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Revision as of 03:35, 2 April 2018

Unknown.png
Personal Information
Date of Birth Not known
Place of Birth Leeds, England
Death 12 Aug 1916
Place of Death Mouquet Farm, Poziéres
Age at Enlistment 30 years, 6 months
Description 5'6"(1.67m) tall; 140 lbs (63.5 Kg) weight; ruddy complexion, brown eyes, and dark brown hair
Occupation engine driver
Religion Church of England
Address William street, Armadale
Next of Kin Friend Mr Richard Beattie
Military Information
Reg Number 590
Date of Enlistment 25 Sep 1914
Rank Sergeant
Unit/Formation 16th Battalion C Company / 4th Brigade, 1st Division at Gallipoli; 4th Division in France
Date of Embarkation 24 Dec 1914 - 1 Feb 1915
Ship Embarked On HMAT A40 Ceramic
Fate Missing in Action, later confirmed Killed in Action 12 Aug 1916, Mouquet Farm
Monument Armadale War Memorial (Armadale panel)
Villers-Bretonneux Memorial
Armadale and Districts Roll of Honour
Medals 1914-15 Star
British War Medal
Victory Medal


Pre War

Friend of Richard Beattie and his wife.

War Service

An original member of the 16th Battalion's E Company, he trained at Blackboy Hill camp until 21 Nov when the battalion entrained for Fremantle where it boarded two Australian coastal steamers, the "Indarra" and the "Dimboola" which carried them to Port Melbourne, arriving a week later. On arrival they proceeded to the Broadmeadows camp where the 4th Brigade were assembling. On 22 Dec 1914 the battalion embarked on the "Ceramic" at Port Melbourne's Railway Pier along with the 15th Battalion and some 4th Brigade artillery men. After a brief pause in Albany to form a convoy, they sailed on 31 Dec 1914 for Egypt.

Arrived at Alexandria in Egypt early morning of 1st Feb 1915, and the troops disembarked two days later and travelled by train to Zeitoun near Cairo, before marching to their base at Heliopolis where two days later they reformed into a four Rifle Company Battalion configuration. On 11 April the battalion travelled by train to Alexandria where the majority boarded HMT Haida Pascha (designated as A28) for Lemnos which was reached early on 15 Apr 1915. Following days of practice landings from the ship's boats, they landed at Gallipoli in the late afternoon of 25 April 1915.

Henry was involved in battles at Bloody Angle, and Hill 971 on the Gallipoli Peninsula, and was promoted to Corporal on 24 May 1915, and Sergeant on 15 Aug 1915. A week later he fell ill with enteritis and initially was evacuated to the 3rd Canadian Stationary Hospital at Mudros. On 18 Sep 1915 he was placed aboard HMHS Aquitania to be moved to hospital in England where he was admitted to the Church Lane Military Hospital in Tooting, England. On his recovery he rejoined his unit at Tel-el-Kebir, Egypt on 9 Mar 1916.

Unit travelled to France aboard the HMT Canada arriving 9 Jun 1916. On 9 Aug 1916 the battalion moved into the front line at Pozières preparatory to an attack on Mouquet Farm. Henry was posted as Missing in Action on 12 Aug 1916, and eventually ruled to have been KIA on that date following an inquiry.

The Sun (Kalgoorlie) 8 Oct 1916 reported that Henry had been Killed in Action, after previously being recorded as missing.

No known grave. Commemorated on Villers-Bretonneux Memorial.

  • Villers Bretonneux Memorial - 2015 photo
  • Commonwealth War Graves Commission

Red Cross records (1DRL/0428) show that....

"he was killed on the 12th of August coming out of the trenches, when being relieved, passing down the reserve trench." One informant told that he had been lying asleep in a dugout when killed by a shell."

Henry's will records his share holding in oil companies such as: Galacian Oil, Land and Royalties Trust; Galacian Standard; and Romanian Oil.

"Worked at the brickyard. He has no relatives here but was held in much esteem by his mates. He enlisted in the early stages of the war, fought through the Gallipoli campaign, and was killed last year in the fighting in France. He was a sergeant when he fell in action."[1]


References

  1. "The Drill of the Foot-Hills" (PDF) (1917). Western Australia. Mar 1917. p. 7. Retrieved 16 May 2017 – via State Library of Western Australia. 

External Links