My
mother Joan spoke about her uncle Wally as a frail man who suffered ‘shell-shock’ after
the first world war. No letters from Wally have survived and his war experiences
were not discussed, however, some understanding of the place war service had in
his life is possible.
A proud new recruit. Ready to serve his State and his country. |
Photos
of a Wally in uniform prior to his embarkation show him as bright and
confident, while those from the 1920s show a sombre though well-dressed man. ‘Shell-shock’
was his niece’s summary of how the experience changed him. It was a commonly
used phrase of ‘consolation and legitimation’ as families tried to make some sense
of the changes they saw in loved ones.
Serious and dapper: Wally about 1925, surrounded by Dorrie his youngest sister (left) sister-in-law Evelyn, sister Phil (seated) and nieces Margaret and Joan. |
Walter
was born in 1893 and when he joined the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) in 1915,
he was the fifth of the 8 surviving children of English migrants Henry and MaryMarsh and the middle boy, between Fred born in 1891 and Frank born in 1896.
Wally
grew up in Adelaide where his father had a candle factory and made a
comfortable life for his family. His eldest brother Henry died after an
epileptic seizure while on his way to the factory in 1899. The death had a
profound effect; three of Wally’s sisters became nurses and his father’s
interest in business waned. Henry senior moved to remote Coomandook to take up
wheat farming, with misplaced idealism, but Wally stayed on as a clerk in the
factory.
The
farm soil was poor and after the first-year productivity sank. Fred and Wally
joined the farm in 1908 and Frank in 1911. Soon after, Fred left for India. Wally
was ‘not naturally suited to outdoor or manual labour’ according to his brother
Frank, but presumably felt some obligation to help his parents.
After
war was declared, Fred joined the Indian Army. Wally’s sister Elsie joined the 2nd
Australian General Hospital, Nursing Staff and in December 1914 embarked for Egypt
while he was helping complete the wheat harvest.
In
April and May 1915, South Australian papers carried dozens of stories of Gallipoli
and the prominent role of the State-based 10th battalion. Wally’s mother
had encouraged Fred to leave the unproductive farm and later would say the same
thing to Frank so may have had a similar conversation with Wally.
Wally
signed up on
27 May 1915 and was assigned to the 8th reinforcements for the 10th
Battalion. Another sister Philippa (Phil) signed up in July and was assigned to
the 3rd Australian General Hospital and Reinforcements embarking for Lemnos, a
Greek island and a staging point for Gallipoli, in August. A month later, Wally
also embarked for Lemnos and in October he was ‘taken on strength’ with the
10th Battalion after their evacuation to Lemnos in November 1915. He was now
part of a legendary battalion and shared something of the experience with Phil.
Wally
would be co-located twice more in similar locations to his sisters, in Egypt
and France, and while this would have given them at least some broadly shared
memories there is no direct evidence of their meeting.
Whatever
excitement Wally felt was jolted after he landed in Alexandria Egypt in late December.
He was hospitalised at the No 2 Australian General Hospital in the Ghezireh
Palace in Cairo with ‘extreme’ jaundice but ‘cured’ by 16 January. He was
admitted to the Red Cross Convalescent Hospital, in Montazah Palace, Alexandria
for a week in March with the same complaint.
Jaundice
first broke out in 1915 among troops in Egypt, spreading rapidly to Gallipoli
and Lemnos and more prevalent amongst men who had not been exposed to it in
their youth.
After
Gallipoli, most of the AIF was sent to the war’s main theatre, the Western
Front in France and Belgium. The 10th Battalion landed in Marseilles,
arriving in Godewaersvelde, by train on 5 April 1916 and commenced regular
training.
On
19 May the Battalion’s billets were under ‘heavy bombardment’ with three killed
and seven wounded. It was Wally’s first experience of being near death on the
battlefield. The Battalion Diary for May notes the continuing wet, regular
skirmishes and one further death.
Wally’s
war experience took a more dramatic turn with his participation in the worst
fighting of the war in the Battle for Pozières in July 1916.
The Battalion suffered 58
deaths, 264 wounded and another 46 missing.
Wally survived without physical injuries but memories of the deaths of many comrades and visions of once green fields and a busy town turned to lifeless quagmires must have filled his later dreams.
Wally survived without physical injuries but memories of the deaths of many comrades and visions of once green fields and a busy town turned to lifeless quagmires must have filled his later dreams.
No place for a clerk. The main street of Pozieres, December 1916. The town was destroyed in the fighting to save it. |
The
battalion was reorganised in August, a necessity after the loss of so many men,
followed by regular training and successful attacks. In October 10 men were
killed and another 70 wounded.
The
harsh trench environment brought health risks which developed into large-scale
medical problems. One was ‘trench foot’, an infection and swelling of feet
exposed to long periods of cold dampness, sometimes leading to amputation.
In
early November the Battalion undertook road making, coped with extensive mud and
‘trenches in [a] shocking state’. On 11 November, 150 were listed as ‘wounded’
mostly with foot trouble. Wally was admitted to the field hospital on 10 November
and on the 28th arrived at the Standing Hospital, Amiens, diagnosed with
‘trench feet’. On 2 December 1916, he embarked at Calais and was admitted to the
3rd Australian General Hospital, Brighton, England, where his sister
Phil had been relocated, for further treatment.
Australian ambulance men at Bernafay, France, carrying their comrades suffering from trench feet to transport which will take them to hospital. |
Wally was granted leave from 8-23 January 1917, perhaps spent with Phil, returning to hospital on 27 January where he presumably remained until 23 March when he joined the new 70th Battalion in Wareham remaining with them until it was disbanded in September then re-joined the 10th Battalion in France mid-October.
On
10 February 1918 he was diagnosed with a highly contagious whitlow infection in
the forefinger of his right hand presumably affecting his ability to shoot. He
went to the ship hospital Boulogne and after convalesce re-joined the unit on
26 April.
From
May to July the Unit Diary shows more detailed planning, training, regular
church parades, successes in battle and low casualties. On 23 August, during a
major advance at Bray Sur-Somme, Wally suffered a gunshot wound to the right forearm.
The following day he was invalided to the General Hospital at Havre and two
weeks later to the Sutton Veny Hospital in Wiltshire, taking leave from 25
September to 9 October. He re-joined the 10th on 29 November 1918
where he would wait until his return to Australia. Several courses of study were offered
at this time (including bookkeeping, dairy farming, French and wheat farming) and
it is likely that he took part in some - though probably not wheat farming.
He
returned to England and on 24 April boarded the Armagh for Australia.
His only formal discipline occurred on this journey home when he was fined two weeks’
pay for failing to ‘attend the Guard Mounting’ in Durban on 3 May, ‘after being
duly warned.’ Another soldier charged with the same offence on the same day was
Private R. W. Ingleton also of the 10th Battalion. Perhaps the two were looking
forward to a day in Durban together. He disembarked in Adelaide on 16 May and
was discharged on 8 July 1919.
By
the time the war ended the ‘fighting 10th’ had taken a prominent
part in the worst of the fighting at Gallipoli and Pozières, both iconic
locations, and was the most decorated of the South Australian Units. It was
something to be proud of.
It
is no surprise that Wally did not apply for farming land through the Soldier
Settlement Scheme; he had probably had enough of the outdoors.
In
1925 he married Catherine Gladys Saunders in a small ceremony at the
Congregational Manse in Alberton, Port Adelaide. The two had had a long, quiet,
apparently isolated and childless marriage. Wally and his wife visited Fred in India
in 1926 with his sister Phil who later left him $600 in her will, suggesting
that their shared experience strengthened their relationship and the same time
as it distanced them both from the rest of their family.
Wally
lived in the same house from his marriage until his death. Through that half-century,
he worked as a ‘clerk’, the trade he learned in his father’s factory.
Adelaide Advertiser, 19 June 1973. |
Wally
died ‘suddenly’ on 17 June 1973 a month after his 80th birthday and
was buried in a private ceremony the following day. His life had been defined,
but personally diminished, by his membership of the 10th battalion.
References:
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ReplyDeleteVery interesting and poignantly presented.
ReplyDeleteThanks very much. I'm glad you liked it.
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