gap between the brigade's right and the railway immediately opened with deadly effect.

Major: John Bruce BUCHANAN 36th Battalion, the senior forward officer was killed. At this critical juncture Captain: Clarence Smith JEFFRIES. V.C. of the 34th Battalion, again accompanied by Sergeant: 21 James BRUCE, led out a few men from the first objective and made for the gun. it was shooting in short bursts, and he was able to work up fairly close. Seizing a moment when it was firing to the north, he and his men rushed at it from the west. It was switched round, killing him, and sending his men to the ground.

But when its fire eased they worked round it, rushed the position, seized 25 Germans and 2 Machine-Guns. This gallant and effective action Captain: Clarence Smith JEFFRIES. V.C. was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross for removing the chief danger to the advance along the crest, but as soon as the 35th Battalion crossed to the eastern side of the hill it became the target of a number of field and heavy guns which, from the hedges and other cover in various parts of the landscape, fired over open sights.

After passing a corpse on its right, the 35th Battalion settled down on what its officers took to be the second objective, although on the extreme right they were actually short of the first. Captain: Henry Vince CARR, now the senior officer on the spot, reported; 8:35. On objective, with about 100 Captain: Robert Derwent DIXON. DSO and three officers. Casualties 25 or 30 per cent. Captain: Henry Charles Dight CADELL M.C   Lieutenant: Charles Teesdale MAIN   Lieutenant: Keith Maitland DAY reported killed and Lieutenant: Frank HORNE   Lieutenant: Christopher Kyffin MEARS  Lieutenant: Charles John HENRY were wounded. Prisoners sent back 400-500. Contact on flanks uncertain, being heavily shelled.

Three posts were established under surviving officers, right Lieutenant: Norman Beade D'ARCY M.C centre Lieutenant: Joseph Francis ADAMS left Lieutenant: Harold Sydney WYNDHAM. In this brigade the battalion for the final objective was the 36th, and a report came along that it had gone through. Actually, it had advanced with the 35th, but, on the left, penetrated to the second objective, which bad been reconnoitered during the previous halt by the commander of the company Captain Robert Austin GOLDRICK. M.C.

He went up the road towards Passchendaele. The barrage, he said afterwards was no hindrance to him, although he left the line lying as close to it as possible "or where he thought it was." He was unable to detect the intensification of the barrage for the second phase, but led his men forward at the proper hour.

As no other battalion was there, he now established the line with its left on the road 600 yards from the church, about the point reached by the 66th Division's troops on October 9th. In front of the position Captain: Robert Austin GOLDRICK. M.C. and Lieutenant E.H FLEITER (39th Battalion) found hidden in a shell hole men of the 66th Division. One had a broken arm, the other trench-feet. They took the Australians at first for Germans. When reassured, "we knew the Australians would come," they said, 'We prayed hard."

From the direction of the church, which lay straight down the highway, no fire came. two Germans ran up the road and surrendered. South-east of the village, along the Moorslede road, were the Germans who seemed "very windy," and near the road two 5.9-inch howitzers began to blaze at the troops digging in.

The 9th Brigade had taken its second objective and the 10th its first, but the position of the officers in charge of these advanced lines was full of anxiety. On the eastern slope Captain: Henry Vince CARR 35th Battalion, the senior officer in this part of the 9th Brigade's front, could see the 4th Division somewhat ahead of its right, and by 10:55 he had discovered that the 36th was on the left, but farther left than the 10th Brigade was far behind on its first objective . The German Guns ahead were sniping with dreadful accuracy. Carr on the western slope, sent back for instructions: "what am I to do?"

Word of the true situation reached headquarters slowly. As on the 9th, the first news was all encouraging. General: MONASH in the Ypres ramparts heard shortly after 7 that both brigades were "well away"; but by 8:26 he had ample evidence that the first objective was taken. At 9:25 the intelligence officer examining prisoners (Lieutenant: Frederick Morley CUTLACK Official War Correspondent) reported having heard from the wounded men that the second objective had been reached.

At 10:28 headquarters was informed of a statement of a wounded man, that the 38th Battalion had gone through. A further report that Australians had been seen at Crest Farm although quickly contradicting but probably true nevertheless. Which confirmed Monash's impression that his division was succeeding. Concerning the New Zealand brigade on his left, however, there was no word until, at 10:50, there arrived the tragic information that the New Zealand Division was stopped by the enemy alone the entire front.

Monash has already heard at 9:55 that the 10th Brigade was held up by fire from Bellevue Spur. Believing that his division was still advancing, he asked that every gun that the New Zealand Division could spare should be turned upon that ridge to suppress the fire. Meanwhile, he would order the reserve (39th) battalion of the 10th Brigade to be ready to assist in holding the ground already won. The reserve battalion the (33rd) of the 9th Brigade he was still keeping back to assist in the capture of Passchendaele.

Shortly after noon news of the true situation arrived. Lieutenant Jackson of the 40th Battalion had established at Waterfields pillbox near the Ravebeek a forward report-centre from which a series of messages, admirably accurate, was flashed by lamp to the headquarters of Lieutenant Colonel Lord of the 40th Battalion. Thus Brigadier General McNicoll of the 10th Brigade was able to inform Monash of the precise position of Giblin's Line. He added that the situation was very serious and the casualties very heave. At the same time from the front line of the 9th Brigade arrived a pigeon message, sent by Captain: Richard GADD of the 36th Battalion.

We are on the Blue Line (second objective) with composite force all three battalions, both flanks in the air.

The New Zealand Division was to make a second attempt at 3:00 pm, and Monash was of the opinion that from the 9th Brigade, well forward on the ridge, patrols might still work northward around Crest Farm. His reserve, the 33rd Battalion (9th Brigade), was accordingly ordered to attempt this at 4:30 pm and the 10th Brigade's forward line being meanwhile reinforced by its own reserve, the 39th Battalion.

These orders went out, but none of them were fulfilled. The New Zealand Division had been defeated by obstacles which no hastily renewed bombardment could have overcome. no infantry in the world could have crossed the Ravebeek mud, penetrated the dense wire, and attacked the crowded pillboxes of Bellview with the assistance of a barrage which did not even screen the advance. No blame can attach to the artillery. Its commander, according to the New Zealand official history, had reported on the previous day that his guns might be unable to give efficient support.

This magnificent division, which lost nearly 3,000 men, had been held up in almost exactly the same position as the 49th three days before-the left brigade penetrating half-way to the first objective, the right stopped almost at the start. The Germans were reinforcing. The New Zealand battalion commanders knew that their men had no chance of succeeding by renewed attack, and the order was eventually cancelled.

As for the Australians, of the two battalions that MONASH had now ordered to participate, the 39th had already to a large extent been involved in the fighting, and the 33rd, endevouring to reach its position of readiness for outflanking Passchendaele, had suffered great loss. No less than 6 of its Officers were killed or mortally wounded. Captain: Wilfred Frank HINTON in command of the forward company, Lieutenant Leonard Rockley BROWNLOW  Lieutenant: Thomas Acheson ARMSTRONG   Lieutenant: Albert George KILPATRICK  Lieutenant William REES-REYNOLDS and Lieutenant: Norman Francis GOBLE.

By the time Lieutenant Colonels Henderson DSO 39th Battalion and MORSHEAD attempted to carry Monash's orders, they found that the attacking force of both brigades was back almost at its starting point. What had happened was as follows.

Neither Major: GIBLIN near the Ravenbeek nor Captain: Henry Vince CARR on the ridge had received their messages sent several hours earlier. The 9th Brigade's line was still being battered by the German Guns. Captain: Richard GADD 36th Battalion, whose troops were being wiped out, informed Captain: Henry Vince CARR 35th Battalion that Lieutenant Colonel: John Alexander MILNE D.S.O 36th Battalion had now come forward to Hillside Farm. CARR accordingly sent Captain: Robert Derwent DIXON. D.S.O with GADD to explain to Milne the desperate nature of their situation. Milne said that he would try to get their troops relieved after dark, but till relieved they must hold on.

(BEAN; History of Word War 1 Vol IV page 921) Charles Edwin Woodrow BEAN

Meanwhile, however, the German artillery was annihilating some parts of their line. All leaders of Carr's three posts were out of action. Lieutenant: Joseph Francis ADAMS was Killed in Action and Lieutenant: Norman Beade D'ARCY M.C and Lieutenant: Harold Sydney WYNDHAM were wounded. Of the remaining officers of the 36th Battalion, Major: John Bruce BUCHANAN and Lieutenant: Fredrick William PUTNEY had been Killed in Action and Captain: Robert Austin GOLDRICK M.C wounded. Farther back Lieutenant: Sydney COOK had been Killed in Action and Lieutenant: William WAND and Lieutenant: Herbert Reginald MAILER were wounded.

At 3 o'clock rain began to fall steadily. at 3:15 pm Captain: Richard GADD 36th Battalion, thought agreeing with  Captain: Henry Vince CARR 35th Battalion that to hold on meant annihilation, refused, in view of his Colonel's orders, to retire. Carr consented to wait while Gadd again sent word to Lieutenant Colonel: John Alexander MILNE D.S.O. Carr himself at 12: 30 had sent Captain Robert Derwent DIXON.  D.S.O to the headquarters of the 35th Battalion at " Seine", from which no word had been received all day.

At 3:45 pm, no reply having come from Milne, and Dixon not having returned as he had been kept at 35th Battalion headquarters awaiting the arrival of an order from brigade headquarters concerning the projected operation by the reserve battalion, Gadd agreed to withdraw and Carr sent along the line a note: The 35th Battalion will retire.

When visiting Gadd, Carr had warned the troops of the probable order to withdraw, and he now saw that the left had already begun to retire. He told men whom he passed to get back as fast as they could to the 34th Battalion (which he believed to be on the first objective). Captain: William James GORDON M.C 36th Battalion, strongly dissatisfied with the order, went straight to Lieutenant Colonel: John Alexander MILNE D.S.O urged that the forward position was tenable, and with Milne and Major: John Martin HAWKEY M.C rushed out to stop the withdrawal. But it was too late.

The 34th was not, as Captain: Henry Vince Carr 35th Battalion, believed, on the first objective. The Commander of the line, Captain: John William RICHARDSON 34th Battalion, on hearing of the extreme weakness of the force at the second objective, had reinforced it. He and his only remaining officer's Lieutenant: James Clement BURGES  Lieutenant: Bruce Gray McKENZIE   Lieutenant: John Abbott LONGWORTH had all been Killed in Action while organising on the first objective, and the first objective now lay empty. The retiring troops, being without orders as to the position to be taken up, streamed back past Milne's headquarters.

All that Hawkey, Gordon, Gadd, and others could then do was to lead a fraction of them forward again to the first objective, where they remained during the night. Captain: Robert Derwent DIXON.  D.S.O. with Captain: John Grieve PATERSON adjutant of the 35th, went up to organise the 35th there, but could find none of it's men. When eventually re-formed the remnant of the 35th was temporarily attached as a Company to the 33rd Battalion.

9th-12th October 1917 saw the 3rd Division, 9th and 10th Infantry Brigade in action during the Battle of Passchendaele, which saw massive losses and suffering in the Australian ranks. The casualties numbered 3,199 men in 24 hours during the height battle. The 34th Battalion lost every officer that day, either killed or wounded including their Medical Officer, Major: Gother Robert Carlisle CLARKE and some of his staff were killed while dressing the wounded. The spirit of some of the wounded is illustrated by the case of Corporal: 3170 Winsleigh Alexander MURRAY   35th Battalion, (formerly a Methodist Minister from Newcastle) gave up his place in a queue waiting for stretcher bearers and was never heard of again.

The Battle of Passchendaele saw 60 Officers and 1,322 other ranks loose their lives.

9th Infantry Brigade Casualties.

33rd Battalion. AIF 11 Officers 273 Other ranks
34th Battalion. AIF 15 Officers 323 Other ranks
35th Battalion. AIF 18 Officers 296 Other ranks
36th Battalion. AIF 15 Officers 383 Other ranks
9th Machine Gun Company. AIF 1 Officer 36 Other ranks
9th Light Trench Mortar Battery. - Officer 11 Other ranks

John was Wounded in Action (1st Occasion) during this action at Passchendaele where he received a Gun Shot Wound to his Left Foot and was invalided to England where he was admitted to the Beauford  War Hospital at Bristol on the 19th of October. 

John proceeded overseas again for France on the 13th March 1918  and was Taken on in Strength with the 35th Battalion on the  19th .

5th-6th May 1918.

MORLANCOURT

A considerable success had been won-except on the two edges of the plateau, both lines of enemy trench had been captured on a front of three-quarters of a mile, and 153 prisoners (including 3 officers), 10 machine-guns, and 3 trench-mortars had been taken at the cost of only some 100 casualties, mostly minor ones.

The 35th lost 5 officers and 47 of other ranks, the 34th 2 officers and 32 other ranks. Lieutenant: 1124 William Henry GLOSSOP (Aberdare. N.S.W.) of the 35th was killed just after crossing the first trench.

Captain: Charles Edwin Woodrow BEAN Volume VI page 82.

5th May 1918.

11:45 pm 35th Battalion AIF plus "B" Company and 2 Platoons of "A" Company 34th Battalion and in conjunction "D" Company plus 2 platoons "A" Company 34th Battalion successfully attacked and occupied enemy trenches from grid line running E and W through J12 and K7 to BRAY SUR SOMME - CORBIE Road inclusive.  Enemy trenches from K 13 C 80.94 to K 19 A 95.50 were attacked and occupied by 34th Battalion and thence a series of posts through K 19 C 40.85 joining Picquet Line at J 24 D 75.16. About 30 prisoners of 237 R.I.R., 3rd Bn. 9th,10th,11th and 12th Company's were captured by 34th Battalion. About 70 prisoners were captured by "B" Company 34th Battalion who were working with 35th Battalion. 5 Light and 1 Heavy Machine Guns were also captured by "B" Company 34th Battalion. It was entirely due to the bravery and devotion to duty of Lieutenant: 932 Hector Reginald MCLEOD, that the communication was maintained throughout the operation. On one 1000 yard portion of line no fewer than 62 breaks were mended by Lieutenant: 932 Hector Reginald MCLEOD and his Sergeant, the remainder of his staff having been wounded. Visual communication by Lucas Lamp was also maintained with 35th Battalion on our left.  

MILITARY MEDAL

14th May 1918.

Private: 1275 John Harold WILLIAMS. 35th Bn AIF. "For most gallant conduct and devotion to duty during attack on enemy position near MORLANCOURT on the night of 5/6th May 1918. Private WILLIAMS acted as No:1 of a Lewis Gun. An enemy machine gun opened up on our Company front and threatened to seriously impede the advance, firing his gun from the hip he rushed to position, killed the gun team and captured the gun. Acting alone he showed exemplary courage and initiative, and undoubtedly saved his Company many casualties, and obviated what might have been a serious delay"

Commonwealth of Australia Gazette: 4 February 1919 on page 129 at position 186
London Gazette: 13 September 1918 on page 10779 at position 13

John was Wounded in Action(2nd Occasion) on the 30th May 1918 and was evacuated to the Casualty clearing Station for treatment to a Gun Shot Wound to his Back and Buttock before he was invalided to England on the 11th June 1918 where he was admitted to the Military hospital at Devonport. After treatment he was discharged and proceeded overseas again for France on the 13th September 1918 and was marched in the his unit on the 16th September.

ARMISTICE SIGNED

We could now tell by the news in the papers that the war was practically over although we (The Third Division) was told to hold ourselves in readiness to proceed to the line again, the 1st, 4th, and 5th Australian Divisions being already on their way back to the line. On Monday 11th November 1918 (the day the Armistice was signed) we marched to Alleray for a hot steam bath and on passing through Airaines found all the houses decorated with tricolours and the church bells pealing and the Frenchies running about like madmen. We wondered what was wrong and halted in the main street for a rest. The Captain then told us (he had interviewed the Mayor who had received a telegram saying that the Armistice was to be signed) that the Armistice was to be signed at 11 a.m. that morning it was then about 10 a.m. We gave three cheers and could scarcely realise that the war was over. When we arrived back at Warlus the news had already reached there and the town was decorated &c. Next day we had a holiday from drill to celebrate Peace. The bells of the old French church chimed day and night for several days. Most of us attended the Victory Mass at the Roman Catholic Church and we also had a great Thanksgiving service out on the parade ground. Some of the men broke camp and went to the neighbouring cities and some got as far as Paris. Many were "pinched" and put in clink (gaol) as they had no leave passes, others were caught and sent back to the Battalion.

After to Armistice John was detached to the AIF Kit Store on the 25th February 1919 when back in England and returned to Australia on board the "Dunvegan Castle" on the 26th August 1919 and was discharged from the AIF on the 10th October 1919. 

Family Information

John was a single 21 year old Blacksmith Striker from Bourke Street, Carrington, New South Wales upon his enlistment with the AIF. John married Eva Kate Clark a war widow who's husband Private: 247 William John CLARK 16th Battalion AIF died on the 10th January 1918 aged 25years and is buried at Wilton, Wiltshire, England. William was from Western Australia. 

John and Catherine Williams 3rd February 1894 at Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. 

John was a member of the Masonic Lodge and was cremated at the Beresfield Crematorium with his wife Eva .

Eva Kate Williams. nee: Clark. nee: Dore. (1896-1989)

Military Records

Under Construction: 11/03/2024-01/05/2024.

Private: 828 James Muir LECKIE.

34th BATTALION AIF

Private: 828 James Muir LECKIE.


Born: 1894. Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. Birth Cert:35043/1894.

Died: 23rd July 1917. Killed in Action Messines Ridge, Belgium.


Father: Alexander Leckie. (1864-1946) Died Manly, Northern Beaches, N.S.W. Australia. Death Cert:10692/1946.

Mother: Mary Leckie. nee: Muir. (1869-1956) Died Ryde, New South Wales, Australia. Death Cert:22702/1956.


INFORMATION

James Muir Leckie enlisted with the AIF on the 19th January 1916 and had been serving with the 16th Infantry Militia for the last 3 years and was allocated to 3rd Reinforcements, C Company 34th Battalion AIF. Lyle embarked on board HMAT A20 "Hororata" on the 2nd May 1916 and disembarked at Devonport was reached on the 23rd June, the Battalion disembarked at Plymouth at 1:00 pm and en trained during the afternoon for Amesbury, arriving at midnight and marching to hutments at No: 1 Camp, Larkhill. Here the Battalion settled down to hard training, which included Route Marching, Trench Digging, Bomb Practice, Musketry and General Camp Routine. Later the Battalion moved to the No: 25 Camp and finished off their training, which included six days' battle practice and field work at the Bastard Trenches.

34th Battalion marching through Amesbury

34th Battalion marching through Amesbury

Some of the Original Wallabies – Salisbury Plain, England 1916. Section of C Company – 34th Infantry Battalion AIF.

Back Row: Private: 847 Lyle MURRAY; - Private: 903 Frank Dixon THOMAS; - Private: 774 Albert GREENFIELD; - Private: 828  James Muir LECKIE.

Third Row (standing): Private: 902 Christopher THOMAS; - Private: 875 Patrick PORTER; - Private: 751 Lial Edgar EDWARDS; - Private: 845 Robert MURRAY;

Private: 806 William Adolphus JOHNSTON; - Private: 716 Edward Mark BLATCHFORD; - Private: 730 Herbert Robert Duncan CHERRY.

Second Row (seated): Private: 756 Fred ENGLAND; - Private: 920 George Alexander WOODS; - Private: 769 James GRAHAM; - Private: 797 Charles William INGRAM.

Front Row: Private: 838 William David MORGAN; - Corporal:713 John BELL; - Private: 793 Victor HUDDLESTON

Trove

The 34th Battalion left Lark hill on the 21st November and en trained at Amesbury for Southampton, embarking on the S.S "Arundel". The transport section left by S.S. "Princess Victoria". The Battalion arrived at Le Harve, France on the 22nd November 1916. Disembarkation commenced at 8:00 am and the Battalion marched to No;1 camp on the Hill, arriving at 2:00 pm. The men carried heavy loads, in some cases amounting to miniature Q.M.' Stores. The march over cobblestones was very tiring, notwithstanding the many route marches which had been carried out at Larkhill. However, after bathing their feet and receiving treatment, as well partaking of a good meal, some spent a comfortable night. 

On the 11th December 1916 the 34th Battalion went into the Line again. "B" Company occupying the Subsidiary line instead of "D" Company, as in the first period. The weather was still cold and misty. The usual counter battery work was carried out by the Artillery and Trench Mortars. Some shells from our own "Heavies" dropped short and fell into our front Line. Sniping on both sides was again active. Extra Patrols were sent out to engage the strong fighting enemy Patrols in No Man's Land. The enemy was busy with his Working Parties and good work was also done by the wiring parties. Two extra Lewis Guns were added to the Front Line for the purpose of sweeping the enemy parapets and wire, in retaliation for enemy sniping which had become most active and causing trouble.

7th June 1917.

THE BATTLE OF MESSINES

The 3rd Australian Divisions first major offensive was at Messines Ridge on the 7th June 1917. The Australian 3rd Division was a part of the II Anzac Corps which was allotted to the first assault. The 25th New Zealand, 3rd Australian Division with the 4th Australian Division in reserve. The 4th Division were battle hardened troops who had fought many major battles. The 3rd Australian Division were having problems getting to the "jump off" point. The day before the 9th and 10th Infantry Brigades were bombarded by German Gas-Shells around Hill 63 and Ploegsteert Wood. Many of the Aussies were not wearing gas masks, but despite this they pressed on even though they received 500 casualties.

They made it to the "jump off" point but only just with some of the men from the 9th and 10th going straight over the top without stopping. The mines went up and the attack commenced behind a protective barrage. The II Anzac Corps were attacking on the right with their objective being the southern shoulder of the ridge which included Messines, the Dover and St Yves areas as far south to the east of Ploegsteert Wood.

Major General Sir John MONASH's 3rd Division had to contend with a tricky 3 mile approach out of Ploegsteert Wood and after the German gas attack, but they were not deterred. The 9th Infantry Brigade under Brigadier General: Alexander JOBSON and the 10th Infantry Brigade under Brigadier General W R NICHOLL had just made the jumping off point but some of the men did not stop, going straight into the assault from the approach march.

Their objective lay between St Yves and the Douve. The mines at Trench 127 and Trench 12 at Factory Farm were laid to aid this task. The explosions erupted a few seconds before zero hour and created craters of 200 feet in diameter, completely obliterating the German defence line as the 9th and 10th Infantry Brigades went over the top. The mine crates forced the 9th and 10th Brigades to veer to the left and right which caused some confusion with the main assault. It is testimony to the quality of training that every man knew the ground, tasks and objectives so well.

Private: 1804 John CARROLL 33rd Battalion, rushed the enemy's trench and bayoneted four of the German occupants. He then noticed a comrade in difficulties and went to his assistance, killing another German. He then attacked single handed a German Machine Gun Team, killing all three of them and capturing the gun. He later rescued two of his comrades who had been buried alive by German Shell Fire, and in spite of heavy shelling and machine gun fire he dug them out alive and saved them from certain death. John was awarded the Victoria Cross.

The German forward zone was completely engulfed and taken by the main assault. The two supporting battalions of each brigade then passed the leading battalion to continue the advance. The men were constantly re-supplied and the ridge was taken. There were many German prisoners taken during the offensive. The 3rd Division was well ahead with the 9th Infantry Brigade pushing on beyond Grey Farm, and on the right the 10th Infantry Brigade were veering left towards Septieme Barn north of Douve.

The German resistance was heavy but was generally brushed aside by tanks and artillery before the infantry had to become too involved. The 4th Bavarian Divisions Artillery had made little impact, but as the day wore on the 3rd Division and later the 4th Australian Division received many casualties from German artillery. (70% of all casualties during WW1 were from artillery).

By 9:00am nearly 6 hours after the assault began the Germans were in disarray, but there was a major problem as the Australians received less casualties as anticipated and when ordered to dig into the ridge they had so many men, that some could not find shelter. the 35th battalion were dug in around Seaforth Farm.

The second phase of the operation was to take the Oosttaverne Line. The 3rd Australian Division would now be in reserve with the 4th Division attacking. The 9th Infantry Brigade (33-34-35-36Bn) were near Thatched Cottage facing Warneton. The river Lys was to their right and the Ploegsteert Wood was now behind them.

Once their objectives were taken the troops consolidated. A barrage to stop and counter attack was shortened and caught three battalions which had to retire. By 9:00 pm this part of the Oosttaverne Line was abandoned. At 10:45 pm General: Alexander John GODLEY ordered the 3rd and 4th Divisions to retake it. This they did by the early hours of the 8th of June.

The Battle for Messines Ridge during May-June 1917 saw 35 officers and 1,631 other ranks loose their lives.

9th Infantry Brigade Casualties.

33rd Battalion. AIF 8 Officers 382 Other ranks
34th Battalion. AIF 10 Officers 378 Other ranks
35th Battalion. AIF 5 Officers 431 Other ranks
36th Battalion. AIF 9 Officers 421 Other ranks
9th Machine Gun Company. AIF 2 Officer 17 Other ranks
9th Light Trench Mortar Battery. 1 Officer 2 Other ranks

Field Dressing Station, Messines 07/06/1917

FIELD DRESSING STATION, MESSINES 7th June 1917. 

19th July 1917.

Casualties 2 killed "Corporal: 845 Robert MURRAY - Private: 2097 John Henry JAMIESON" and 5 wounded Private: 198 Edward Abraham "Ted" SULLIVAN in WELLINGTON TRENCH. Enemy firing gas shells intermittently all night. 

(34th Battalion War Diary)

James was Killed in Action on the 23rd July 1917 and is remembered with honour and is commemorated in perpetuity by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission at the Messines Ridge British Cemetery. 

Grave of Private: 828 James Muir Leckie

MESSINES RIDGE BRITISH CEMETERY

Family Information

James was a single 21 year old Baker from Teralba Road, West Maitland, N.S.W. upon his enlistment with the AIF. His father was recorded as his next of kin. 

Alexander Leckie. (1864-1946)

Mary Leckie. nee: Muir. (1869-1956)

Military Records

© Commonwealth of Australia (National Archives of Australia)

Under Construction: 27/10/2022-28/10/2022.

Private: 774 Albert GREENFIELD.

34th BATTALION AIF

Private: 774 Albert GREENFIELD.


Born: 16th August 1895. Atherton, Lancashire, England. 

Died: 16 December 1916. Killed in Action. Armentieres, France.


Father: Samuel Greenfield. (1868-1931) Died at Teralba, New South Wales, Australia. Death Cert:18677/1931.

Mother: Isabell Greenfield. nee: Higgins. (1870-1943) Died at West Wallsend, New South Wales, Australia. Death Cert:24577/1943.


INFORMATION

Albert Greenfield enlisted with the AIF on the 25th February 1916 and had been serving with the 15th Infantry Militia for the last 2 and a half years and was allocated to 3rd Reinforcements, C Company 34th Battalion AIF. Lyle embarked on board HMAT A20 "Hororata" on the 2nd May 1916 and disembarked at Devonport was reached on the 23rd June, the Battalion disembarked at Plymouth at 1:00 pm and en trained during the afternoon for Amesbury, arriving at midnight and marching to hutments at No: 1 Camp, Larkhill. Here the Battalion settled down to hard training, which included Route Marching, Trench Digging, Bomb Practice, Musketry and General Camp Routine. Later the Battalion moved to the No: 25 Camp and finished off their training, which included six days' battle practice and field work at the Bastard Trenches.

34th Battalion marching through Amesbury

34th Battalion marching through Amesbury

Some of the Original Wallabies – Salisbury Plain, England 1916. Section of C Company – 34th Infantry Battalion AIF.

Back Row: Private: 847 Lyle MURRAY; - Private: 903 Frank Dixon THOMAS; - Private: 774 Albert GREENFIELD; - Private: 828 James Muir LECKIE.

Third Row (standing): Private: 902 Christopher THOMAS; - Private: 875 Patrick PORTER; - Private: 751 Lial Edgar EDWARDS;Private: 845 Robert MURRAY;

Private: 806 William Adolphus JOHNSTON; - Private: 716 Edward Mark BLATCHFORD; - Private: 730 Herbert Robert Duncan CHERRY.

Second Row (seated): Private: 756 Fred ENGLAND; - Private: 920 George Alexander WOODS; - Private: 769 James GRAHAM; - Private: 797 Charles William INGRAM.

Front Row: Private: 838 William David MORGAN; - Corporal:713 John BELL; - Private: 793 Victor HUDDLESTON

Trove

The 34th Battalion left Lark hill on the 21st November and en trained at Amesbury for Southampton, embarking on the S.S "Arundel". The transport section left by S.S. "Princess Victoria". The Battalion arrived at Le Harve, France on the 22nd November 1916. Disembarkation commenced at 8:00 am and the Battalion marched to No;1 camp on the Hill, arriving at 2:00 pm. The men carried heavy loads, in some cases amounting to miniature Q.M.' Stores. The march over cobblestones was very tiring, notwithstanding the many route marches which had been carried out at Larkhill. However, after bathing their feet and receiving treatment, as well partaking of a good meal, some spent a comfortable night. 

On the 11th December 1916 the 34th Battalion went into the Line again. "B" Company occupying the Subsidiary line instead of "D" Company, as in the first period. The weather was still cold and misty. The usual counter battery work was carried out by the Artillery and Trench Mortars. Some shells from our own "Heavies" dropped short and fell into our front Line. Sniping on both sides was again active. Extra Patrols were sent out to engage the strong fighting enemy Patrols in No Man's Land. The enemy was busy with his Working Parties and good work was also done by the wiring parties. Two extra Lewis Guns were added to the Front Line for the purpose of sweeping the enemy parapets and wire, in retaliation for enemy sniping which had become most active and causing trouble.

This was the beginning of continuous sweeping of parapets on both sides during the whole period of holding this Sector of the Line. The 34th Battalion Patrols were contesting No Man's Land, which up to this time Fritz considered belonged to him. Heavy bombardments were carried out which caused considerable damage to the Trenches and Supports on both sides. quite a number of Men were being evacuated with trench feet through standing in the cold and wet, notwithstanding that dry socks were issued every day to the troops. during this period there were a number of casualties, including 6 K.I.A. and Lieutenant: Stephen Matthew HARRIS was the first the Officer wounded. Captain: Walter Hedland Valentine BAKER. and Lieutenant: Frederick Llewllyn EAST. and a number of men were also evacuated sick.

Albert was one of the 6 men Killed in Action during this action and is Commemorated in Perpetuity at the Cite Bonjean Military Cemetery, Armentieres, Lille, Nord Pas de Calais, France

Cite Bonjean Military Cemetery, Armentieres.

Family Information

Albert was a single 20 year old Miner from Killingworth via Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia upon his enlistment with the AIF. Albert was still serving with the 15th Infantry Militia. Brother Private: 3325 Stephen GREENFIELD 11th Reinforcements 1st Battalion AIF. Enlisted 13th July 1915 and was Killed in Action on the 22nd July 1916, France. 

Military Records

© Commonwealth of Australia (National Archives of Australia)

Under Construction: 25/10/2022-26/10/2022.

Private: 12584 Robert Harold MORRIS

35th DEPOT BATTALION AIF

Private: 12584 Robert Harold MORRIS


Born: 1894. Lithgow, New South Wales, Australia. Birth Cert:18941/1894.

Died: 3rd September 1916. Maitland Hospital, N.S.W. Australia. Death Cert:11463/1916.


Father: Samuel Morris. 

Mother: Mary A Morris. nee: 


INFORMATION

Robert Harold Morris served for 4 years with the 16th Infantry Battalion prior to his enlistment with the AIF on the 29th August 1916 where he was allocated to the 35th Training Battalion at the Rutherford Army Camp at West Maitland. 

Rutherford Army Camp 1916

Robert commenced his training at the Rutherford Camp but was accidently run over run over by a motor vehicle on the New England Road outside the entrance to the camp on the 2nd of September 1916. 


Maitland Daily Mercury (NSW : 1894 - 1939), Monday 18 September 1916, page 6

A SOLDIER'S DEATH.

KNOCKED DOWN BY MOTOR CAR.

The adjourned inquest touching the ' death of Robert Harold Morris, who was knocked down by a motor car near Rutherford 'camp on the 2nd instant, and who died In the Maitland Hospital on the evening of the following day, was held at the West Maitland Courthouse this afternoon by the Coroner (Mr. W. J. M. Fincham, P.M.). Loyal Clifford Marsh, a returned soldier, and the driver of the car was present in court. His interests were watched by Mr. W. J. Enright. Sergeant Dolman conducted the proceedings. on behalf of the police.

Major Kerr, senior Medical 0fficer at Rutherford Camp, deposed that between 11, and 11.30 p.m., on the 2nd Instant, Morris was admitted to the field hospital. He was soon by Captain Peter Murphy and Captain Brown, A. A.M.. C, immediately on admission. Captain Murphy had since embarked and gone to the front. The following morning between seven and eight o'clock  he saw the patient and several times during the day in consultation with the Officers mentioned. Deceased did not tell him anything further than that he had been knocked down by a motor. They formed the opinion that he was suffering from a rupture of some internal organ with severe internal haemorrhage.  He had some slight abrasions about the brow and left hip, and alight bruising over the liver on the right side. He was very pale and almost pulseless.  He suffered from shock, and it was considered that he was too weak to undergo an operation with any moderate prospects of success. As, however, he became worse during the day, it was thought an operation was his only chance. The patient assented and was conveyed to Maitland Hospital in the afternoon, where he was operated  upon.

This disclosed that the abdomen was full of blood, the liver ruptured. The patient died about an hour afterwards . The cause of death was Internal haemorrhage from a rupture of the liver, the result of an injury. Another soldier named Miller, who was admitted at the same time was also treated at the Camp Hospital . His injuries were only slight.  Loyal Clifford Marsh, a motor driver, stated that on the evening of Saturday the 2nd instant, he left the Garden Picture Palace about 10.15 or 10.20 p.m. Going down towards Rutherford Camp a car passed him on the top of the hill. He was under thick dust and slowed down, Suddenly he saw two soldiers appear in front of the car about seven or eight yards distant. He blew his horn and tightened the brakes, which acted alright. The men appeared to be pulling one another about. Suddenly they paused then one of them grabbed the other and pulled him into the middle of the road in front of the car. Both were bumped by the car. Witness pulled up the car, and found deceased lying five or six yards behind the car the other opposite him, three of four yards away.

Witness sent for assistance did everything he possibly could He had no possible chance of avoiding  the impact. _To Sergeant Dolman: He could not say exactly what time the pictures came out.  Five or Six Officers were in the car. He drove the car at an average of about ten miles an hour;  some times I went faster.  He did  not go more than 13 or 14 miles an hour.  He could not tell whether the men were intoxicated or not. He did not have time to form an opinion, the accident so suddenly. -To Mr Enright:  It was a foggy night. - To the Coroner: One man was unconscious when he went back to  him: the other was either  delirious or under the influence of  liquor. He had a bottle of rum in his pocket. The Inquest at this stage was adjourned until 5'oclock.

Trove

Lieutenant: Julien Frank De MEYRICK. (55th Battalion AIF)

Corporal: 60 Loyal Clifford MARSH. (A Squadron 6th Australian Light Horse) Driver of Car.

Private: 2613 William MILLER. (36th Battalion AIF) 

Garden Picture Palace, Maitland, New South Wales.

Maitland Daily Mercury (NSW : 1894 - 1939), Tuesday 19 September 1916, page 2

A SOLDIER'S DEATH.

KNOCKED DOWN BY A MOTOR VEHICLE

The adjourned inquest touching the death of Robert Harold Morris of  West Maitland a member of the Expeditionary Forces who was knocked down by a motor car near  Rutherford Camp on the 2nd instant and who died in the Maitland Hospital on the evening of the following day, was concluded at the West Maitland Court House yesterday afternoon by the Coroner Mr W.J.M. Fincham. P.M. 

The interests of Loyal Clifford Marsh a returned soldier and the driver of the motor car, were watched by Mr W. J. Enright. Sergeant Dolman stated that the accident happened at the military encampment at Rutherford. Captain Meyrick, attached to the military forces at Rutherford Camp stated that they joined the car at Maitland about 10:30 o'clock on the night in question in company of four other officers. 

The car was not driven any faster than 20 miles an hour. It was less than that. A fog was rising. When close to the entrance to Rutherford Camp, the car was running under 15 miles. Before the accident happened he saw two soldiers in the middle of the road. They were about 30 yards ahead, and appeared to be intoxicated: they were arm in arm and staggering about. He was sitting alongside the driver. The car was travelling about 5 miles an hour when the men were struck.

It travelled about three car lenghts after the collision. The bigger man appeared to stagger across the road , dragging deceased who was the smaller, in front of the car. The car passed over deceased. Miller was five or six paces behind the car when it was pulled up and deceased about ten paces. It appeared to him that the left lamp of the car struck Miller. Deceased seemed to crumple up and fall down in front of car. He could feel quite distinctly that the car passed over something.

To the Coroner: The driver of the car was perfectly sober, and he was sure that both head lights were burning. He was well on the left side of the roadway. The driver swerved the car to the left bank in an endeavour to avoid an accident. About two minutes, perhaps less, a car passed them and raised the dust. A fog was also rising. The dust interfered with the vision ahead momentarily. If the men had remained where they were when he saw them first there would not have been an accident. They were then towards the right of the middle of the road. As soon as the men began to pull across the road, apparently on noticing the car, he saw that an accident was inevitable.

To Mr Enright: So far as he could see the driver did everything possible to avoid the accident. William Miller, a private in the Rutherford Camp, stated that deceased and he were about town on that afternoon of September 2nd, and had several drinks: he could not say how many. He did not keep count. They had just had a drink when they thought they required it. They had none after 6 o'clock. They afterwards went to the Rutherford Hotel and stayed there for a while. They remained there until 9:30 or 10 o'clock and started off to walk to the camp, taking the road.

They were both about half drunk; he was never drunk in his life that he was aware of. He did not have a bottle with him, and he did not know that the deceased had one. They dodged a few cars along the road. They were walking arm in arm. He heard the horn sound and turned round and saw the car coming. He believed he did say he did not hear the horn. They ran into the gutter on the left hand side trying to avoid the car, but the car followed and knocked them down. That was all he remembered.

The car went over his legs. He remembered being taken to the camp hospital. He did not make any suggestion against the driver; he was no judge of pace, but thought he was going over 10 miles. He saw nothing to make him think that the driver of the car was careless.

The Coroner found that the death was due to injuries accidently received through being run over by a motor car.       

Lieutenant: Julien Frank De MEYRICK. (55th Battalion AIF)

Corporal: 60 Loyal Clifford MARSH. (A Squadron 6th Australian Light Horse) Driver of Car.

Private: 2613 William MILLER. (36th Battalion AIF) 

Robert died at Maitland Hospital on the 3rd September 1916 from a ruptured liver as a result of a Motor Vehicle Accident on the New England Highway at Rutherford, N.S.W.

Family Information

Robert was a single 22 year old Labourer who worked at the Port Stephens Naval Base upon his enlistment with the AIF..

Military Records

Under Construction: 16/03/2022.

Corporal: 2930 George HOUSTON

33rd BATTALION AIF

Corporal: 2930 George HOUSTON


Born: 1896. Wallsend, New South Wales, Australia.

Died: 12th October 1917. Killed in Action. Passchendaele, Belgium.


Father: John Houston. 

Mother Mary Houston.


INFORMATION

George Houston enlisted with the 34th Battalion AIF on the 2nd October 1916 but Deserted and re enlisted with the 33rd Battalion at the Liverpool Army Camp. His Warrant for his arrest was withdrawn on the 30th January 1919. George was allocated to the 6th reinforcement 33rd Battalion and embarking on 25th November 1916 from Sydney for England.

 

After training in England, Houston was TOS of the 33rd Battalion in France on 22.05.17, just in time for the Battle of Messines, which he fortunately survived, the 33rd suffering the worst casualties of the War.

 

Messines was followed by actions during the Third Battle of Ypres in October. Moving up to Zonnebeke on the night of 2/3 October, in the first week of the push against Broodseinde, the 33rd were assigned a support role as the narrowness of the front limited the role of the 3rd Division. On 12 October, the Allied attack progressed into a second phase and the 3rd Division was thrown into the assault during the First Battle of Passchendaele. Heavily depleted, with a frontage of just 242 men, they fought around Augustus Wood, where the Germans had established many pillboxes before heavy rain washed away any hope of an Allied breakthrough.

 

 

 George was buried in the Tyne Cot Cemetery, Passchendaele, Belgium, Grave XXII.C.23.  His parents requested that the following sentiment be inscribed on his headstone – ‘BELOVED BY ALL – DEEPLY MOURNED’.

 

Stockton War Memorial

George's War Medal: 57143 inscribed to CPL 2930 G.HOUSTON 33 BN AIF was acquired in October 2018 and is now in the Harrower Collection.

Family Information

George Houston, was a single 21-year old labourer from "Bonne Doon" Mitchell Street, Stockton, N.S.W, upon enlistment with the AIF. He had previous service with the 16th Infantry (Newcastle) were he served with A Company.

Military Records

Under Construction: 05/10/2018.

Lance Corporal: 2598 Stanley Lloyd HACKWORTHY

35th BATTALION AIF

Lance Corporal: 2598 Stanley Lloyd HACKWORTHY


Born: 9th October 1897. Islington, New South Wales, Australia. Birth Cert:36847/1897.

Died:  6th May 1918. Killed in Action, Morlancourt, France.


Father: Robert Hackworthy. (18..-1935) died North Sydney, N.S.W. Death Cert:22066/1935.

Mother: Alice Lavinia Hackworthy. nee:  King. (18..-1922) died Islington, N.S.W. Death Cert:15373/1922.


INFORMATION

100 years ago today, on the 6th May 1918, Lance Corporal Stanley Lloyd Hackworthy, 35th Battalion, bank clerk (ledger keeper, Commercial Banking Company of Australia, Gosford, N.S.W.), from "Stan Horace", 15 Anderton Street, Islington, New South Wales, was killed in action at the Second Battle of Morlancourt, Northern France.

Born at Islington, New South Wales on the 9th October 1897 to Robert (died 1935, residing at the Broadway Hotel, Lambton Road, Broadmeadow, N.S.W.) and Alice Lavinia (died 1922) Hackworthy, Stanley enlisted August 1916 at Gosford, N.S.W.

Stanley was wounded in action on the 12.10.1917 (1st Battle of Passchendaele), and his name is now inscribed on the Australian National Memorial, Villers-Bretonneux, France, where 10,773 names of soldiers of the Australian Imperial Force with no known grave are inscribed who were killed between 1916, when Australian forces arrived in France and Belgium, and the end of the war.

Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners' Advocate (NSW : 1876 - 1954), Tuesday 21 May 1918, page 5

http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article140975297

Stanley’s name is also inscribed on the Wickham Superior Public School Roll Of Honour, Wickham (Hawkins Oval) Soldiers' Memorial (photo), Book of Gold, Islington St. Mark's Anglican Church Roll of Honour and The Capt. Clarence Smith Jeffries (V.C.) and Pte. William Matthew Currey (V.C.) Memorial Wall. Name would be inscribed on the Newcastle Technical College Roll of Honour.

Stanley has been memorialised at his parent’s gravesite at Sandgate Cemetery (ANGLICAN 1-52. 47.)

http://sandgate.northerncemeteries.com.au/…/war-…/index.php…

https://issuu.com/gosfordcitylib…/…/hackworthy-stanley_lloyd

Lest We Forget.

(Gary Mitchell; May 2018)

Villers-Bretonneux War Memorial

Family Information

Stanley was a single 18 year old Bank Clerk at the Commercial Banking Company of Australia, Gosford, N.S.W and lived at "Stan Horace", 15 Anderton Street, Islington, N.S.W with his mother. Stanley served with the 16th Infantry Senior Cadets for 4 years. His parents Robert and Alice Hackworthy were married in 1886 at Sydney, N.S.W. and had 4 children. Horace L Hackworthy born 1892 at Hamilton, N.S.W. Birth Cert:16333/21892. Clarice L Hackworthy born 1895 at Islington, N.S.W. Birth Cert:8881/1895. Stanley Lloyd Hackworthy born 1897 at Islington, N.S.W. Birth Cert:36847/1897 and died during World War 1. Lancelot K Hackworthy born 1900  at Islington, N.S.W. Birth Cert:18097/1900.

Military Records

© Commonwealth of Australia (National Archives of Australia)

Under Construction: 06/05/2018.

Private: 1221 John George PEARCE.

35th BATTALION AIF

Private: 1221 John George PEARCE.


Born: 1898. Hartlepool, Wingate County, Duhram, England.

Died: 20th December 1918. Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Camperdown, New South Wales, Australia. Death Cert:14998/1918.

Buried: 22nd December 1918. Kurri Kurri Cemetery. (Methodist Section)


Father: Samuel Pearce. (18..-1921) Died at Kurri Kurri, N.S.W. Death Cert:9397/1921.

Mother: Mary Ann Pearce. nee: Berry. (18..-1924) Died at Kurri Kurri, N.S.W. Death Cert:6715/1924.


INFORMATION

John George Pearce served with the 16th Infantry prior to his enlistment with the 35th Battalion at Newcastle on the 3rd January 1916 and was an original member of the Battalion.  John was allocated to D Company at the Broadmeadow Camp on the 12th February and en trained for Sydney where the Battalion camped at the Royal Agricultural Show Ground. The next day they embarked on board HMAT A "Benalla" on the 1st May and disembarked at Plymouth, England on the 2nd July 1916.  The 35th were en trained during the afternoon for Amesbury, arriving at midnight and marching to hutments Durrington Army Camp Larkhill. Here the Battalion settled down to hard training, which included Route Marching, Trench Digging, Bomb Practice, Musketry and General Camp Routine.

John was admitted to Hospital on the 10th July and after his discharge he was to report to the 9th Training Battalion at Lark hill but failed to attend and was charged with being AWL from 7:15 am on the 7th August until 11th August 1916 and was fined 7 Days Pay by Captain: COX.

John returned to the 9th Training Battalion and rejoined his unit and was admitted to Hospital again on the 7th September where he remained until the 27th of September when he was discharged and marched out to rejoin the 35th Battalion at Lark hill. 

 

 

The 9th Infantry Brigade proceeded overseas for France on the 21st November 1916 via Southampton and disembarked at Le Harve, France on the 22nd November 1916. Disembarkation commenced at 8:00 am and the Battalion marched to into Camp on the Hill.

 

35th Battalion Band 1916.

On the 7th January John was Detached to the Railway Construction Depot at West Capell, France where he assisted with the construction of the AIF Light Rail Lines. After his secondment John re joined the 35th as they moved into the area near Messines. 

7th June 1917.

THE BATTLE OF MESSINES

The 3rd Australian Divisions first major offensive was at Messines Ridge on the 7th June 1917. The Australian 3rd Division was a part of the II Anzac Corps which was allotted to the first assault. The 25th New Zealand, 3rd Australian Division with the 4th Australian Division in reserve. The 4th Division were battle hardened troops who had fought many major battles.The 3rd Australian Division were having problems getting to the "jump off" point. The day before the 9th and 10th Infantry Brigades were bombarded by German Gas-Shells around Hill 63 and Ploegsteert Wood. Many of the Aussies were not wearing gas masks, but despite this they pressed on even though they received 500 casualties.

They made it to the "jump off" point but only just with some of the men from the 9th and 10th going straight over the top without stopping. The mines went up and the attack commenced behind a protective barrage. The II Anzac Corps were attacking on the right with their objective being the southern shoulder of the ridge which included Messines, the Dover and St Yves areas as far south to the east of Ploegsteert Wood.

Major General Sir John MONASH's 3rd Division had to contend with a tricky 3 mile approach out of Ploegsteert Wood and after the German gas attack, but they were not deterred. The 9th Infantry Brigade under Brigadier General: Alexander JOBSON and the 10th Infantry Brigade under Brigadier General W R NICHOLL had just made the jumping off point but some of the men did not stop, going straight into the assault from the approach march.

Their objective lay between St Yves and the Douve. The mines at Trench 127 and Trench 12 at Factory Farm were laid to aid this task. The explosions erupted a few seconds before zero hour and created craters of 200 feet in diameter, completely obliterating the German defense line as the 9th and 10th Infantry Brigades went over the top. The mine crates forced the 9th and 10th Brigades to veer to the left and right which caused some confusion with the main assault. It is testimony to the quality of training that every man knew the ground, tasks and objectives so well.

Private: 1804 John CARROLL 33rd Battalion, rushed the enemy's trench and bayoneted four of the German occupants. He then noticed a comrade in difficulties and went to his assistance, killing another German. He then attacked single handed a German Machine Gun Team, killing all three of them and capturing the gun. He later rescued two of his comrades who had been buried alive by German Shell Fire, and in spite of heavy shelling and machine gun fire he dug them out alive and saved them from certain death. John was awarded the Victoria Cross.

The German forward zone was completely engulfed and taken by the main assault. The two supporting battalions of each brigade then passed the leading battalion to continue the advance. The men were constantly re-supplied and the ridge was taken. There were many German prisoners taken during the offensive. The 3rd Division was well ahead with the 9th Infantry Brigade pushing on beyond Grey Farm, and on the right the 10th Infantry Brigade were veering left towards Septieme Barn north of Douve.

The German resistance was heavy but was generally brushed aside by tanks and artillery before the infantry had to become too involved.The 4th Bavarian Divisions Artillery had made little impact, but as the day wore on the 3rd Division and later the 4th Australian Division received many casualties from German artillery. (70% of all casualties during WW1 were from artillery).

By 9:00am nearly 6 hours after the assault began the Germans were in dissaray, but there was a major problem as the Australians received less casualties as anticipated and when ordered to dig into the ridge they had so many men, that some could not find shelter. the 35th battalion were dug in around Seaforth Farm.

The second phase of the operation was to take the Oosttaverne Line. The 3rd Australian Division would now be in reserve with the 4th Division attacking. The 9th Infantry Brigade (33-34-35-36Bn) were near Thatched Cottage facing Warneton. The river Lys was to their right and the Ploegsteert Wood was now behind them.

Once their objectives were taken the troops consolidated. A barrage to stop and counter attack was shortened and caught three battalions which had to retire. By 9:00 pm this part of the Oosttaverne Line was abandoned. At 10:45 pm General: Alexander John GODLEY ordered the 3rd and 4th Divisions to retake it. This they did by the early hours of the 8th of June.

The Battle for Messines Ridge during May-June 1917 saw 35 officers and 1,631 other ranks loose their lives.

9th Infantry Brigade Casualties.

33rd Battalion. AIF 8 Officers 382 Other ranks
34th Battalion. AIF 10 Officers 378 Other ranks
35th Battalion. AIF 5 Officers 431 Other ranks
36th Battalion. AIF 9 Officers 421 Other ranks
9th Machine Gun Company. AIF 2 Officer 17 Other ranks
9th Light Trench Mortar Battery. 1 Officer 2 Other ranks

Field Dressing Station, Messines 07/06/1917

FIELD DRESSING STATION, MESSINES 7th June 1917. 12th June 1917

John was Wounded in Action; 1st occasion during this action on the 6th June 1917 when he affected by Severe Gas Poisoning and was invalided from the Field Dressing Station to the 1st Australian General Hospital at Rouen. He received further treatment to relief his suffering from the Gas and upon his discharge John was marched in to the no: 11 Convalescent Depot  at Rouelles.

John rejoined his unit with the 35th Battalion on the 1st of October as the Brigade was preparing for the Big Push at Passchendaele. 

12th October 1917

THE BATTLE OF PASSCHENDAELE I

At 1:30 am rain showers began. By 2:30 am it was raining lightly but steadily, by 3:30 fairly heavily. the infantry moved through the pitch dark in single file. In some battalions each man held on to the equipment of the man ahead of him; if touch was broken, those in front had to come back. The news that the line as reported by the 66th division was not held only just reached the incoming troops. Accordingly, in the right brigade (9th) the leading Company Commanders Captain: Clarence Smith JEFFRIES. V.C. and Captain: Telford Graham GILDER M.C. both of the 34th Battalion stopped their men at the entrance to Broodseinde railway cutting, and themselves went to make sure that their column might not run into the enemy.

At Keerselaarhoek Cemetery they found the tape duly laid, and met the officer of the 36th Battalion who had laid it, and by 3:00 am the time set, the 34th battalion was extended on its jumping-off position. But during the previous halt and afterwards, as it lay on the tape, the battalion was persistently shelled and suffered many casualties.

The first shell killed three signallers. Lieutenant: Albert Leslie WATSON. a signal officer of the 34th Battalion, a brave and enterprising leader who also was at the head of the column was severely wounded and all his staff hit. After establishing a forward command post Lieutenant: Thomas Fraser BRUCE 36th Battalion was also killed. Lieutenant Colonel: John Alexander MILNE. 36th Battalion supervising the assembly was knocked down by a shell but continued to command. Captain, Chaplain: Charles MURPHY was also wounded.

(BEAN; History of World war 1 Vol IV p911) Charles Edwin Woodrow BEAN

Only one Australian Division, the 3rd, was wholly employed in the days offensive. but the division was to capture Passchendaele an in spite of the depressing conditions, it was eager to achieve the distinction of doing so. One unit carried the Australian flag,to be planted in Passchendaele, and although officers and men in general were not enthusiastic concerning such "stunts" the Commander-in-Chief had been informed, and had told General: MONASH that, when this flag was planted, the news would be immediately cabled to Australia.

Some keen spirits looked on the operation simply as a dash for Passchendaele. One young company commander of Monash's reserve battalion, the 33rd, in face of a strict prohibition, led on his company as soon as the barrage fell. Starting from a line 350 yards in rear of the general alignment, the 3rd Division was out of touch with its neighbours from the outset. The heavy shelling on the tapes had made orderly disposition there almost impossible, as German Machine-Guns, undisturbed by the barrage now opened immediately, no opportunity offered of restoring proper formation.

The 9th Brigade went forward in the utmost confusion and a terrible mix up as reported by Captain: Robert Derwent DIXON D.S.O 35th Battalion at 6:40 am and "Great Confusion" was the description given by Captain: Henry Vince CARR 35th Battalion. Even on the ridge, the mud was difficult, the hope, if there ever was one, of catching up before the quick barrage finished.

The 9th Infantry Brigade's intendered direction lay not along the ridge and the Passchendeale road, but diagonally across them, and parallel to the railway, which most of the brigade could not see. As the jumping-off line was practically at right angles to the ridge, the brigade tendered to advance alone the heights. The Machine-Gun fire at the start came, on the 9th Brigade's right, from the ruined house near Defy Crossing; on its centre from, "Hillside Farm"; and on its left from Augustus Wood.

The pillbox opposite the centre was supported from the rear by a trench in which were Germans with Machine-Guns, and here occurred a delay which threatened to wreck to whole attack. it was not until an hour after the programme time that these places were rushed by the neighbouring portion of the line under Captain: Henry Vince CARR and Captain: Robert Derwent DIXON. D.S.O of the 35th Battalion. The trench contained 35 Germans and 4 Machine-Guns. Part of the line was also held up by a pillbox close to Passchendaele road near the highest point of the ridge.

Here there was practically no shelter from attack, but Captain Clarence Smith JEFFRIES. V.C. of the 34th Battalion managed to organise a party, with Sergeant: 21 James BRUCE and another N.C.O Corporal: 2036 Vere Cummings STEVENSON and a dozen men, and outflanking it, charged the place from the rear, capturing 25 Germans and 2 Machine-Guns. These actions set free the advance. The pillbox captured by Captain Clarence Smith JEFFRIES. V.C. being not far short of the first objective, the 34th Battalion dug in there.

Great loss had been uncured; the 34th Battalion had only three officers left and there were wide gaps in the line. The right flank had swung far away from the railway, along which the 4th Division was attacking, but on the left Captain: Telford Graham GILDER M.C. of the 34th Battalion who had been wounded by a Machine-Gun bullet, but was carrying on found the 10th Brigade digging in slightly to his left under Captain: LATCHFORD, 38th Battalion, and fell back seventy yards to join it.

The Advance to the second objective was to begin at 8:25, the low clouds had opened, and fleecy cirrus with patches of blue were widening overhead and the sun had come out. The 9th Brigade had been so late in reaching the first objective that, while most of the 34th Battalion dug in, the 35th Battalion, allotted for the second phase, moved straight on. Standing on the Passchendaele road, Captain: Henry Vince CARR and Captain: Robert Derwent DIXON. D.S.O of the 35th Battalion endevoured to decide where the barrage then was; at first Carr thought it may be behind them, but finally decided that it was ahead.

The confusion at the start had split the brigade into mixed parties of all battalions and many of the 34th went on with the 35th, the main body of which, about 100 in all, now advanced along the south-eastern side of the ridge in order to catch the barrage. The hour was probably a little before that for the second advance. A German Machine-Gun in the gap between the brigade's right and the railway immediately opened with deadly effect.

Major: John Bruce BUCHANAN 36th Battalion, the senior forward officer was killed. At this critical juncture Captain: Clarence Smith JEFFRIES. V.C. of the 34th Battalion, again accompanied by Sergeant: 21 James BRUCE, led out a few men from the first objective and made for the gun. it was shooting in short bursts, and he was able to work up fairly close. Seizing a moment when it was firing to the north, he and his men rushed at it from the west. It was switched round, killing him, and sending his men to the ground.

But when its fire eased they worked round it, rushed the position, seized 25 Germans and 2 Machine-Guns. This gallant and effective action Captain: Clarence Smith JEFFRIES. V.C. was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross for removing the chief danger to the advance along the crest, but as soon as the 35th Battalion crossed to the eastern side of the hill it became the target of a number of field and heavy guns which, from the hedges and other cover in various parts of the landscape, fired over open sights.

After passing a corpse on its right, the 35th Battalion settled down on what its officers took to be the second objective, although on the extreme right they were actually short of the first. Captain: Henry Vince CARR, now the senior officer on the spot, reported; 8:35. On objective, with about 100 Captain: Robert Derwent DIXON. DSO and three officers. Casualties 25 or 30 per cent. Captain: Henry Charles Dight CADELL M.C   Lieutenant: Charles Teesdale MAIN   Lieutenant: Keith Maitland DAY reported killed and Lieutenant: Frank HORNE   Lieutenant: Christopher Kyffin MEARS  Lieutenant: Charles John HENRY were wounded. Prisoners sent back 400-500. Contact on flanks uncertain, being heavily shelled.

Three posts were established under surviving officers, right Lieutenant: Norman Beade D'ARCY M.C centre Lieutenant: Joseph Francis ADAMS left Lieutenant: Harold Sydney WYNDHAM. In this brigade the battalion for the final objective was the 36th, and a report came along that it had gone through. Actually, it had advanced with the 35th, but, on the left, penetrated to the second objective, which bad been reconnoitered during the previous halt by the commander of the company Captain Robert Austin GOLDRICK. M.C.

He went up the road towards Passchendaele. The barrage, he said afterwards was no hindrance to him, although he left the line lying as close to it as possible "or where he thought it was." He was unable to detect the intensification of the barrage for the second phase, but led his men forward at the proper hour.

As no other battalion was there, he now established the line with its left on the road 600 yards from the church, about the point reached by the 66th Division's troops on October 9th. In front of the position Captain: Robert Austin GOLDRICK. M.C. and Lieutenant E.H FLEITER (39th Battalion) found hidden in a shell hole men of the 66th Division. One had a broken arm, the other trench-feet. They took the Australians at first for Germans. When reassured,"we knew the Australians would come," they said, 'We prayed hard."

From the direction of the church, which lay straight down the highway, no fire came. two Germans ran up the road and surrendered. South-east of the village, along the Moorslede road, were the Germans who seemed "very windy," and near the road two 5.9-inch howitzers began to blaze at the troops digging in.

The 9th Brigade had taken its second objective and the 10th its first, but the position of the officers in charge of these advanced lines was full of anxiety. On the eastern slope Captain: Henry Vince CARR 35th Battalion, the senior officer in this part of the 9th Brigade's front, could see the 4th Division somewhat ahead of its right, and by 10:55 he had discovered that the 36th was on the left, but farther left than the 10th Brigade was far behind on its first objective . The German Guns ahead were sniping with dreadful accuracy. Carr on the western slope, sent back for instructions: "what am I to do?"

Word of the true situation reached headquarters slowly. As on the 9th, the first news was all encouraging. General: MONASH in the Ypres ramparts heard shortly after 7 that both brigades were "well away"; but by 8:26 he had ample evidence that the first objective was taken. At 9:25 the intelligence officer examining prisoners (Lieutenant: Frederick Morley CUTLACK Official War Correspondent) reported having heard from the wounded men that the second objective had been reached.

At 10:28 headquarters was informed of a statement of a wounded man, that the 38th Battalion had gone through. A further report that Australians had been seen at Crest Farm although quickly contradicting but probably true nevertheless. Which confirmed Monash's impression that his division was succeeding. Concerning the New Zealand brigade on his left, however, there was no word until, at 10:50, there arrived the tragic information that the New Zealand Division was stopped by the enemy alone the entire front.

Monash has already heard at 9:55 that the 10th Brigade was held up by fire from Bellevue Spur. Believing that his division was still advancing, he asked that every gun that the New Zealand Division could spare should be turned upon that ridge to suppress the fire. Meanwhile, he would order the reserve (39th) battalion of the 10th Brigade to be ready to assist in holding the ground already won. The reserve battalion the (33rd) of the 9th Brigade he was still keeping back to assist in the capture of Passchendaele.

Shortly after noon news of the true situation arrived. Lieutenant Jackson of the 40th Battalion had established at Waterfields pillbox near the Ravebeek a forward report-centre from which a series of messages, admirably accurate, was flashed by lamp to the headquarters of Lieutenant Colonel Lord of the 40th Battalion. Thus Brigadier General McNicoll of the 10th Brigade was able to inform Monash of the precise position of Giblin's Line. He added that the situation was very serious and the casualties very heave. At the same time from the front line of the 9th Brigade arrived a pigeon message, sent by Captain: Richard GADD of the 36th Battalion.

We are on the Blue Line (second objective) with composite force all three battalions, both flanks in the air.

The New Zealand Division was to make a second attempt at 3:00 pm, and Monash was of the opinion that from the 9th Brigade, well forward on the ridge, patrols might still work northward around Crest Farm. His reserve, the 33rd Battalion (9th Brigade), was accordingly ordered to attempt this at 4:30 pm and the 10th Brigade's forward line being meanwhile reinforced by its own reserve, the 39th Battalion.

These orders went out, but none of them were fulfilled. The New Zealand Division had been defeated by obstacles which no hastily renewed bombardment could have overcome. no infantry in the world could have crossed the Ravebeek mud, penetrated the dense wire, and attacked the crowded pillboxes of Bellview with the assistance of a barrage which did not even screen the advance. No blame can attach to the artillery. Its commander, according to the New Zealand official history, had reported on the previous day that his guns might be unable to give efficient support.

This magnificent division, which lost nearly 3,000 men, had been held up in almost exactly the same position as the 49th three days before-the left brigade penetrating half-way to the first objective, the right stopped almost at the start.The Germans were reinforcing. The New Zealand battalion commanders knew that their men had no chance of succeeding by renewed attack, and the order was eventually cancelled.

As for the Australians, of the two battalions that MONASH had now ordered to participate, the 39th had already to a large extent been involved in the fighting, and the 33rd, endevouring to reach its position of readiness for outflanking Passchendaele,had suffered great loss. No less than 6 of its Officers were killed or mortally wounded. Captain: Wilfred Frank HINTON in command of the forward company, Lieutenant Leonard Rockley BROWNLOW  Lieutenant: Thomas Acheson ARMSTRONG   Lieutenant: Albert George KILPATRICK  Lieutenant William REES-REYNOLDS and Lieutenant: Norman Francis GOBLE.

By the time Lieutenant Colonels Henderson DSO 39th Battalion and MORSHEAD attempted to carry Monash's orders, they found that the attacking force of both brigades was back almost at its starting point. What had happened was as follows.

Neither Major: GIBLIN near the Ravenbeek nor Captain: Henry Vince CARR on the ridge had received their messages sent several hours earlier. The 9th Brigade's line was still being battered by the German Guns. Captain: Richard GADD 36th Battalion, whose troops were being wiped out, informed Captain: Henry Vince CARR 35th Battalion that Lieutenant Colonel: John Alexander MILNE D.S.O 36th Battalion had now come forward to Hillside Farm. CARR accordingly sent Captain: Robert Derwent DIXON. D.S.O with GADD to explain to Milne the desperate nature of their situation. Milne said that he would try to get their troops relieved after dark, but till relieved they must hold on.

(BEAN; History of Word War 1 Vol IV page 921) Charles Edwin Woodrow BEAN

Meanwhile, however, the German artillery was annihilating some parts of their line. All leaders of Carr's three posts were out of action. Lieutenant: Joseph Francis ADAMS was Killed in Action and Lieutenant: Norman Beade D'ARCY M.C and Lieutenant: Harold Sydney WYNDHAM were wounded. Of the remaining officers of the 36th Battalion, Major: John Bruce BUCHANAN and Lieutenant: Fredrick William PUTNEY had been Killed in Action and Captain: Robert Austin GOLDRICK M.C wounded. Farther back Lieutenant: Sydney COOK had been Killed in Action and Lieutenant: William WAND and Lieutenant: Herbert Reginald MAILER were wounded.

At 3 o'clock rain began to fall steadily. at 3:15 pm Captain: Richard GADD 36th Battalion, thought agreeing with  Captain: Henry Vince CARR 35th Battalion that to hold on meant annihilation, refused, in view of his Colonel's orders, to retire. Carr consented to wait while Gadd again sent word to Lieutenant Colonel: John Alexander MILNE D.S.O. Carr himself at 12: 30 had sent Captain Robert Derwent DIXON.  D.S.O to the headquarters of the 35th Battalion at " Seine", from which no word had been received all day.

At 3:45 pm, no reply having come from Milne, and Dixon not having returned as he had been kept at 35th Battalion headquarters awaiting the arrival of an order from brigade headquarters concerning the projected operation by the reserve battalion, Gadd agreed to withdraw and Carr sent along the line a note: The 35th Battalion will retire.

When visiting Gadd, Carr had warned the troops of the probable order to withdraw, and he now saw that the left had already begun to retire. He told men whom he passed to get back as fast as they could to the 34th Battalion (which he believed to be on the first objective). Captain: William James GORDON M.C 36th Battalion, strongly dissatisfied with the order, went straight to Lieutenant Colonel: John Alexander MILNE D.S.O urged that the forward position was tenable, and with Milne and Major: John Martin HAWKEY M.C rushed out to stop the withdrawal. But it was too late.

The 34th was not, as Captain: Henry Vince Carr 35th Battalion, believed, on the first objective. The Commander of the line, Captain: John William RICHARDSON 34th Battalion, on hearing of the extreme weakness of the force at the second objective, had reinforced it. He and his only remaining officer's Lieutenant: James Clement BURGES  Lieutenant: Bruce Gray McKENZIE   Lieutenant: John Abbott LONGWORTH had all been Killed in Action while organising on the first objective, and the first objective now lay empty. The retiring troops, being without orders as to the position to be taken up, streamed back past Milne's headquarters.

All that Hawkey, Gordon, Gadd, and others could then do was to lead a fraction of them forward again to the first objective, where they remained during the night. Captain: Robert Derwent DIXON.  D.S.O. with Captain: John Grieve PATERSON adjutant of the 35th, went up to organise the 35th there, but could find none of it's men. When eventually re-formed the remnant of the 35th was temporarily attached as a Company to the 33rd Battalion.

9th-12th October 1917 saw the 3rd Division, 9th and 10th Infantry Brigade in action during the Battle of Passchendaele, which saw massive losses and suffering in the Australian ranks. The casualties numbered 3,199 men in 24 hours during the height battle. The 34th Battalion lost every officer that day, either killed or wounded including their Medical Officer, Major: Gother Robert Carlisle CLARKE and some of his staff were killed while dressing the wounded. The spirit of some of the wounded is illustrated by the case of Corporal: 3170 Winsleigh Alexander MURRAY   35th Battalion, (formerly a Methodist Minister from Newcastle) gave up his place in a queue waiting for stretcher bearers and was never heard of again.

The Battle of Passchendaele saw 60 Officers and 1,322 other ranks loose their lives.

9th Infantry Brigade Casualties.

33rd Battalion. AIF 11 Officers 273 Other ranks
34th Battalion. AIF 15 Officers 323 Other ranks
35th Battalion. AIF 18 Officers 296 Other ranks
36th Battalion. AIF 15 Officers 383 Other ranks
9th Machine Gun Company. AIF 1 Officer 36 Other ranks
9th Light Trench Mortar Battery. - Officer 11 Other ranks

John was Wounded in Action; 2nd occasion during this action on the 12th October 1917 when he received a Gun Shot Wound to the Head and a Fractured Skull and was treated by the 69th Field Ambulance who evacuated him by Stretcher Bearers to the 41st Casualty clearing Station for further treatment. After John's condition was stabilized he was transferred to the 1st Canadian General Hospital at Estaples the next day and invalided to England on the 25th October 1917.

John was admitted to the Onterio Military Hospital at Orpongton, England for surgery to his Head and after his discharge he was marched in to the No; 2 Command Depot for return to Australia. John embarked from England on the 12th May 1918 on board the "Ruahine". John was admitted to the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital.

15th November 1918.

Informant: Private: 1221 John George PEARCE.  D Company 35th Battalion AIF described Private: 7195 Ishmael BRAITHWAITE as about 5'6" high, medium build, aged about 24/25. Thought to have come from Cootamundra. Informant states that they both came from D Company, No.16 Platoon and the same section. On 12.10.17 the Battalion was in action at Passchendaele. Before the hop over Informant, BRAITHWAITE and three others were in a shell hole. 

While they were there the Germans opened up a barrage and a shell lifted them all out of the shell hole. BRAITHWAITE wanted to go back but just afterwards our barrage opened and then said to his mates "Come on, we'll go over", meaning that they should follow the barrage. After starting they parted by some means and took different directions, and that was the last that Informant saw of BRAITHWAITE.   

Just after they parted Informant saw a couple of shells lob over in BRAITHWAITES direction, and it is Informant's opinion that he was killed. He could learn nothing more although he made enquiries.

(Stretcher's Note. BRAITHWAITE was posted as missing for some time)

No: 2 Ward, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital.

Sydney.

John was discharged from the AIF on the 4th January 1919 which was nearly 2 weeks after his death?.

Family Information

John was a single 18 year old Wheeler from Hepburn-Newtown, Weston, N.S.W. upon enlistment. John served with the 16th Infantry at the time of his enlistment with the AIF and was a member of the Weston Band and after his enlistment became a member of the 35th Battalion Band.

Military Records

Commonwealth War Graves Records

 

Under Construction: 16/04/2018.

Private: 443 Austin Vincent GARVEN.

                                                   35th BATTALION AIF

Private: 443 Austin Vincent GARVEN.


Born: 1897. Hamilton, New South Wales, Australia. Birth Cert:31776/1897.

Died: February 1918. 13 Nott Street, Merewether, New South Wales, Australia. Death Cert:1506/1918.

Buried: 7th February 1918. Sandgate Cemetery, Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. 


Father: James Garven. (1867-1940) Died Newcastle, N.S.W. Death Cert:11315/1940.

Mother: Annie E Garven. nee: Chapman.


INFORMATION

A forgotten digger of the Great War. Pte Austin Vincent Garven, 35th Bn, pastry cook from "Leixlip", 13 Nott Street, Merewether, New South Wales and 22 Dumaresq Street, Newcastle West, N.S.W., was laid to rest at Sandgate Cemetery on the 7th February 1918. I believe his age to be about 21 as I have not located a record of birth, stated to be Hamilton, N.S.W. Austin enlisted January 1916 from Newcastle, N.S.W., and returned home August 1916, discharged medically unfit with bronchitis. His name has been inscribed on the Merewether (Mitchell Park) Memorial Gates and the Hamilton Superior Public School Roll of Honour. For 98 years Mr Garven has been resting in an unmarked grave, so I have placed a wooden cross adorned with poppies on the gravesite, taken a photo of the grave and uploaded the photo onto the Northern Cemetery website as a permanent record of his service. Austin received a Military funeral. His older brother Raymond Horace also served 1st A.I.F.
https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/138155898…
https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/138149356…
Photos taken by Ken Shilling, available from “Remembrance” CD, at the Newcastle Family History Society.
http://sandgate.northerncemeteries.com.au/…/sear…/index.php…
Lest We Forget.

(Gary Mitchell; February 2018)

Austin's War Medal  was donated to the Australian War Memorial in Canberrra ACT 

Merewether Park War Memorial

Hamilton Superior Public School

Grave of Austin Vincent Garven. Sandgate Cemetery, N.S.W

Family Information

Austin was a single 18 year old Pastry Cook from "Leixlip", 13 Nott Street, Merewether, N.S.W upon enlistment with the AIF. Albert served for 3 years with the Senior Cadets with the 16th Infantry. at Newcastle. His parents James and Annie Garven were married in 1892 at Newcastle, N.S.W. Marriage Cert: 5555/1892. Raymond Garven born 1894 at Merewether, N.S.W. Birth Cert:23630/1894 and died 1968 at Belmont, N.S.W. Death Cert:17695/1968. Austin Vincent Garven born 1897 at Hamilton, N.S.W. Birth Cert:31776/1897. and died 1918 at Merewether, N.S.W. Death Cert:1506/1918.

Military Records

© Commonwealth of Australia (National Archives of Australia)

Under Construction: 07/02/2018-11/02/2021.

Private: 1634 Adrian CROESE.

 35th BATTALION A.I.F.

Private: 1634 Adrian CROESE.


Born:  1891. Mayfield, New South Wales, Australia.

Died: 11th March 1917. Killed in Action. France.


Father: Cornelius Croese. (18..-1938)

Mother: Jane Croese. nee: (18..-1948)  


INFORMATION

Adrian Croese served with the 16th Infantry prior to his enlistment with the 35th Battalion AIF on the 16th February 1916 at Newcastle and embarked with the 1st Reinforcements to the 35th Battalion on the 1st of May 1916 and was taken-on-strength by the 35th Battalion, in England, on the 21st of July 1916.

He was Killed-in-Action at Armentieres on the 11th of March 1917 and is buried in the Cite Bonjean Military Cemetery.

Photograph was printed in the Sydney Mail, dated 18th April 1917.

(Bill Durant; 2017)

101 years ago today, on the 11th March 1917, Pte. Adrian Croese, 35th Bn ((Lewis Machine Gun Section), lineman from Crebert Street, Mayfield, New South Wales, was killed in action, age 26. Born Mayfield on the 26th December 1890 to Cornelius (died 1938) and Jane (died 1948) Croese, Adrian enlisted February 1916 at Newcastle, N.S.W., and is now resting at Cite Bonjean Military Cemetery, Armentieres, France. Plot V Row A Grave 35. Adrian’s name has been inscribed on the Waratah Park Memorial Gates, Mayfield Public School Roll of Honour, Newcastle Postal Employees Roll of Honour and The Capt. Clarence Smith Jeffries (V.C.) and Pte. William Matthew Currey (V.C.) Memorial Wall. Mr. Croese is memorialised at his parent’s gravesite at Sandgate Cemetery. Younger brother Thomas (Reg No-393) buried at the cemetery.
http://sandgate.northerncemeteries.com.au/…/war-…/index.php…
Lest We Forget.

(Gary Mitchell; March 2018)

Cite Bonjean Military Cemetery, Armentieres, France.

Sandgate Cemetery, Newcastle, N.S.W.

Family Information

Adrian CROESE, a 25 year old linesman from Mayfield in NSW.

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© Commonwealth of Australia (National Archives of Australia)

Under Construction; 26/08/2017.