Friday 30 January 2015

The 7th and 8th Battalions at Ismailia on the Suez Canal



The 8th Battalion recruited from Ballarat, central and Western Victoria.  Lieutenant Colonel William Bolton, of Ballarat, originally led the Battalion, and there are many Ballarat names in the Battalion’s rolls.  The 7th and the 5th Battalions also carried recruits from Ballarat and district.


The Battalions were encamped at Mena in Egypt and “enjoying” their desert training (things had become monotonous) when news was received at headquarters of a large Turkish force advancing across the Sinai Desert, aiming to capture the Suez Canal and threaten Cairo.  British commanders called up reinforcements to protect the canal around Ismailia, and the reinforcements selected were the two country battalions of the 2nd Brigade – the 8th and the 7th.


Colonel Bolton wrote of the excitement aroused by news received at midnight on 3rd February of the move to the Suez Canal:


…[the Battalions were] to be ready to march out of camp in one hour…Talk about excitement in the camp…long before the hour was up these two battalions were out on parade and ready to move off…men delighted with prospect of change…whole camp turned out of bed and lined the road to wish us luck and express envy and regret at not going with us 1


But the excitement was short lived. The Turkish forces were withdrawing by the time the Battalions arrived. Despite being detailed for a pursuit across the Western Sinai Desert, the orders were soon cancelled, and there were “plenty of disappointed faces” as one soldier noted in his diary.


In fact the Turkish advance across the Sinai was disastrous for them, with thousands of casualties, and the ease with which the Turks were repulsed influenced the thinking of senior British commanders, who felt the fighting value of the Turkish soldier was very low.  This thinking was to have profound consequences, when the two armies next met – at the Dardanelles.

 
The 8th Battalion travelled to and from Ismailia on open railway trucks




1.       Austin, Ron.  Cobbers in Khaki: the history of the 8th Battalion 1914-1918
         Slouch Hat Publications, 1997 p.  29   (available in the Australiana Room if you’d like to read more)





Friday 23 January 2015

Richard Wells and Con Burrow, of Ballarat

Richard Wells was the subject of a previous post (24th November 2014), where we found that he was not a Ballarat man, but included in the Avenue of Honour.  His father in law, Con Burrow, lived in Ballarat, and I became curious to know who he was.

This is his entry in Citizens and Sports, one of our favourite resources in the Australiana Room:





Goodness! Can you read all those abbreviations? Con Burrow is evidently one of Ballarat's outstanding citizens, a publican and a military man. Both his sons, Sgt. Arthur Alfred and Lieutenant Sydney are with the AIF, in the 8th and 7th battalions, respectively.  I see now that Richard Wells would have been welcomed into the Burrow family, and everyone must have been very pleased to see that he had been promoted to Major on January 1st.

Imagine Richard's wife - her husband and both brothers on active service.

And this is a link to a quite splendid photograph of Con Burrow, held at the State Library Victoria.



Thursday 15 January 2015

Private Henri Julius Paulig

Henri Julius Paulig was a son of Herman Julius Paulig and Lawrie Margaret Paulig.
According to information contained with his service record he was one of six children, three boys and three girls. Henri was born in January, 1893 in Ballarat. His brothers names were Albert James and Stein W Paulig but his sisters names are not recorded. 
His mother was deceased prior to his enlistment in The Great War and his father lived in Ballarat (formerly in Alfred Hall in Curtis Street and later at 106 Doveton Street North).
He was 5 feet 101/2 inches tall and weighed 11 pounds 2 ounces. He had brown eyes, black hair, a dark complexion and was raised as a Methodist. Henri was also a carpenter by trade before he entered the war.


He enlisted in Ballarat on the 19th August, 1914 at the age of 21 years and 7 months. His service number was: 246. He was assigned to the 2nd Brigade, Infantry 8th Battalion B Company and embarked from Melbourne on the HMAT A24 Benalla on the 19th October, 1914. He arrived in Egypt on the 2nd December, 1914.
These photographs are taken from an album Kensington to Cairo and from Cairo to Gallipoli : album of photographs, 1914-1915 in the collection of the Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales.  (It has been digitised and can be found here)  The album was created by Henry Charles Marshall, 1st Battalion, Infantry, no. 577, a professional photographer, who fought and died at Gallipoli. The album contains impressive personal photographs of the soldiers' lives from initial training in Australia through to desert training in Egypt and the landings and fighting at Gallipolli.

Friday 9 January 2015

Private George Douglas



This week’s post presents a problem many family historians encounter – “the mystery man”.



Private George Douglas’ Service Records on the National Archives of Australia website, state that his place of birth was Ballarat East, and that he enlisted in Ballarat. His occupation was given as Miner, and his Next of Kin was his sister Olive. His age is 23 years and 1 month, in December 1914.



So he should have been born around 1891, but when we look in the Victorian Birth Death and Marriage records, we cannot find him.  A search for his sister Olive is also inconclusive.  We can find a George Douglas, with a sister Olive, but his birth year is 1886, making him much older than 23, and neither of them were born in Ballarat.  A search of the Victorian Death Index also doesn’t reveal anything.



His enlistment papers suggest he was originally in the Light Horse, but he is listed in the All-Australia Memorial as part of the 3rd Reinforcements for the 7th Battalion.  This means he was serving under Lt.Col. Harold (Pompey) Elliott, in the Infantry.  In the Memorial, his address is given as North Carlton – what was he doing there, if his occupation was “miner”?



So there are many questions we can’t answer about this fellow. Nevertheless, we are going to include him, and follow his experiences through the Great War, as he represents many of those soldiers about whom nothing much is known.  Just maybe, by including him here, someone will be able to give us better details.



George Douglas enlisted on 10 December, 1914, and after only about 3 months training, he left Australia on 25 February, 1915.

"ANZACs in the Making" from The All-Australia Memorial: History, Heroes, and Helpers
a copy can be found in the Australiana Room at Ballarat Library