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Albert George Bullock

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Albert George Bullock
Bullock Albert George.jpg
Western Mail 1 Sep 1916 page 26.
Personal Information
Date of Birth Not known
"Not known" contains an extrinsic dash or other characters that are invalid for a date interpretation.
Place of Birth Stawell, Victoria
Death 5 Jan 1938
Place of Death Murchison district
Age at Enlistment 29 years old
Description 5' 5½" (1.66m) tall ; 137 lbs
62.142 kg
; fresh complexion complexion ; blue eyes ; brown hair
Occupation Motor driver
Religion Church of England
Address NOK Byford, Western Australia during 1915
Next of Kin Wife , Mrs Emma Blanche Bullock
Military Information
Reg Number 1407
Date of Enlistment 23 Aug 1915
Rank Lance Corporal
Unit/Formation 32nd Battalion, D Company, transferred to Australian Army Motor transport Section, Chelsea.
Date of Embarkation 18 Nov 1915 ‒ 18 Dec 1915
Ship Embarked On HMAT A2 Geelong
Date of Return 3 Mar 1919 ‒ 10 Apr 1919
Ship Returned On HMAT A14 Euripides
Fate Wounded in Action 19 Jul 1916 at Fromelles
Returned to Australia
Monument Armadale War Memorial (Beenup Panel)
Medals 1914-15 Star
British War Medal
Victory Medal



Pre War

NOK in Byford during 1915 before moving to 169 Charles street, West Perth, Western Australia. It is possible that Albert was also in Byford and is the H Bullock on the memorial for which a match cannot be found.

Electoral Rolls for 1910, 1912, and 1913 have Albert labouring in Goomalling; 1916 entry is for a motor driver living at 205 Charles street, Perth. In 1908 he married Emma Blanche Evenis

War Service

An original member of the 32nd Battalion, which was formed from South Australian (A & B Companies) and Western Australian troop (C & D Companies). After preliminary training in WA, C & D Companies travelled to Adelaide in late September, early October to join their colleagues at Cheltenham Race Course.

Albert travelled with the battalion to Egypt where they performed protective roles for Port Suez and the Canal at El Ferdan and Ismailia before moving to Tel-el-Kebir in early Feb 1916. During the last week of March they relocated to 'Ferry Post' and remain there until they move to Moascar on 30 May 1916. On 16 Jun they entrained for Alexandria and early the next morning boarded the HMT Transylvania.

The Transylvania arrived at Marseilles in France on 23 Jun 1916. While aboard the Transylvania he had spent two days in the ship's hospital with influenza.

On 19 Jul 1916 he received an injury (shell wound to his left knee) when his battalion attacked at Fleurbaix as part of the disastrous Battle of Fromelles. D Company had arrived in the front lines at 5.45pm and with C Company made up the 3rd and 4th wave of attackers. The first wave attacked at 5.53pm and Albert and his group followed soon after.

Seen by the 15th Field Ambulance and No.1 Casualty Clearing Station, he was admitted to 32nd Stationary Hospital on 20 Jul 1916, before being released to the 1st Convalescent Camp in Boulogne on 22 Jul 1916 where he remained until 20 Aug 1916. He rejoined his unit on 16 Sep 1916 and was appointed Lance Corporal on 19 September.

On 2 Nov 1916 he was admitted to the 23rd General Hospital in Étaples with Trench Feet and was sent back to England on 5 Nov 1916 aboard HMHS Newhaven from Calais. Admitted to the 1st Northern General Hospital in Newcastle on 6 Nov 1916 he was released to the 2nd Command Depot in Weymouth on 13 Feb 1917. For the next several months he bounces from one base depot to another before finally rejoining his unit in France on 1 Aug 1917.

Three months later he was ill and hospitalised in France before being evacuated to England again on HMHS Panama on 2 Jan 1918, this time via the 3rd Australian Field Ambulance; 50th Casualty Clearing Station and 11th Stationary Hospital with I.C.T. Buttocks (Dhobi's itch). He was treated in the 1st London General Hospital before being moved to the 1st Australian Auxiliary Hospital at Harefield from 9 Jan to 9 Mar 1918.

Following treatment he enjoyed some leave in England and the normal posting to base units as his health improved before being transferred to the Motor Transport unit at Chelsea.

Before going home he spent some 88 days in the 1st Australian Dermatological Hospital at Bulford with Gonorrhoea ( 12 Jul - 7 Oct 1918). One of the earlier ones to be sent home after hostilities cease via the Euripides from Portland, he is marked as having flat feet. Discharged at 5th MD on 11 Jun 1919

Coming Home - Our Returning Heroes - The Euripides' Contingent..L/Cpl Bullock, Albert Geo, 32nd Battalion.[1]

Post War

1921 a motor driver at 34 Fairfield street Balkatta; in 1931 he was described as a depot superintendent living with Emma in Bridgetown before they return to Balcatta where between 1935 and 1937 he had become a fibrous plasterer. Seemingly turned to prospecting from 1937, dying in the Murchison district in 1938.

By 1943 Emma has returned to their Fairfield street address by herself. Emma died on 26 Jul 1967 in Mt Hawthorn.


References

  1. "COMING HOME". The Daily News. XXXVIII, (13,756). Western Australia. 4 April 1919. p. 5 (THIRD EDITION). Retrieved 30 May 2017 – via National Library of Australia. 

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