A stonemason’s war:
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In 1915 Joseph Ellis was a stonemason in the quiet, ex-goldfield town of Castlemaine, Victoria.
Two of his sons worked in the small family business:
William, stonemason, was 23, 170cm tall, fair-haired & blue-eyed.
Samuel was 21, with dark complexion.
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With little work available, the brothers enlisted together in March 1915 in the Australian Imperial Force.
Pay was good: 6 shillings/day.
In contrast, British Army private soldiers received 1 shilling per day.
Recruits arrive at Broadmeadows Camp, west of Melbourne in 1915.
3/ William and Samuel Ellis were both attached to the new 21st Battalion, New Zealand & Australian Division. Five weeks later the Ellis brothers were aboard the Transport A38 (the “Ulysses”), bound for Egypt.
They trained hard for several weeks in the desert, near the pyramids.
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Sep. 2:
Whilst en-route from Egypt to Gallipoli, the brothers were on the “Southland” when it was torpedoed by submarine UB-14.
45 men died, including 2 Indian crewmen shot whilst looting stores on the stricken ship.
It didn’t sink, but almost everybody had to abandon ship.
5
The 21st Australian Infantry Battalion, recently arrived from hot and humid Egypt, suffered through the Gallipoli winter conditions of late 1915.
Freezing winds, sleet and snow came off the Anatolian plains.
The weather was brutal and the living conditions rudimentary at best.
6/ Sept-Dec: 21st Bn fought at #Gallipoli, with mainly defensive duties at Wire Gully until the Dec evacuation.
A fellow 21st Bn soldier who died during the Gallipoli campaign, Pte James Martin, only 14 yrs old, believed to be the youngest Australian soldier to die in the FWW.
7/ March 1916: After 21 Bn returned to Egypt, William transferred to the new 2nd Pioneer Battalion, specializing in tasks such as digging culverts, strong points, light railways.
Pioneer troops required masonry, carpentry & engineering ability as well as basic soldiering skills.
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Throughout 1916 the 2nd Pioneers were training and working in open air workshops around Ypres and the Somme.
They were heavily involved in the heavy fighting at Fleurbaix and Pozieres.
They worked hard to repair huge craters caused by German mines on the main Bapaume Road.
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William’s 2nd Australian Pioneer Battalion was engaged in unceasing hard work through the WF campaigns, both in construction and reparation.
Then in late August 1916 William received the tragic news that his brother Sam, still with the 21st Bn, had been killed at Pozieres.
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Drivers from the 2nd Pioneers stop to buy chocolate from a Frenchwoman.
Each Australian Division had a Pioneer Battalion attached: constructing trenches, tramways and working at trades such as stonemasonry, carpentry, painting, signwriting, blacksmithing and/or armourers.
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Nov 14 1916: Heavy German shelling caused many casualties in the Pioneer Battalion.
While at work on trenches and roads in the severely muddy battlefield near Flers, northern France, William was wounded in action.
He received bad shrapnel wounds in the left arm and hand.
12/ William was evacuated: left index finger was amputated, left thumb movement permanently restricted.
In February 1917 he was classed as “Permanently unfit for General Service but fit for Home Service”.
He was listed to return to Australia or to stay in the UK on 'Base Duties'.
13/ In 1917 the Australians were now running short of reinforcements and needed every man. Many wounded were now returned to front-line duties.
Despite having only 8 functioning fingers, in March William was reclassified as “Fit for General Service”.
He returned to his old unit.
14/ October 1917: A very happy/sad reunion.
William rejoined the greatly depleted 2nd Pioneers near Ypres.
They had suffered heavy casualties at the Battle of Passchendaele: over 180 Officers and men KIA or WIA while repairing muddy Belgian roads, working under constant shelling.
15/ In the harsh winter of 1917-18 the 2nd Pioneers were busy with heavy work in Flanders.
March 1918: To block the German Offensive, William’s entire 2nd Division was rushed by train south to the Somme & Ancre River valleys.
Here in heavy action his battalion fought hard again.
16/ In May 1918 William was promoted to Corporal, but in June he was back in hospital for a week with influenza, which incapacitated almost 130 men of the Battalion. Aug 8: The Battalion was involved in the great Allied advance of the Battle of Amiens – finally a war of movement.
17/ After the huge advance the exhausted Australian Divisions were given a break on the Somme River and Canal.
Concerts and swimming carnivals were held.
Many men got into trouble with alcohol and AWL. William was granted UK leave and was still there when the hostilities ceased.
18/ January 1919: As an early 1915 volunteer, William was a “Gallipoli man”.
He was therefore given an early transfer to the UK for return to Australia.
The policy was “First in, first out”.
Due to a great lack of shipping, some late volunteers could not return home until 1921.
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In April 1919 William, classed as an "Invalid", left the UK on the “Warwickshire” bound for home.
On May 31, 1919 he disembarked in Australia after two tedious months at sea.
Castlemaine, however, was no longer home.
His parents had moved to Sutherland, 860km NE in Sydney.
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4th July, 1919: William was finally confirmed for discharge by the 4th Australian General Hospital.
For the remainder of his life, he worked as a stonemason (with eight able fingers) at his family’s stonemasonry business at Sutherland in the southern suburbs of Sydney.
END
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New Guinea is a huge island, second only to Greenland in the world.
From 1942 to 1945, war raged over most of the northern part of the island.
Due to the island’s incredibly rugged terrain and almost complete lack of any infrastructure, military logistics was a nightmare.
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During the SWW in New Guinea, an obscure Australian infantry officer, Captain Ronald Isherwood of the 24th Battalion (at left), in 1944, received one of the highest awards possible at that time for Australians – the MBE.
How did this unusual feat come about?
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The MBE, “Member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire”, is the third highest ranking level of the Order of the British Empire.
It is awarded to an individual for an outstanding achievement, or service to the community that has had a long-term, significant impact.
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Muschu Island is an idyllic Pacific setting; 16km long, 13km wide.
It is located 13km off the northern coast of PNG near Wewak.
In 1945 it was occupied by the 27thJapanese Naval Base Force, commanded by Rear-Admiral S. Sato.
The Australian forces were advancing, 40km away.
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April 11 1945:
Eight commandos of Z Special Unit landed on Muschu Island.
Unexpected tidal movements on the moonless night & strong currents carried their collapsible kayaks off course.
Surf on the encircling reef capsized them.
Most signal equipment and weapons were drenched.
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In total darkness, the motor launch remained offshore for over three hours in case the team made a sudden return.
But all of the torches and radios were now saturated and useless.
Operation Copper’s leader was Lieutenant Thomas J. Barnes, 26, now into his sixth year of the war.⤵️
Radios of the 1940s did not work very well in the remote terrain of Papua and New Guinea.
The thickly vegetated, rugged trackless mountains and the high tropical humidity of the lowlands created havoc with wireless systems.
Radios were so bulky that their use was problematical.🧵
In the Papua New Guinea campaigns of 1942-45 military communications by wireless were seriously hampered by the extremely rugged terrain, the humid climate and the dense jungle foliage.
As a result, whenever possible, landline communications via copper cables were relied upon.
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Allied units in New Guinea were widely dispersed.
It is incredibly rough country, with steep mountains, dense jungle, and seemingly incessant rain.
In 1943 a permanent telegraph “jungle carrier line” began to be established between Port Moresby and the forward base at Lae.
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From 1942 to 1945 the war in New Guinea consisted mostly of small actions in almost inaccessible locations.
One such action occurred in July 1943.
Lt. Usui of the Japanese II/66th Regt had withdrawn remnants of his company (3 officers, 46 men) from Mubo to ‘Timbered Knoll’.
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Timbered Knoll was a Japanese stronghold on the slopes of Bobdubi Ridge near Salamaua on New Guinea’s coast.
Major George Warfe's 50-man Independent Company attacked at 4pm on 29 July 1943.
Unusually, this attack was well documented by cameraman D. Parer and artist Ivor Hele.
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Two parties assaulted the knoll from north to south but were pinned down by machine-guns.
They began taking casualties.
The third unit moved silently downhill and along the east side of Timbered Knoll, assembled, and then attacked, yelling and screaming, from south to north.
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25 May 1944.
Sturdy recruits of the Papuan Infantry Battalion listen attentively to instruction on the safe handling and use of the Mills grenade.
Corporal Dangoro instructs (LtoR) Privates Omar, Tabunguna (centre), ToPuipui (kneeling), Kai-io, Kabuna & Chikikama (squatting).
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After an ambush at Gona, the PIB recovered a dead Japanese officer's diary.
He described the PIB: "Moving silently in the jungle, inflicting casualties on us - and then gone, like green shadows..."
The PIB proudly adopted that nickname.
Emblem of the Papuan Infantry Battalion:
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Papuan Infantry Battalion recruits drill:
LtoR: L/Cpls Gamari, Kiko & Gido; Privates Tapae, Koina, Wagigal.
The PIB fought in most Papua New Guinea campaigns; were feared by the Japanese and named "Ryokuin" (Green Shadows) due to their ability to conceal, & emerge from jungle.
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Cape Wom Tragedy:
On 7th May 1945 nine American P-38s set off from Nadzab to strafe Wewak Point.
On nearby Cape Wom, to the west, 44 25-pdr guns of 6th Australian Division were emplaced —plus tanks of 2/4 Australian Armoured Regt and the 19th Australian Infantry Brigade HQ.
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By May 1945 the Japanese 41st Div. base area of Wewak was isolated.
Australians had captured Madang to the east and the Americans had captured Aitape to the west.
Enemy strength at Wewak was reduced to approx 1000 men concentrated in the town & caves situated on a small point.
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The familiar drone of the Lockheed P-38 Lightnings grew louder as the squadron approached from the south.
2,000 Australians relaxed as familiar American aircraft circled.
They stood to watch the attack on the headland 4km away.
Here, Australian gunners clean their 25-pounders.
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