Papua New Guinea Volunteer Rifles (PNGVR)

Commencement of the Australian CMF post war. 

In early 1946 the vice-chief of the general staff presented the army’s first policy paper on the nature of the post-war army, and this was approved by the cabinet in June 1947. 

In 1949 a WWII veteran reserve officer wrote to the administrator of PNG about formation of a CMF unit in PNG. This was passed to northern command HQ in Brisbane and resulted in approval for a CMF infantry battalion in PNG. In 1950 the first PNGVR commanding officer was appointed. Lt Colonel N R. McLeod, a Duntroon graduate. 

In September he toured the main center’s of PNG to obtain a feel for the country and make arrangements for accommodation for area staff and facilities for training depots. He was told by command not to enlist anyone until so ordered

In March 1951 Lt. Colonel N P Maden replaced Lt Colonel McLeod and commenced recruiting for headquarter company.   Other actions followed in 1951. 

  1. The administrator, Colonel J K Murray became honorary colonel of PNGVR 
  1. A coy was raised at Lae in April that year, b coy at Rabaul in May and 3 pl a coy at Bulolo/Wau in June. 
  1. All enlistees were white with the majority being WWII veterans. 
  1. During the lifetime of PNGVR, units were also raised at Banz, Goroka,  
  1. Kainantu, Samurai, Madang, mt Hagen and Wewak, although the sub- units at Bulolo/Wau, Kainantu and Samarai were deactivated and never reformed. 
  1. Co PNGVR also became area commander which included being responsible for the raising of pacific islands regiment (pir). 
  1. In December the co led a party of PNGVR and civilians over the Kokoda trail and the pacific islands monthly gave the trek good coverage. Prior to this walk no civilians with the exception of kiaps and locals had walked the trail since WWII. 
  1. PNGVR ended 1951 with a strength of less than 200 and until 1964 the strength of PNGVR never exceeded 200. 

A lot of problems faced the co PNGVR. 

  1. The administrator was lukewarm in dealings with him 
  1. Lack of accommodation was a major problem with the administrator: it was felt that the army was stealing their housing as, prior to 1951, the administration had been told by command that it would not need Murray barracks housing. 
  1. Some district commissioners seemed to see the army as an opposition as PNGVR was attracting young kiaps and police officers to its ranks. 

Some encouraging matters were. 

  1. All sub units were appointing PNGVR NCO’S. 
  1. An instruction team had been created to teach these NCO’S methods of instruction. 
  1. At Rabaul, b coy, was presented with a us distinguished unit citation by the us military attaché in Australia for safekeeping. The citation was for actions on Los Negros island in the admiralties in WWII in which attached Angau and ex-NGVR men were involved. 
  1. 12 men from a coy, PNGVR Lae, carried out a patrol from the mouth of the Buang river to Bana, a Lutheran mission, following a well known wartime track used by warrant officer Peter Ryan when behind enemy lines in 1942. 

Also in 1951 the Australian government introduced a form of national service where every Australian male of the age of 18 was required to attend a compulsory camp of full time training followed by a period of 5 years CMF service. 

This proved beneficial for PNGVR as many men coming to PNG to work had to complete their military service and PNGVR was the only unit in PNG where they could comply with this. 

I will now briefly cover the PNGVR situation over the following years. 

By 1953. PNGVR was declared a going concern 

PNGVR strength was 7 officers and 175 other ranks. 

3bz wireless transceivers were installed at each sub unit, making administration duties easier. 

Promotion exams for corporal and sergeant were held at Murray barracks. 

The governor general visited Lae for the opening of the recently completed cross of sacrifice at the Lae war cemetery and PNGVR provided an honour guard. 

A parade for the Queens Coronation was held at Ela beach oval, Port Moresby, and included PNGVR. 

1954. The governor general, Field Marshall sir William slim visited Rabaul for the opening of the gates at Bita Paka war cemetery and PNGVR provided an honour guard. 

Equipment was still WWII style. Uniforms were khaki trousers and shirts, the slouch hats did not always have chin straps, tan boots were issued, and members had to blacken them. The boots also had brass cleats which were dangerous in cement drill hall floors, so the cleats had to be removed. Belts and gaiters had to be blancoed and early WWII style gaiters were issued. Much of this, by the way, when i first joined PNGVR in 1959 had not changed but by then we had jungle green uniform in lieu of khaki and modern gaiters. The .303 rifle issued to me was a 1916 model. 

Although each major center had an army jeep there was no other transport to carry troops to bivouacs. In the case of b coy many of the members of PNGVR were shell employees so the shell vehicle was used. I recall in Madang in 1959/early 1960’s we used a variety of calaboose and administration trucks depending on who had one to spare at the time. 

1956. The Duke of Edinburgh in the royal yacht “Britania” visited Rabaul and was met with a guard of honour by b coy, PNGVR. 

1958. C coy commenced recruiting in Goroka. A coy, Lae, flew to Madang for a 5-day bivouac over easter at the ‘siar’ training camp. 

HQ coy exercised for 7 days with the pir at Goldie River. 

3 PNGVR members from Port Moresby completed a crossing of the Kokoda trail in 7 days, receiving good press. 

1959/60. Annual camp was held at Goldie River. Problems being that some 7o+ members of the unit were, for different reasons, unavailable for the camps. 

In 1960 the battalion structure altered to the newly introduced pentropic division structure which added a support company to the battalion. This was located in Port Moresby. 

1961. The new slr (self-loading rifle) the replacement for the .303 was introduced to PNGVR and fired for the first time at Goldie River training depot during camp. 

An application was made for theatre and battle honours for NGVR, and a regimental colour was designed. Our association president, Phil Ainsworth, played a large part in this design. For those not aware PNGVR colours were unique in the Australian army, having the d’albertis creeper (flame of the forest) on the colours in lieu of wattle, on the colours of all other Australian units. 

An incident occurred at the flooded Laloki river during a PNGVR bivouac where a Papuan civilian was rescued and two PNGVR soldiers were awarded a BEM (British e Empire Medal). 

About this time members of PNGVR commenced attending various army courses in Australia. 

PNGVR strength was 156. 

1962. About 90 members attended the annual camp at Taurama barracks with field training being carried out at Goldie River. 

PNGVR was awarded the NGVR battle honours as custodians. 

“Imperial echoes” was selected as the PNGVR regimental march. Those who attended either our formal or field dinners would recall “imperial echoes” being played for the march in and out of the flags. 

1963. About 150 members attended the annual camp at Murray barracks (the largest number to date), and it was the last time Goldie River training area was used by PNGVR. 

PNGVR were the first CMF soldiers to fire the gpmg60 – the new medium machine gun which replaced the Bren gun. 

1 a SAS coy arrived in PNG for a large-scale exercise in which pir was heavily involved and PNGVR provided a number of umpires over the exercise. “Long hop”, as it was called, was the largest field exercise conducted in PNG since WWII. 

The Anzac Day march in Port Moresby that year was attended by PNGVR, pir and SAS and a film of the march is today held in the Australian war memorial. 

1964. January 1964 saw the biggest change in the PNGVR since its inception with the enlistment of PNG citizens, including men of Chinese and Malay descent. The integration of these people was a new learning curve for PNGVR officers and NCO’s and worked out well. Many of the new local recruits, even though the minimum education standard dictated grade 6 level, did not have a good command of English, and i recall in Goroka it was not unusual for an instructor to sometimes move into pidgin during a lecture if it became obvious that English was not getting across. I did that myself on occasions. 

One other difficulty was introducing recruits who had previously never been allowed to use firearms or rifles, machine guns, grenades and other explosives. 

Annual camp 1964 was at mt Ambra, in the western highlands near mt Hagen. This camp resulted in the largest peacetime troop movements in PNG in a single day since WWII when 350 troops were flown into mt Hagen. 

1964 was a year of change for PNGVR. That year PNGVR was issued with juniper green uniform as walk out dress in lieu of jungle greens, local enlistees were issued boots and gaiters instead of sandals which had been their initially issued footwear, and, after annual camp at mt Ambra, the slouch hat, which had been issued to European members only, was withdrawn and all ranks then wore a navy beret. 

After these changes the biggest problem faced was the pay rate. Nationals received much less than Europeans. This was addressed on numerous occasions but never satisfactorily resolved. 

As previously stated, 1964 saw the biggest changes ever in the history of PNGVR. 

The range of indigenous recruits into PNGVR was huge. In Goroka we had Doctor Alan Tarata and Dentist Geoffrey Time, both of whom had graduated from the Suva medical college and were employed at the hospital in Goroka. In the Australian army a doctor and a dentist would have entered the army as captains in the medical corps, but both Alan and Geoffrey were firm in their wish to remain privates and just be part of the platoon. 

At year’s end the effective strength of PNGVR was 28 Officers and 520 Privates, this being its greatest strength since inception. 

1965/66. 

Best described as “years of consolidation” after the huge changes in 1964. 

Annual camp 1965 was again at mt Ambra and in 1966 on the Butibum river outside Lae. The latter was actually an old army site from 1943 when the Australian 9th division made an amphibious landing at the Bumbu river and commenced their advance on Lae, crossing the nearby Butibum river.  Over 500 men attended each camp. 

From my own perspective i was most unimpressed with the 1966 camp as it was held during the wet season and my opinion was that the constant heavy rain hindered training, not assisted it. It is very difficult to train soldiers who are wet, cold and miserable. The higher brass in PNGVR however reported that it had subjected the PNGVR members to “challenging conditions”. From my point of view, they were “challenging” all right. 

1966 also saw the raising of the university platoon, PNGVR. This was raised in June at the university of PNG, Port Moresby, with members coming from the administrative college and university students. 

Until the disbandment of PNGVR in 1973 the university platoon had a controversial history with ongoing differences between the university hierarchy and the army. 

Also, in 1966 the Wewak detachment of PNGVR which had been running for a year officially became “d” coy and Madang, which had over the years been attached to a coy Lae, c coy Goroka, and a coy Lae again, became 12 platoon, d coy, attached to Wewak. 

1967. 

The annual camp saw 450 soldiers moved by road to the Bulolo Valley and then spent a week moving on foot back to Lae using the Wau-Lae Road as an axis of advance in a counter insurgency exercise. 

1967 also saw the first CMF officers being posted to Vietnam as “observers”. During following years quite a number of PNGVR officers saw active service in Vietnam. 

That year PNGVR headquarters moved from Port Moresby to Igam barracks, a newly built complex, outside Lae. 

1968 to 72. Annual camps were held at gam barracks with field exercises in the nearby Atzera ranges. 

The first week of the 1969 camp was devoted to preparation for the presentation of the queen and regimental colours which were presented to the co PNGVR by the administrator of PNG on 17 may. The second week consisted of a 4-day exercise in the Atzera range. 

Battalion parades were also held at Igam barracks during the 1970 and 1971 camps. The university platoon, which had usually held its annual camp separate to the main PNGVR camp due to clashes with the university academic program attended the 1970 camp. 

The field exercise for the 1972 annual camp was held in the Finistere Ranges, the site of a number of battles during WWII. Attendance now had fallen to 357 for all ranks. 

1973. The last camp of continuous training by PNGVR was in 1973 at Finschhafen and again PNGVR had the assistance of pir soldiers. 324 of all ranks attended. 

It was at the end of this camp that the official disbandment of PNGVR at the end of the year was announced. 

A number of reviews had been held re the future of PNGVR, and it was disbanded as it was considered that it was not possible to maintain after independence when it would move from the Australian army to being part of the PNG Defence Force. It was not a suitable unit for use in internal security operations, and its administration was difficult. Moreover, PNGVR regional bases could provide a source of power for areas disaffected with the central government. 

When it was disbanded PNGVR was represented at: - 

Events which followed the disbandment of PNGVR. The current association. 

Formed in the early 1990’s it is still a viable association, even though the membership is an ageing one. An example of this is the number present here today, which would have been even greater except for the effects of covid-19 which has restricted interstate travel. 

Laying up of PNGVR colours. 

Anzac Day 1974 saw the laying up of the queens and regimental colours in Canberra. 

They are now held in the Australian war memorial and can be viewed if sufficient notice is given to the AWM. 

Marching on ANZAC day. 

Ever since the formation of the association we have marched as an association on Anzac Day. 

With the declining membership as we age the numbers have reduced from over 100 in the 1990’s/early 2000’s to 25 this year. 

Montevideo maru services. 

The association holds an annual service on the 1st of July each year to remember the sinking of the unmarked Japanese pow vessel “Montevideo maru” with 1053 soldiers and civilians aboard, with no prisoner survivors. This service commenced in the early 1990’s with the formation of the association and is one of the few official Montevideo maru services held in Australia. 

Establishment of the museum. 

Our museum opened in February 2006 and is one of the features of the association. There are a lot of rare memorabilia held in the museum and a dedicated group of volunteers keep it in tip top condition for show to the public. 

Harim Tok Tok 

This newsletter is the main contact between association members spread all over Australia and overseas. It is produced each two months and has been the one continuous means of contact with members ever since the association was formed. 

Web and Facebook sites. 

The association also has both a web and Facebook site and these contain many photos and information on both the PNGVR and the NGVR 

Service in PNGVR. For those of us who served in PNGVR that service left indelible memories. It is not often during one's military service that you have the unique experience of serving in areas which had been occupied during WWII, or the privilege of having carried out exercises and tests (tactical exercise without troops) in areas that had been fought over during WWII. 

One will never forget the experience of moving into a copra plantation and seeing trees chopped in half, and others, still growing, with bullet holes through them. 

I once had the experience of participating in an examination in which i had to put in a platoon attack on a hill in the Markham valley where Richard Kelliher was awarded a Victoria Cross for his actions when his platoon attacked that same hill during the advance on Lae in WWII. 

PNGVR was a unit unique in the Australian army. 

It was only the second Australian CMF or militia unit to be raised offshore, served offshore, and disbanded offshore, our PNGVR predecessor – the NGVR (new guinea volunteer rifles) was the first. 

It was also unique in its structure – a mix of Europeans, Chinese, Malay, and indigenous PNG citizens. 

All in all, PNGVR was a unique experience for all those who had the privilege of serving in it. 

Indigenous Soldier, Prisoner of War - Douglas Grant SN.6020

This is the story of a young child rescued from the Atherton Tablelands in Queensland. His date of birth is believed to be around 1885. He had been born into a remote Aboriginal community, and there are two versions of how he came to be all alone. One is that his parents had been killed in inter-tribal warfare, the other that his people had been killed in a massacre during the Queensland frontier wars. Now it so happened that a Scottish scientist, Robert Grant, and his wife, Elizabeth, were on an expedition in the area, collecting specimens on behalf of the Australian Museum in Sydney. They took the child back to Lithgow in New South Wales and adopted him, giving him the name Douglas. He grew up there with the Grants’ biological son, Henry and eventually moved with the family to Sydney.

In primary school, Douglas was a willing student with interests in poetry (he particularly liked Shakespeare) and a talent for drawing. He won first prize in the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee exhibition in 1897 for a drawing of Queen Victoria. Amongst his other talents, he could speak in a broad Scottish accent and play the bagpipes!

He attended Scots College in Sydney and left when he gained an apprenticeship as a mechanical draughtsman at Mort’s Dock and Engineering Company, where he worked for 10 years before taking a job as a wool classer at “Belltrees” Station in the Hunter Valley.

Douglas Grant with his adoptive family, c. 1896. National Archives of Australia, Canberra, SP1011/1, 2176. Reproduction courtesy of the National Archives of Australia and Australian Broadcasting Corporation Library Sales.

Douglas enlisted in the army in 1915. However, the Aborigines Protection Board intervened as he was about to leave Sydney for Gallipoli, citing Government regulations that prevented Aboriginal people from joining the military or leaving the country without permission, and so Douglas was discharged from the army.

However, being an intelligent and determined man, Douglas wasn’t going to let a bureaucratic technicality prevent him from serving his country, and he re-enlisted on 13 January 1916. Eventually, the authorities gave him permission to go on the basis that he had been raised by a white family. He left Australia in August 1916 and joined the 13th Battalion on the Western Front.

Douglas Grant as a prisoner of war in Germany, c. 1917–18. (AWM2016.400.1)

This is an image of Private Douglas Grant as a prisoner of war in Germany, 1917-1918.

In April 1917, he was wounded at Bullecourt and taken prisoner. After spending time at other prisoner of war camps doing hard labouring work, he became an object of curiosity to the Germans because of his dark complexion, his history as an Aboriginal child brought up and educated in white society, and his ability to speak in a Scottish accent. He was sent to a camp at Wündsorf, near Berlin, where he was examined at some length (inside out, up and down, and everywhere in between, he used to say!)

He enjoyed unusual freedom as a captive. In Berlin, German anthropologists were more interested in studying him than in imprisoning him. A talented artist, he impressed his captors with his intellect. A German scientist described Grant as “an unmistakable figure,” recalling how prisoners appointed him to take charge of relief parcels because of “his honesty, his quick mind, and because he was so aggressively Australian”.

He was repatriated from Germany to England in December 1918, but before returning to Australia, he took the opportunity to visit the Grant family in Scotland. How surprised his Scottish uncle must have been to see a coal-black man standing before him, but he was welcomed and accepted by the family!

So how did this intelligent, well-educated man fare when he returned to Australia?

Douglas was discharged from the AIF on 9 July 1919 and received the British War Medal and the Victory Medal. However, the equality he had experienced in the AIF did not continue in Australian society. He was not entitled to the grants and benefits that other ex-servicemen could obtain.

Soldiers returning to Australia, including Private Douglas Grant (middle row, fourth from left), 1919

An image of soldiers returning to Australia , including Private Douglas Grant.

He returned to work at Mort’s Engineering Company, but after his adoptive parents died in the early 1920s, he returned to Lithgow and obtained work in a factory as a labourer. When he lost this job, he found it difficult to get another. He became active in fighting for Aboriginal rights and spoke out about the plight of Aboriginal people, especially ex-servicemen, which at that time would not have endeared him to the authorities.

Born Indigenous, raised and accepted in white society as a child, treated and respected as an equal in the army, an object of curiosity as a captive and for a time seen as a celebrity veteran, how could Douglas reconcile the stark contradictions in his life pre and post war, especially after the death of his parents? Although he had accepted white culture, it was clear that when he became an adult, the feeling was not reciprocated.

He did as many veterans did, coped by drinking heavily, and in 1931, suffering a mental breakdown, he was admitted as a patient to Callan Park Mental Asylum. He continued to live there and worked as a clerk for the next ten years; during this time, he also designed a large ornamental pond which was spanned by a replica of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. He was living at a war veterans’ home in La Perouse when he died in 1951, at the age of 66 years, a lonely and depressed man, unable to fit easily into either black or white society.

You can find a lot of information about Douglas Grant if you put his name into your favourite search engine. Chris Clark wrote an article which was published in the Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 9, 1983 and online in 2006. Macquarie University documentary maker Associate Professor Tom Murray featured his story in the documentary “The Skin of Others”, which debuted in the 2020 Sydney Film Festival, and the ABC Radio National programme “Earshot” broadcast his story in 2017. Other sources were research by Professor John Maynard for a University of Technology Sydney series of podcasts and videos, and an article by Nicole Cama for the Barani website (www.sydneybarani.com.au/sites/douglas-grant)

Phyllis Darragh – Snowy Valleys Heroes Inc

Sources:

 “Aborigine enlists”, Queensland Times, 5 September 1916.  <accessed 4 September 2019>

Aboriginal soldiers: story of Douglas Grant”, Morning Bulletin, 9 September 1916.  <accessed 4 September 2019>.

Sergt. Douglas Grant: dark skin but white heart”, Lithgow Mercury, 28 April 1916.  <accessed 14 October 2019>.

An Aboriginal soldier”, Sydney Mail, 10 May 1916.  <accessed 14 October 2019>.

Douglas Grant service papers, c. 1914–20, National Archives of Australia.  <accessed 4 September 2019>.

Paul Daley, “From Butchers Creek to Berlin: did Douglas Grant see the body of an Indigenous relative in Germany?”, The Guardian, 16 October 2015.   <accessed 4 September 2019>.

Tom Murray, “Douglas Grant and Rudolf Marcuse: wartime encounters at the edge of art”, Taylor and Francis Online, 13 May 2019.  <accessed 4 September 2019>.

Tom Murray, “Douglas Grant: the skin of others”, ABC Radio National Earshot, 2017.  <accessed 4 September 2019>.

First World War Soldiers - North Stradbroke Island’s First World War Soldiers and the Homefront

The NSIHM has created an exhibition called “Stradbroke 100. North Stradbroke Island’s First World War Soldiers and the Homefront“.

The exhibition explores the war experiences and post-war lives of 22 men, at least 14 of whom were Aboriginal. These stories, all different, provide a valuable insight into Australian and Island life as it was lived 100 years ago.

In the early part of the twentieth century, North Stradbroke Island was described like this:

“Except for the Aboriginal Mission Station, three miles from the Asylum grounds and two or three homes at Amity, the Island is otherwise uninhabited.” Rockhampton Morning Bulletin, August 6 1918

Whilst this is generally true, it simplifies a complex society, where the Aboriginal people and the newcomers had been co-existing for many decades, where the important industries of cattle-raising, oystering, dugong and commercial fishing were established. The social policies and legislative frameworks of early governments were shaping the lives of all Queenslanders – especially Aboriginal people – and setting the groundwork for State-owned institutional care through the operations of the Dunwich Benevolent Asylum, the Inebriate Institution and the Peel Island Lazaret.

Who Was Here?

In the early part of the twentieth century, the people living on North Stradbroke Island were residents of the Myora Aboriginal Mission, inmates and staff of the Dunwich Benevolent Asylum, families (mostly Aboriginal) making a living from the oystering, fishing and the dugong industries of Amity, and those involved with Billy North’s cattle and horse grazing activities at Point Lookout. Life for almost everyone on the Island – particularly the Moreton Bay Aboriginal people – was subject to a raft of State and Commonwealth legislation.

Aboriginal Participation in the First World War

Despite all the hurdles put in their way, Aboriginal men from all around Australia found ways to enlist and join the fighting overseas. Gary Oakley, the Australian War Memorial’s Indigenous Liaison Officer, often refers to the Army as “Australia’s first equal opportunity employer”, and there is little evidence to suggest soldiers were treated differently once they were accepted into the forces.

Roll of Honour in the Dunwich Hall

The Roll of Honour, which is today found on the wall of the Dunwich Hall, was donated by Thomas Welsby, a well-connected Brisbane identity and part-time Amity resident.

When the Roll of Honour was unveiled in June 1918, the Brisbane Courier recorded:

“Mr. Welsby, in a stirring address, said he deeply regretted that thousands of his fellow Australians had hitherto failed to comply with the call of duty. It was, he could not help thinking, an ironically unpalatable fact to contemplate that some coloured natives of Stradbroke Island were fighting the battles of, and giving their lives for, the preservation of the horse racing and other pleasurable privileges of a large number of their white Australian brothers.” Brisbane Courier, Friday, June 7, 1918 Appreciation of Soldiers

The Roll of Honour lists 13 names. There are three blank panels. It seems that Welsby himself may have chosen the names honoured. Our understanding of some of the men’s connections to North Stradbroke Island has been lost.

A Microcosm of Lived War Experience

Much can be learnt from an understanding of the lives of these twenty-two men, not just of Stradbroke Island, but of broader Australian life in the early twentieth century.

At least half of the men who feature in the exhibition were of Aboriginal descent. This is a remarkable statistic, given the lengths these men had to go to in order to enlist. Some of these families had their Aboriginality denied or suppressed, or lied about their Aboriginality or their age to be accepted into the armed forces. Some of these men claimed to be Maori.

Several men were wounded in action, and families have shared stories about their father’s or grandfather’s poor lung health after being ‘gassed’ overseas. Two men married overseas during the war and returned to Australia with their wives. Some died as young men, others lived to their nineties.

Two men – Benjamin Manager and Henry Lee – were initially accepted into the Army, but were discharged after several weeks, when their Aboriginal ancestry was uncovered.

Two of the men listed on the Roll of Honour – Richard Martin and Albert Tripcony – died on active service and are commemorated with marble plaques on the walls of the Dunwich Hall, also donated by Welsby. Both were Aboriginal men from North Stradbroke Island.

Some men returned to Stradbroke Island and resumed their lives, and their families have remained on the Island for generations. Others – mostly those associated with the Benevolent Asylum- did not return to their pre-war employment on the Island, and our understanding of their post-war experiences is limited.

Albert Fraser Bongers – 398

1 Lighthorse Regiment

Albert Bongers was born in Sydney and worked as a railway engineer. He enlisted at 20 years of age in August 1915. He served at Gallipoli and in France, and was wounded a number of times, including losing part of his knee.

In 1928, he married Aunty Rosey Martin, and they had one child, Ruth. They wanted to come and live on Aunty Rosey’s country on North Stradbroke Island, so he applied for a land selection. He provided a reference from the Inspector of Police in Toowoomba, which read:

“Bongers is 32 years of age and states that his wife’s people live at Stradbroke Island, and that his wife’s brother Alfred Martin, who looks after the piggery, and Bethal Martin whose husband recently died leaving her with 7 children, and this man states if he could get sufficient land on the island say 100 – 200 acres, he would be able to assist this woman, and also make a home and a good living for himself…Further, his wife’s anxious to get back to the island so as to be among her own people.”

Albert Bongers is not listed on the Roll of Honour.

James (Cooterman) Cairncross – 3610

47th Battalion, 10th Reinforcements, then 25th Battalion

James Cairncross was aged 40 when he enlisted in Brisbane on May 14, 1917. He had spent his early years on North Stradbroke Island, and listed his next of kin on his enlistment papers as Margaret Rollands (Brown), also known as Granny Mibu. He had worked as a labourer. James was wounded in France and returned to Australia in January 1919.

“Jimmy Cooterman was known by his Aboriginal name of Jungi.  Uncle Jungi was born at Myora Mission on North Stradbroke Island [Minjerribah]. When he outgrew the mission school, a doctor named Cairncross took him to live at his home on the mainland. At the outbreak of World War 1, he enlisted under the assumed name of James Cairncross, for though his skin was rather fair, he was ineligible for military service as a native ward. He served overseas in the 25th Battalion in France. In 1917, the 25th Battalion was part of the 2nd Division’s first wave at the Battle of Menin Road in Belgium. Victory here was followed up with the capture of Broodseinde Ridge on 4 October. The 25th reprised its role from Menin Road, in what was its last large-scale offensive action for the year. Uncle Jungi was wounded twice in France in 1917. After the war Uncle Jungi settled at Sandgate and from there operated as a fisherman, owning his own boat and gear and also some property. He eventually sold off all his assets and went to live at North Arm near Nambour until he died. He was buried with military honours at Woombye Soldiers ’ Cemetery. His descendants are still closely associated with their traditional lands on Minjerribah/North Stradbroke Island and continue to live on country.” Information supplied by family member, Sandra Delaney

James Cairncross is not listed on the Roll of Honour.

Leonard Cardew – 568

1 Lighthorse Regiment

Leonard Cardew was born in Stanthorpe, Queensland. He was 25 years old when he enlisted on December 13, 1915, in Longreach. He worked as a motor mechanic, and his mother was Mrs Ellen Cardew, the Matron of the Women’s Quarters at the Dunwich Benevolent Asylum. He served on the Western Front before he suffered gunshot wounds to his buttocks in 1917, and was discharged in January 1919.

Leonard Cardew is commemorated on the Roll of Honour.

Horace Thomas Dalton – 57247

Trooper, 11th Light Horse Regiment

Horace Dalton was born in Dunwich in 1899. His father was Thomas Dalton, and his mother was Elizabeth Dalton (nee Parker). His mother’s family lived at Myora. He was working as a farmer when he enlisted on May 16, 1918, in Brisbane.  Horace supplied a Statutory Declaration to confirm his parents were both ‘half-caste’, and that he “had lived with white people all of my life.” His parents provided a letter of consent for him to enlist, as he was not yet 21 years of age. He travelled to Egypt and returned to Australia in 1919.

Like other Aboriginal soldiers, Horace wasn’t given the same rights as other soldiers when he returned. He was buried in an unmarked grave in the Ipswich Cemetery in 1956. A military service was finally held for him by the Returned & Services League in 2012. After the military service, his son Ken Dalton said:

“I feel honoured that the RSL, the council and everyone else have come to show their respect for my father. I was only 16 when he died, and nobody knew what was going on; we just had a small funeral. This has made me very proud. Dad fought for the rights of Australians, even though he didn’t have them himself. He signed up, even though his country treated him shamefully. When he enlisted, he had to sign an affidavit saying he had the right heritage to be an Australian soldier – I thought it was a bit of cheek, seeing as he was one of the true owners of the land.” The Queensland Times, Oct 1, 2012, “Military service finally honoured” by Rebecca Lynch

Horace Dalton was not included on the Roll of Honour.

Evelyn Ellis – 554

7th Australian Machine Gun Company

Born on North Stradbroke Island, Evelyn enlisted in Brisbane on September 7, 1916, when he was 41. He was a widower, and worked as a carpenter. His mother was Mrs Sydney Rollands of Dunwich. He served in England and France and was discharged on June 27, 1918. After the war, Evelyn Ellis applied to lease some land on North Stradbroke Island, so he could farm pigs. The Medical Superintendent of the Dunwich Benevolent Asylum opposed his request, as did the Minister for Lands.

“The fate of Uncle Evelyn – as I recall it – was much the same as a lot of returned servicemen who were identified as Aboriginal. They weren’t part of the reconstruction or retraining. They were not eligible for land grants that other servicemen would have been entitled to. I have seen some documentation with Uncle that when he was applying for a grant of land to lease land on Stradbroke Island, the response that I have back from the Department of Lands was that anyone connected with the Aboriginal Mission should not receive land grants. So he was denied a lease of land on this island, so that he could run cattle, be self-sufficient and contribute to society. He had served, he had served this county well.” Uncle Bob Anderson, a nephew of Evelyn Ellis, recorded by the NSIHM, February 2015

It took many years and a change of leadership at the Asylum for his lease to be awarded eventually.

“Ellis quickly built the fences that were prerequisite for his pigs. [Bert Levinge and Evelyn Ellis] had won their land with a certain amount of luck, applying when the medical superintendent and undersecretary were communicating as little as possible and when the superintendent was too new to be aware of many of the aspects of the job.” Whom Nobody Owns: the Dunwich Benevolent Asylum, an institutional biography 1866 – 1946, Joseph B. Goodall, The University of Queensland,1992

Evelyn Ellis is commemorated on the Roll of Honour. He died in 1952 and is buried in the Dunwich cemetery.

Charles William Foley – 3753

49th Australian Infantry Battalion, 69th Australian Infantry Battalion, 13th Australian Machine Gun Company

Charles Foley was born on North Stradbroke Island and enlisted on September 14, 1915, at the age of 34. He worked as an oysterman, and listed his next of kin as his cousin, Mrs Elizabeth Iselin, Dunwich. He gained a reputation for great seamanship skills and bravery before the War:

“Some excitement was caused amongst the crew of the sailing boat Cockroach on Sunday night whilst anchored off Mud Island fishing. It appears that one of the crew, named Fred Johnson, hooked a large shark, the monster eventually pulling him (Johnson) overboard. The cry of Johnson overboard aroused the skipper, Charley Foley, who was taking ‘’forty winks” in the stern sheets of the boat. Charley jumped overboard and just rescued Johnson as he was drowning. To mark their appreciation of Foley’s presence of mind in jumping overboard and saving Johnson’s life, the crew intend to present to young Foley a purse of sovereigns.” Queensland Figaro Thursday 26 May 1910

Aunty Margaret Iselin recalls Charles Foley as a skilled fisherman and superb swimmer. She remembers one day when they were out boating, the anchor got stuck. She was impressed with his diving effortlessly under the water to free the anchor.

He served overseas and was discharged in 1918 with rheumatism. He was buried in the Dunwich cemetery in 1944.

Charles Foley is commemorated on the Roll of Honour as ‘Charlie Foley’.

Arthur Walter Harward – 17209

7/4 Pioneers, Driver

Arthur Harward was born on Stradbroke Island and was working as a baker when he enlisted on June 19, 1916. His mother was Mrs Lottie Harward (nee Campbell) of Dunwich. His brother Robert Percy Harward had joined up earlier. Arthur was discharged in August 1919. His granddaughter Cheryl Harward remembers him:

“He went to Myora School in 1904, then to the Dunwich State School in 1908. Arthur enlisted in WWI in 1916 as a driver. He was 22 years of age. His trade was as a baker at the Wacol Asylum. He returned home from the war in 1919 at the age of 25. Then he came back to Wacol Asylum and worked there till he was 70 years of age as head baker. His father was the chief attendant of the Asylum, Walter Blake Harward. He started at the Asylum, only as a wardsman. He ended up becoming chief attendant at the Asylum. He and my great-grandmother Charlotte lived in a government house, the one near the bait and tackle shop and the fruit shop. It was one of those. Walter helped to establish the new Dunwich School between 1904 and 1908 before it opened. He was part of the creation of it. He fought for it. [Arthur] used to live at a lot of places, but I remember that as he got older, he lived a lot at our place. He was married three times, and when he got older, he was on his own. He would come and live with us, and he would go back to Eventide, where his brother Wally was. He was living with us when he had a massive stroke. He was 82. Pop never spoke about the war. He said you don’t need to know.” Interview with Cheryl Harward, recorded at the NSIHM, February 2015

Arthur Harward is commemorated on the Roll of Honour. The Harward family still have deep connections to North Stradbroke Island.

Robert Percy Harward – 443

2nd Aust Tunnelling Coy, Australian Army Pay Corps

Percy Harward – as he was known – was almost 20 when he enlisted in November 1915. His mother was Mrs Lottie Harward (nee Campbell) of Dunwich, his father was Walter Blake Harward. Percy was the second of their eight children – Arthur, Percy, Irene, Reginald, Hilda, Charlotte (Lottie), Alfred and Walter. His brother Arthur Harward joined up the following year. Percy attended the Myora Mission School and then Dunwich State School. He served in France and was wounded before being discharged in 1919. Percy married Elinor Hooton in 1932, and they had four children. They lived in Coolangatta but spent some time in Lismore.

During and for some time after the Second World War, when there was a period of rationing and price control, Percy worked for the Prices Branch in Brisbane. At that time, his family lived in Coolangatta, and he would travel to and from home on weekends. He always did some small bookmaking, and after the war, although he did other things, bookmaking became his life. One of his daughters, Diana Coghill, remembers him:

“Dad was pretty colourful, he was one of those dapper little men. He was about 5ft 2 or 5ft 3, always looked like a bookmaker; always wore polished shoes and a little hat. That’s how I grew up knowing him. I know Dad was really fond of his Mum, but it is said that he had forged his mother’s signature on the Parents’ Consent Form to go to war. He was gassed in the trenches. He only had one lung that worked, and he used to get pneumonia. Dad never talked about the war. There was only once that he mentioned to us about the food rationing. He said you would eat anything because you were so hungry, even though you were in the trenches, in the mud, with dead bodies. That’s the type of thing he said, although he never said very much. Robert (my brother) said that he remembered that although Dad proudly wore his small Returned Services badge on his suit, he never attended any Anzac Day ceremony. I think that he had a tough time in the war. I think that he became quite a timid man after that. He was also a very nervous man, and we always thought that that was from the war.” Interview with Diana Coghill, recorded at the NSIHM, February 2015

Robert Percy Harward died in Brisbane on May 28, 1985 (his 90th year). He is commemorated on the Roll of Honour.

James Cooper Hope – 5029

31 Infantry Battalion – 13 to 15 Reinforcements

James Hope was born in Manchester, England, and enlisted in April 1917 at 40 years of age. His complexion was noted on his enlistment papers as “grey”. He was a Warder at the Dunwich Benevolent Asylum when he enlisted. He seems to have made a remarkable transformation from an inmate to a warder, as Aunty Rosie Borey remembers from when she was a child living in Dunwich:

“I can remember mostly the family. He married one of the nurses from the Benevolent Asylum. They had two boys…they went to school with us. He was really unfit, that James Hope, because they said he could hardly walk when he came to Dunwich. Some of our locals used to take him down to the beach and dig in the saltwater sand and cover him over. Eventually, they got him back to walking on his feet. He was an inmate. They got him to the stage where he finished up getting a job.” Aunty Rosie Borey, recorded at the NSIHM, February 2015

His next of kin was listed as his brother in England, so he may not have had any other family living in Australia when he enlisted. James was discharged in 1919 as medically unfit and returned to Australia.

James Hope is commemorated on the Roll of Honour.

Albert Jones – 64364

6th Reinforcements

Although he claimed to be born in Gympie on his enlistment papers, Albert had lived at Cherbourg with his mother, Lucy Lane. He enlisted in Gayndah. Permission for him to serve overseas was given by the Chief Protector of Aborigines, as he was only just 18 years of age.

Albert Jones returned from war in 1919 and went to Maryborough to work for the Levinge family oystering. Albert would bring oysters down to the banks owned by the Moreton Bay Oyster Company below Big Hill at Myora, to fatten them. It was here that he met Louisa Newfong. They married and had 9 children. Albert got a job looking after the pumping station at Yerrol Creek for the Dunwich Benevolent Asylum. He was also responsible for lighting the Myora Beacon every night. His daughter, Aunty Margaret Iselin, remembers as a child accompanying her father at low tide when he would walk to the light with a fresh lantern filled with kerosene. Aunty Margaret remembers her father as a man who never drank. He would always whistle and used to whistle his grandkids to sleep. His granddaughter, Aunty Patsy Miethke, remembers:

“He would never talk about the war. He did share his deep sadness he felt when leaving [the war] because they had to shoot all the wonderful horses, which they had grown attached to.”

He died at the age of 59 and is buried in the Dunwich cemetery. He never received an Army pension. His surviving children are Aunty Margaret Iselin, Aunty Cynthia Flucker and Uncle Kenny Jones.

Frederick George Kelly – 3564

25th Infantry Battalion – 1 to 8 Reinforcements

‘Fred’ Kelly was born in Rockhampton and enlisted at 18 years in 1915 in Brisbane. His parents were Arthur and Ethel Kelly, of Dunwich. Arthur worked at the Dunwich Benevolent Asylum as a carpenter. Because of his young age, Arthur had to provide a letter of permission to the Recruiting Officer, allowing his son to enlist. Fred’s occupation before the war is listed as “Messenger customs”. After he was discharged in April 1919 with a shoulder wound, he returned to work with the Customs Department. He died in Roma at age 50, whilst working there as an Excise Officer.

Frederick Kelly is commemorated on the Roll of Honour as Fred Kelly.

Henry Lee & Benjamin James Manager

Henry Lee and Benjamin Manager were both born and raised in Dunwich. They enlisted in September 1915, but were discharged a few weeks later, both on the same day, by the same man. Both their papers had “services no longer required” written across the front page.

Henry Lee

Henry Lee was born in Dunwich and worked as a fisherman. He had a wife and a child. He enlisted in Brisbane in September 1915 when he was 29. His papers describe him as “Dark – half-caste Maori”, although he was from the Lifu family from New Caledonia. He was discharged on November 1, 1915, for being ‘half-caste’.

Benjamin James Manager

Benjamin Manager was born in Dunwich and enlisted at 18 years old on September 10, 1915. His mother was Mrs Elizabeth Burke of Dunwich, who was a daughter of Fernando Gonzales and Junobin. Elizabeth was known as Grannie Bessie. His father was Benjamin Manager (Managai), a Maori from New Zealand. The family worked for the Moreton Bay Oyster Company at Currigee on South Stradbroke Island, and lived at Myora. Benjamin Manager Snr was buried at Myora cemetery in 1901, and Grannie Bessie remarried.

His paper noted his “Distinguished Features” as “Maori extraction”, and he was discharged on November 1, 1915, for being ‘half-caste’.

Francis Herbert Mansfield – 3135

4th Pioneers Battalion

Francis was born on Stradbroke Island and enlisted on May 2, 1916, in Brisbane, when he had just turned 21. He had spent four years as a cadet and three years in the Citizen Infantry Forces. He worked as a carpenter before the war. His mother was Mrs Mary Mansfield of Paddington; his father is listed as Richard Mansfield, a fisherman. He married Daisy Wenlock in England in June 1919, and they returned to Australia together later that year. He died in 1943, leaving his wife and a son, Allan.

The Mansfield’s family connection with North Stradbroke Island may have been lost before the war, as he is not listed on the Roll of Honour.

Edmund James McDonald – 39227

Field Artillery Brigade – 27 to 35 Reinforcements

Edmund McDonald was born in Burra, South Australia, where his parents lived when he enlisted. He worked as an ‘agent’ and enlisted in Burra on March 17, 1917. He had just turned 29. He served overseas in France as a Gunner. He was discharged in early 1920. Edmund joined up for the Second World War too, and was a Sergeant in the Pay Corp. He died suddenly in June 1945, leaving his wife, Lucy and daughter Marjorie. He is buried in the AIF Cemetery in Adelaide.

Edmund’s connection with Dunwich and the reason for appearing on the Roll of Honour is a mystery.

Richard Martin – 1359

15th Battalion, transferred to 47th Battalion

Richard Martin is Aunty Rosie Borey’s uncle; she remembers her brother Alfred and sister Bunny telling her about him. The family originally lived in Dunwich up until the death of their father, Richard Baptiste Martin. Grannie Nooninga (Rosie Martin) then took her family back to the Moongalba Mission. After finishing school, Richard worked as a labourer. Richard was almost 23 when he enlisted in the Army in Brisbane on December 17, 1914, and claimed on his enlistment papers that he was born in Dunedin, New Zealand, although he was born and lived in Dunwich. Aunty Evelyn Parkin said her mother, Bethel Delaney (nee Martin), remembered her Uncle Richard leaving from Dunwich. She went down the jetty, and there was a group of people at the jetty, waving him goodbye and all feeling sad.

Richard joined the 15th Battalion and sailed for Gallipoli on February 13, 1915. After Gallipoli, those soldiers remaining from the 15th Battalion joined the newly formed 47th Battalion and were shipped out to the Western Front in early June 1916.

Before leaving Egypt, Richard wrote to his brother Alfred and sent him a copy of the program celebrating ‘The 1st Anniversary of the Landing at ANZAC: Military Sports held at Tel-El-Kebir’, dated April 25, 1916. Richard told Alfred it was a good time.

Richard fought in several campaigns – the Battle of Poziers and the 1st and 2nd Battles of Bullecourt, to name a few. He was wounded three times, then killed in action on March 28, 1918. His name is listed on the Villers-Bretonneux Memorial in France. His grave is unknown, but military records advise that he is buried in the Dernacourt Cemetery. Thomas Welsby was with Richard’s brother, Alfred, when the telegram arrived with the news of Richard’s death:

“His brother was working on the carburettor when the fatal telegram was placed in his hands. We knew. A few minutes, two or three, passed in silence, when he turned his face to me, and with tears in hopeful, and yet withal cheering eyes, said, “Well, Mr. Welsby, Dick died with his boots on” (and that meant everything), and went on working.” Thomas Welsby, Memories of Amity, 1922

Richard Martin is commemorated on the Roll of Honour and also has a heart-shaped memorial stone on the wall of the Dunwich Hall.

James Murray McGregor – 650

4 Infantry Battalion, Naval & Military Forces – Special Tropical Corps, AIF 53292, 1 to 8 (QLD) Reinforcements

James McGregor was born in Scotland and worked as a hospital attendant at the Dunwich Benevolent Asylum. When he enlisted, the Medical Superintendent of the Asylum wrote a letter to his superiors asking for two replacement staff, because of the shortage of men “suitable for this class of work”. His parents lived in Brisbane. He was 35 years of age when he first enlisted on November 12, 1915, in Brisbane. James enlisted and travelled overseas on two separate occasions. He first joined the 3rd Tropical Force and was sent to Rabaul in Papua New Guinea. After 18 months, the Tropical Force was no longer required, and they were returned to Australia. A year later, James enlisted in the AIF and was sent to France. He returned to Australia in 1919 and was discharged.

James McGregor died in Brisbane in 1922. He is commemorated on the Roll of Honour.

Ernest Walter Reedman – 4236

25th Infantry Battalion

Ernest Reedman was born in Dunwich and enlisted in Brisbane on December 23, 1915, at the age of 24. His father, Arthur, was a tram inspector. Ernest worked as a labourer before the war. We don’t know much more about his life, or why the family were living in Dunwich at the time he was born. His complexion on his enlistment papers is noted as “Dark”, but no local records can be found of him attending school or living on the Island. Ernest married whilst on active service – in Ireland on June 9 1917, to Emma Stewart. He returned to Australia in September 1919 with his wife and child. He worked for the Tramways Department when he returned to Australia, and died in April 1945 in Brisbane, leaving his wife Emma and their children.

He is not listed on the Roll of Honour.

Jerome Sofin – 5472

20/15th Battalion

Born on Thursday Island, Jerome Sofin was 24 years of age when he enlisted in Darwin in February 1916. His next of kin was his sister Henrietta Sofin, who lived in the Philippines with her three other sisters. He was a labourer. He was discharged in February 1917 as medically unfit, and fought a long battle with the authorities for recognition of his service. Jerome lived on North Stradbroke Island after his discharge in 1917.

He is not listed on the Roll of Honour. Jerome Sofin is the grandfather of Margaret Kucirek and Fred Campbell.

William Shackleton – 6074

6th Field Company Engineers, Reinforcement 3

William Shackleton was born in Sunderland, England, where his next of kin still lived when he enlisted in Brisbane on September 18 1915. He was almost 37. He was employed as a plumber in the Dunwich Benevolent Asylum before he enlisted.

Aunty Rosie Borey remembers a family story of the efforts William made to see off his mate, her Uncle Richard Martin, as he was leaving the Island and heading to the War:

“[William Shackleton] made a point of getting the boats to come together so he could say goodbye. Uncle Dick was going, and he was coming from the mainland. He asked if they could go alongside just to say goodbye. There would not have been that many people here. Everyone would have known each other.”

He served in France as a driver and was discharged in 1919. William Shackleton is commemorated on the Roll of Honour.

Albert Tripcony – 5655

25th Australian Infantry Battalion

Albert was born on North Stradbroke Island and enlisted on February 11, 1916, in Brisbane, when he was 23. He had been working as an oysterman. His mother was Mary Rose Tripcony, and his younger brother Vincent also went to the First World War. Albert was killed in action in France on May 3, 1917. He was 25 years of age. In the Red Cross file of eyewitness accounts of his death, one of the testimonies says that the soldier understood that Tripcony had “Italian parents”, which was perhaps what he told the Army to explain his dark complexion. His sacrifice was recognised with a presentation of a certificate to his family in 1920. In part, it reads:

“By the Mayor and the Aldermen of the City of Brisbane, on behalf of the citizens, who desire hereby to express their admiration of the high resolute that impelled him to offer his services with the Australian Imperial Forces, in the Great War, 1914-1919, and to acclaim him one of the gallant heroes who by devotion and sacrifices so nobly have upheld the traditions and glorious heritage of the British Empire”.

Albert Tripcony is commemorated at the Villers-Bretonneux Memorial – the Australian National Memorial in France. He is also listed on the Roll of Honour (as ‘Bertie Tripconny’) and there is a marble memorial stone on the wall of the Dunwich Hall in his honour.

Vincent Tripcony – 470

3rd Australian Machine Gun Battalion

Vincent was born in Brisbane and enlisted in June 1916. He was only 18 when he enlisted, a few months after his brother Albert. He had been working as a labourer. Vincent and Albert’s mother was Mrs Mary Rose Tripcony of Sutton.

St, Kangaroo Point. She wrote to the Minister for Defence on a number of occasions, seeking information about the location and health of her sons.  Vincent was wounded in France in 1917, with injuries sustained to his jaw and right thigh. He was discharged and returned to Australia in August 1919. He had a house at One Mile on North Stradbroke Island for many years. Later, Vincent and his sister Anastasia built a house on Oxley Parade, Dunwich. His nephew is Quandamooka elder, Uncle Bob Anderson.

Vincent Tripcony is commemorated on the Roll of Honour. He died in 1975.

Acknowledgements & Disclaimer

This text contains language of the World War I era, which may offend.

The North Stradbroke Island Historical Museum has worked hard to include all the stories of people enlisting in World War One who have an association with North Stradbroke Island. This list may not be complete, and we would welcome any additional information.

The Museum is grateful for the assistance from the Island community in compiling this exhibition.

In particular, we would like to thank:
Uncle Bob Anderson
Australian War Memorial
Aunty Rosie Borey
Diana Coghill
Aunty Sandra Delaney
Desley Finlay
Bill Giles
Roger Goebel
Margaret Grenfell
Cheryl Harward
Robert Harward
Aunty Margaret Iselin
Aunty Hazel Kennedy
Aunty Margaret Kucirek
Aunty Patsy Miethke
Minjerribah Moorgumpin Elders in Council
Minjerribah Respite Centre
Maureen Myers
Glenda Nalda
National Archives of Australia
Karen O’Brien
Aunty Evelyn Parkin
Aunty Ailsa Perry
Angela Puata
Queensland State Archives
Redland City Bulletin
Redland City Council
Mike Ricks
Royal Historical Society of Qld
State Library of Qld
Stradbroke Design

Acknowledgment of Country

We acknowledge the Goenpul [Goren-pul], Ngugi [Noog-ee] and Noonuccal [Noo–knuckle] First Nations Peoples of the Quandamooka Region, the Traditional Owners of this land. We pay our respects to Elders past, present & future. 

Source: North Stradbroke Island Museum on Minjerribah

Indigenous recruits rejected at camp

In May 1917, the Australian Government issued a Military Order (No. 200) which relaxed the Defence Act (1903) provisions around indigenous enlistment. A resounding ‘No’ vote in the 1916 conscription referendum, heavy losses on the Western Front, and a decreasing number of willing recruits prompted authorities to consider other strategies to fulfil the recruiting quota.

“Persons who are not substantially of European origin or descent” were exempt under the Defence Act; however, the 1917 Military Order stated that “half castes may be enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force provided that the examining Medical Officers are satisfied that one of the parents is of European origin”. Although a halfway measure, this change did enable more Aboriginal men to join the AIF.

An image of head shots of veterans

Indigenous men had in fact been enlisting since 1914, but success was random, and often dependent on the attitudes of recruiting sergeant and officers, and how they interpreted and applied the Instructions for the guidance of enlisting officers at approved military recruiting depots - “Aboriginals, half-casts, or men with Asiatic blood are not to be enlisted – This applies to all coloured men.”

Some indigenous men travelled hundreds of miles to try their luck at recruiting centres far away from their communities, if they had been rejected closer to home. Others with mixed parentage scraped through by claiming foreign nationality. Some men who were successfully enlisted were subsequently rejected once they arrived at a training camp.

Such was the case for a group of indigenous men from Queensland. On 15 May 1917, the Darling Downs Gazette reported that Canon Garland of the State Recruiting Committee and Mr Blakeney, the Protector of Aborigines, informed of the new regulations, travelled to the Barambah Aboriginal Station to enlist several Aboriginal men who had been ‘waiting for some time for permission’.

'Enlistment of half-castes', Darling Downs Gazette, 15 May 1917, p.4
On 21 June 1917, however, the Gazette reported that the 16 men had been rejected and sent back home. Upon arrival at the training camp, they had been examined by a medical officer and deemed ‘unfit for military duties’, as they were ‘not half-castes, and the military authorities state that full-blooded aboriginals are not wanted, as they will not make soldiers.’ Angry that they were ‘made to appear as slackers’, the men wrote a letter to the Brisbane Courier stating that not only had they been escorted home ‘like a lot of prisoners’, but had also not received any pay or discharge papers.

Aboriginal recruits' Darling Downs Gazette, 21 June 1917, p.6

Certainly, the prospect of increased indigenous enlistment met with a variety of opinions. A particularly patronising article in The Queenslander on Saturday 2 June 1917 – ‘Half-castes to the rescue’ - appeared to praise the honour and bravery of indigenous servicemen; however, its main point seemed to be a criticism of indifferent young white men, complaining that the 'shirking of the slackers and the veranda-supports has made it necessary to enlist' indigenous men.'

'Half-castes to the rescue'. The Queenslander, 2 June 1917, p.20 

'Half-castes to the rescue'. The Queenslander, 2 June 1917, p.20

The author suggested that it was a 'shamefully regrettable circumstance that we should have to go back to the blacks for defensive purposes, and it brings us face to face with the degrading fact that Australia has given birth to numbers of young whites who would rather foist their war responsibilities on to anybody else rather than face the music themselves.' For young black men, the enlistment changes of 1917 offered some leeway for participation in the war; however, equality was nowhere to be found.

For more information about Queensland's indigenous servicemen, see the QANZAC100 website.

References

Defence Act 1903

Military Order No. 200, May 1917

Instructions for the guidance of enlisting officers at approved military recruiting depots.  Anthony James Cumming Government Printer and the Australian Army, Brisbane, 1916. Australian War Memorial, 355.2230994 A741r

Source: Robyn Hamilton - QANZAC100 Content Curator, State Library of Queensland

Indigenous Australian Forces

‘Honour, Recognition and Respect: Lest We Forget’.

These words are written on a banner carried at the Anzac Day March in Redfern and followed by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander marchers. It lists the international conflicts in which many have served, reminds us that Indigenous people have a long history of military and civilian service, and demands that this service be recognised after many years of neglect. Following on from the celebration of NAIDOC week this month, our article recognises the role of Indigenous men and women in all conflicts to date.

The most surprising thing in researching this topic has been to realise the willingness of Indigenous people to volunteer to defend a country that had systematically tried to wipe out their people in the early settlers’ grab for land, instituted Aboriginal Protection Acts that controlled every part of their lives, and put legal barriers in place to prevent them joining the services, beginning with The Defence Act of the new commonwealth in 1909.

The Boer War

When the Boer War broke out in 1899, Australia consisted of six separate British colonies, which were under the control of the British Parliament. These governments offered to raise military contingents to support the empire, and many Australians volunteered, including Aboriginal men.

Whilst the exact number is not known, those who did go, either as troopers in militia contingents raised by the States, or trackers, proved their worth as excellent horsemen and trackers.

Jack Alick Bond, aka John Alick

One such man was Jack Alick Bond, known as John Alick. He was a Yuin man, born in Braidwood, NSW, and the first known Aboriginal serviceman to be awarded a medal for military service in a foreign country. He served as a trooper in South Africa from 1900 to 1901 in the 1st Australian Horse, then in 1902 in the 1st Battalion Commonwealth Horse, until the war ended.

Unfortunately, this did not count for anything when he returned to Australia; he died in 1941 and was buried in an unmarked grave until the National Indigenous Australians Agency contributed to arranging a headstone and plaque to commemorate his service.

Many others returned to the same conditions that they had left, some finding that their children had been removed in their absence. This happened after WWI as well.

World War I

The Commonwealth Defence Act of 1909 introduced compulsory military training but exempted men “not substantially of European origin or descent”. Policy detailed in the July military recruiters’ handbook stated that ‘Aborigines and half-castes are not to be enlisted’. This policy was not relaxed until 1917, to allow ‘half-castes’ to enlist if ‘one of their parents is white and of European descent’.

No official reason was given for this policy change. However, the fact that Australia had suffered huge losses in Europe, and the compulsory conscription referendum in October 1916 had been lost, may have been contributing factors. Nevertheless, military records show that large numbers of Aboriginal men did in fact enlist between 1914 and 1916, often by not revealing their heritage, or by moving to areas where they were more accepted. Many recruiting and medical officers at certain locations used their own discretion, perhaps for pragmatic reasons.

Richard Kirby

As research continues to identify Indigenous servicemen and women, it is known that over 70 men served at Gallipoli. One such man was Richard Kirby from Warren, NSW. After Gallipoli, he went to France, where he was promoted to Lance Corporal and served with distinction. He was awarded a Distinguished Conduct Medal and received a letter from King George V, one of four Aboriginal men to receive this honour. He was shot in France and died on August 20, 1918.

World War II

Despite serving in WW1 alongside their white comrades and experiencing similar conditions with little signs of racism, the same racist attitudes and barriers to enlistment existed for Indigenous Australians when Australia went to war again. Many did enlist in 1939, either in the 2nd AIF (Australian Imperial Force) or the Militia, although in 1940 the Defence Committee decided that such enlistments were “neither necessary nor desirable”.

This attitude changed when the threat of Japan invading the north of Australia became apparent after the bombing of Darwin. Given the nature of the land in the northern part of Australia, and the special skills required to navigate the terrain, military authorities finally accepted the value of raising specialist Indigenous units from the local Aboriginal population, men who had a deep knowledge of their country. Three particular units enabled Indigenous men to gain meaningful employment and develop their skills.

The Torres Strait Light Infantry Battalion was raised in March 1943. It was the only Indigenous Australian battalion ever formed by the Australian Army, and its role was to guard the islands of the Torres Strait, which were a strategic point between the Pacific and Indian oceans. However, they only received one-third of the pay of white soldiers and were denied any benefits. They were disbanded in 1946. Eventually, in 1986, they received full back pay for their war service.

The Northern Territory Special Reconnaissance Unit was formed in August 1941 to patrol Arnhem Land. The unit included 50 tribal Aboriginal warriors from Arnhem Land, who were employed for their knowledge of the land, their bush skills, and their traditional fighting skills. Their payment was tobacco rations and fishing and hunting supplies. The unit was disbanded in 1943 when there was no longer a threat of Japanese invasion. They did not receive back pay or medals until 1993.

The 2/1st North Australia Observer Unit (NAOU), known as the ‘Nackeroos’ or ‘Curtin’s Cowboys’, was formed in May 1942. It comprised 550 men and employed more than 50 Aboriginal guides and labourers. Its role was to patrol the northern coast and bush on horseback and in small craft, to man coast-watch stations, and operate a signals network for northern Australia. The unit was disbanded in March 1945. It served as the forerunner for NORFORCE.

However, the majority of Indigenous servicemen joined the AIF, where they fought, were wounded, were taken captive, and died alongside their mates. They fought in all spheres of war and received equal pay. That equality did not extend to life after the war.

Reginald Walter Saunders

Reginald Saunders was a Gunditjmara man born in 1920 in Victoria. He enlisted in the army in 1940 and served with the 2/7th Battalion, where his leadership qualities were soon noticed.  In April 1943, he was promoted to Sergeant.

In April 1944, he married Dorothy Banfield, who was serving in the Women’s Auxiliary Australian Air Force. He was commissioned as a Lieutenant in November 1944. After being wounded, he returned to Australia and was placed on the Reserve Officers’ list.

At the outbreak of the Korean War in 1950, he joined the 3rd Battalion Royal Australian Regiment and was promoted to temporary Captain. He was placed in command of ‘C’ Company, which took part in the Battle of Kapyong, for which the battalion was awarded the United States of America’s Distinguished Unit Citation.

On his return to Australia, he reverted to Lieutenant in March 1952 and was put in charge of training recruits and National servicemen. He was not happy in this role and resigned his commission in October 1954. As the first Indigenous Australian to be commissioned in the army, he was instrumental in breaking down racist assumptions about his people.

Despite his service record in the army, however, he still experienced racism and discrimination in civilian life. He was not even able to obtain a Soldier Settlement block.

An article in the Adelaide newspaper “News”, dated 18th November 1950, said,

“Mrs Dorothy Saunders, wife of the first full-blooded aboriginal to receive the King’s Commission, is living with their three baby daughters in one squalid room in North Fitzroy while her husband fights in Korea.

In this room of a condemned house – the only home that a war hero and his family could find in years of searching – the youngest baby has been bitten by a rat, and there are great gaps in the broken, sunken flooring. A patch of wet mud lies at the doorway, where the floor has been worn right away.

Lieut. Reg Saunders, the “real Australian officer”, won his commission and his distinction for his race by AIF service in the Middle East and New Guinea.”

In 1969, he was appointed as a liaison officer in the Office of Aboriginal Affairs and was awarded an MBE (1971) for his work in establishing communications between the government and Indigenous communities. He died in 1990.

Leonard Waters

Leonard ‘Len’ Waters was Australia’s first Indigenous fighter pilot. A Kamilaroi man, he was born in 1924 and was fascinated by flight from childhood.

Len left school at age 14 and worked as a shearer with his father during the Depression. In 1942, he enlisted in the RAAF as a flight mechanic.

He began training as a fighter pilot in 1943 and over the next year completed intensive training in navigation and other flying skills, firstly at Narrandera and then at No. 5 Service Flying Training School RAAF at Uranquinty, near Wagga Wagga.

In July 1944, he received his RAAF pilot’s wings and was promoted to sergeant. He said that he never experienced any discrimination on the basis of his skin colour.

Len flew 95 missions in his Kittyhawk, aptly named Black Magic, logging 103 flying hours. He was discharged in January 1946 with the rank of Warrant Officer.

Len’s dream of starting a regional airline to connect people in the bush with services and facilities of the city was denied when, after 5 attempts, he was denied a civilian pilot licence because of his Aboriginality.  

After years of struggle, he died in August 1993 at Cunnamulla, Queensland. He was honoured with a flyover by 9 RAAF Hornets, flying in formation. In 2023, a Water Tower Mural depicting Len Waters was officially opened at Uranquinty to commemorate Australia’s first and only Aboriginal Fighter Pilot.

Kathleen (Kath) Walker

Born in 1920, Kathleen Walker, nee Ruska, grew up on North Stradbroke Island in Moreton Bay. When the Second World War broke out, she joined the Australian Women’s Army Service (AWAS) and trained as a signaller. She said that she joined AWAS because it was a good opportunity for an Aboriginal to further their education. She remained in the AWAS until early January 1944.

After her military service, she began her long career in political activism. She also began to write poetry and, in 1964, became the first published Aboriginal poet in Australia. She adopted her Aboriginal name and became known as Oodgeroo Noonuccal.

She died in 1993 at the age of 72. A trust was established in her honour to carry on the work she had begun towards reconciliation.

Korean War (1950-53)

At least 80 Indigenous men are believed to have served during the three years of the Korean War. Most did so in the army, although 7 served with the RAN, and one seaman served in Korean waters with HMAS Condomine in 1952–53. Torres Strait Islander Corporal Charles Mene received the Military Medal for operations during 1952. The most prominent Indigenous figure of the Korean War, however, was Reg Saunders, as we have already seen.

Malaya (1950-60)

There are currently 70 Indigenous servicemen identified as having served during the Malayan Emergency. This number is also expected to continue to rise. Most of these served in the regular army battalions sent on rotational tours from 1955, although there was also an air presence based in Singapore for most of the period of the Emergency.

Vietnam (1962-73)

More than 300 Indigenous men are known to have fought in Vietnam, but current estimates of service are approximately 500, as research continues. More than 225 are from the army; 75 of these served in Vietnam as national servicemen, even though the National Service Act 1964 exempted Indigenous Australians from the requirement to register for this obligation. Although the numbers available for the RAN and RAAF are far from definitive (12 and 5, respectively), they at least confirm a presence.

Peacekeeping and Other Overseas Deployments

While the Department of Defence website proclaims that Indigenous personnel served in the full range of overseas deployments undertaken by the Australian Defence Force (ADF) since 1975 (including Somalia, East Timor, Afghanistan, Iraq, and various peacekeeping operations), no numbers regarding the size of Indigenous participation have yet become available. A growing number of individuals have been identified who served in Cambodia, Somalia, Rwanda, East Timor, the Solomon Islands, and Afghanistan, but these at least provide a basis for the claim that, since the 1990s, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders have become a welcome and integral part of the modern ADF. 

Army Reserve Units

Supporting Department of Defence claims of significant progress in eliminating all forms of discrimination against Indigenous enlistment is the formation during the 1980s of three regional force surveillance units as part of the Army Reserve. These units – NORFORCE (formed in 1981), the Pilbara Regiment (1982), and the 51st Battalion, Far North Queensland Regiment (1985) – are all predominantly made up of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander personnel. The RAN and RAAF are equally committed to maintaining a proportion of their workforce representative of Indigenous numbers in Australian society.

Conclusion

Stan Grant, a proud Wiradjuri man, journalist and author, speaks of two of his ancestors, one a boy who changed his name, lied about his age and went to war. His name was Ivan Grant, and he died in France in WWI. The other is his grandfather Cecil Grant, Ivan’s brother, who served in the Middle East and was a Rat of Tobruk in WWII. Cecil carried the memory of his brother with him and devoted his life to the fight for equality and the right to belong in a country he had served in war.

He tells the story of his grandfather marching with his white comrades on Anzac Day and going back to a pub in Griffith. He was stopped from entering by a local police sergeant who told him he wasn’t allowed in, medals or not. Then his digger mates formed a circle around him and walked him in - in defiance of the police.

Stan Grant article – “On Anzac Day, we need to recognise the role of Aboriginal diggers” – was posted in The Link on 25 April 2017 and updated on 26 April 20 2017.

The common experience of many Indigenous service men and women was the feeling of acceptance and equality while in the services, and the ‘back to usual’ experience of returning to discrimination and inequality. Thankfully, things have improved in the 21st Century. However, it is worth remembering the experiences of those who went before, in the spirit of reconciliation.

So, given the many barriers placed in their way in earlier years, either by Aboriginal Protection Authorities which governed every aspect of their lives, or legislated restrictions, why then did so many Indigenous men and women continue to serve and defend an Australia which did not grant them citizenship until 1948, did not include them in the Census until 1967, did not remove remaining Aboriginal Protection Act provisions until 1969, and did not remove the clause exempting Indigenous men from national service until 1992?

There is no definitive answer to this question; however, perhaps it can best be summed up in this quote from the book ‘Serving Our Country’, page 4.

“Many who served in past conflicts left no record of their motivation. However, it seems reasonable to infer that many wished to exercise their own agency: to better their economic situation, to improve their political status, and to demonstrate their equality with other Australians. But as the oral histories of service personnel and their families testify, many also aspired to serve their ‘country’, a rich and nuanced term which embraces not only the Australian nation, the traditional focus of patriotism and loyalty, but also the land that has remained so central to the livelihood, culture and spirituality of Indigenous communities.”

Phyllis Darragh, Snowy Valleys Heroes Inc

Sources:

Australian War Memorial - Indigenous Service

Anzac Portal

Deadly Story - ANZAC Day & Aboriginal Service People

Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS)

Anzac Portal - Reginal (Reg) Saunders

Anzac Portal - Leonard (Len) Waters

Australian War Memorial - Kath Walker (Oodgeroo Noonuccal)

Australian War Memorial - The Lovett family

Australian War Memorial - Richard Kirby

 ‘Serving Our Country', edited by Joan Beaumont & Alison Cadzow, UNS Press 2018

The Victorian Naval Forces and Indigenous Sailors

While we are starting to learn more about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders who fought as Black Diggers during World War I, what do we know of any Indigenous sailors?

Before I start on the many Indigenous Sailors, I must tell you the history of the Victorian Naval Forces, or Colonial Forces as they were called.

In fact, the military recruitment and service of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders for their skills and knowledge of country has a long history, right from the early colonial period when British soldiers needed guides through the bush. Some Indigenous men managed to join the Australian colonial forces, such as the first recorded Aboriginal man in uniform, Thomas Bungalene, who enlisted in the Victorian Colonial Navy in 1861 – though Thomas seems to have been sent to the navy to ‘benefit from the discipline’.

It has previously been assumed that the Victorian Navy consisted of men of European descent. Part of the problem in identifying ethnicity is that non-European men were not described in terms of their ethnic background.

Unlike Asian names, the names of men of Australian Aboriginal and African descent do not necessarily identify their ethnicity. Likewise, Certificates of Service and Enrolment Sheets for the men of the Permanent Force do not describe the individual's ethnicity. However, the Victorian Naval Reserve register does list the eye colour and complexion of some of the men. Harry Moore (aka Black Harry), who was described in the press as "a coloured man" ( A Jamaican) and of whom we have photographs, was listed as having a dark complexion and dark eyes. Apparently, this description was also applied to Australian Aboriginal servicemen in the First World War.

From the first intake in 1860, men described by themselves as "Sandridge darkeys" were sworn in as members of the Sandridge Naval Brigade. Non-European men served in both divisions of the Naval Reserve/Brigade and the Permanent Victorian Navy. It would appear that the Victorian Naval Forces were more multicultural than has previously been assumed.

While recent focus on Black Diggers during World War I has shown hundreds served – often unrecognised and who continued to be unrewarded long after the war – it appears there are no historical records of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander service in the Royal Australian Navy (RAN) at this time.

Considering that many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders had a long tradition of working in maritime industries – from fishing in the early colony of New South Wales to voyagers such as Bungaree and his circumnavigation of the continent with Matthew Flinders in 1803, to whaling in the southern oceans and pearling in the north and west – it would be surprising if some Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islanders had not served in the navy before the sailors on HMAS Geranium in 1926.

The RAN differed from the Australian infantry in that it was a small, professional service established before the war. It didn’t need the tens of thousands of volunteers that the army was to require. After Federation in 1901, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander men were not citizens and therefore could not join the armed forces. While some hid their identity and managed to join up, and others were overlooked when recruitment became more desperate, it would have been very difficult for such men to join the small naval service, which comprised just two to five thousand personnel throughout the war.

But with the RAN’s history of temporarily recruiting non-Australians, and the long history of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people willing to serve their country despite Australian racism and lack of recognition of their service, the question arises whether there were any Black Sailors who served along with the Black Diggers in WWI?

The Victorian Navy

Victoria was separated from the mother colony of New South Wales in 1851, and was quick to realise that her very existence could stand in jeopardy without a navy. Gold discoveries drew thousands of people from all over the world to Victoria by mid-1852. There was no way for local authorities to enforce control over the port waters, so an appeal was made to the Imperial Government for an armed vessel to be stationed in Port Phillip. HMS Electr, under Captain Morris, arrived at Williamstown in April 1853.

Electra was inadequate, and Sir Charles Hotham applied for a vessel similar to HMS Devastation to be sent out at Imperial Government expense. This request was not complied with, so Victoria ordered a screw sloop of war from the Limehouse yard of Young Son & Magnay. The first war vessel built to the order of any British colony, which cost $76,000, was of 580 tons and had a speed of 13 knots. Commander William Norman brought her out and anchored her off the site of the dockyard on 31st May 1856.

Principal employment of HMCS Victoria was rendering assistance to shipwrecked mariners, carrying out coastal surveys, storing lighthouses, and serving as a water police ship. She repatriated stranded diggers from the abortive Port Curtis goldrush in 1858 and searched Northern Australian waters for Burke and Wills in 1861. (Thomas Bungalene was on this voyage). Her declining years were spent as a general-purpose hack, and she was broken up at Williamstown in 1896.

Victoria went to war once, when she operated as a dispatch vessel attached to HMS Pelorus in New Zealand waters during the Taranaki Rebellion. She landed a party of her seamen who constructed a redoubt under heavy fire. Her armament at the time comprised a 32 pivot gun forward and aft, two similar long guns broadside, and four short 32s.

War in the Crimea caused local panic with fears of invasion by a cruising Russian squadron. In anticipation of a war, fortifications were set up as a massive semicircular redoubt enclosing a portion of the land now occupied by the dockyard. These works, completed in 1855, were demolished six years later. The parapet was seven feet high, eighteen feet wide at the summit, and twenty-six feet at the base. Chief Harbour Master, Captain Charles Ferguson, raised an artillery force to man the defences, and on 8th April 1856, this became the Williamstown Division of the Victoria Marine Artillery Corps. Williamstown and Port Melbourne were charged with the task of raising the Victoria Naval Brigade in 1859. Manning guns of the port blockship Sir Harry Smith was their first task.

The Colonial Naval Defence Act of 1865 laid down a definite policy by which colonies could provide, maintain, and use their own vessels of war. Permanent naval forces could be raised and volunteers enlisted for the Royal Naval Reserve. After the implementation of the Act, vessels of the Victorian Navy were titled HM Victorian Ships instead of HM Colonial Ships, although official correspondence shows occasional lapses until the hoisting of the Victoria Ensign.

George Verdon (later Sir) was sent to consult the Imperial Government on naval defence matters for Victoria in 1866. Verdon represented Williamstown in Parliament. He obtained from the British Government the old wooden battleship Nelson for use as a naval training ship, and $200,000 towards the cost of the ironclad turret ship Cerberus. Nelson was laid down in 1805 as the first ship of the line built in England after the Battle of Trafalgar.

She was launched in 1814, too late to take part in the Napoleonic Wars, and as peace brought the usual drastic reduction in naval forces, the vessel spent most of her life laid up, until she was cut down to a two-decker and fitted with an auxiliary steam engine and screw. Originally, she carried 126 guns and a crew of 875. She was reduced to a single-decker at Williamstown Dockyard in 1881.

Captain Charles Payne went to England with Verdon and brought back Nelson. He remained in charge of the vessel until the death of Captain Ferguson in 1870, when he was appointed Chief Harbour Master. Nelson became a training ship for ‘... waifs and strays who had become a burden on the colony either by death of parents or desertion of them . . .’ soon after she made port in February 1868. The average annual number borne on her books was 350 boys, controlled by 36 officers and men.

Nelson was used for a time as a store ship lying off Fishermen’s Bend. She was sold at auction by the British Government in 1898 to Mr. B. Einerson of Sydney for $4,800. She became a Union Steamship Co. coal hulk at Sydney in 1901. She was towed to Beauty Point on the Tamar in 1908 and later to Hobart, where she went to the breakers in 1924. The remains were fired at Shag Bay to secure some tons of gunmetal and bronze fastenings.

The national flag granted to the Colony of Victoria was officially inaugurated in 1870 when it was broken out on the mainmast of HMVS Nelson. It incorporated the Union Flag in the upper left quadrant and the Southern Cross on an azure field. The new mercantile Red Ensign was flown from the mizzen.

Naval brigade gun teams exercised in Nelson for the first time on 10th September 1870. They were unpopular on the eastern shore of the bay in 1877, when they loosed a projectile which landed at the railway station entrance, narrowly missing killing a Chinese.

Nelson took part in a mock attack on Williamstown batteries in 1876. All arms of the services took part in the exercise, and there were about 2,000 to 3,000 troops deployed around the Bay. Nelson landed a task force of the Naval Reserve below Brighton and proceeded to attack the Williamstown batteries, which were declared destroyed because their guns could not be brought to bear on the vessel. Nelson at this time carried two 116-pdrs., twenty 64-pdrs., 20 smooth bore 32-pdrs. and six 12 pdrs.

Gun-boat VICTORIA in the Government Graving Dock at Williamstown.

HMVS Cerberus, laid down at Palmers yard on 1st September 1867, was launched on 2nd December 1868. Completed in September 1870, she sailed from Plymouth on 8th November. As her maximum coal capacity of 210 tons was inadequate for the voyage out to Melbourne, temporary sides were built up to the breastwork, and she was given a full three-masted rig. She arrived at Williamstown on 9th April 1871 after a passage largely under sail.

A drawing of the HMSV Avernul and HMVS Victoria.

Cerberus displaced 3,340 tons. With a length of 225 feet, her hull had a freeboard of only 3½ feet, with a central armoured breastwork amidships rising 7 feet above the deck. She carried four 18-ton 10-inch Woolwich muzzle-loading rifled guns in her two turrets, with several Gatling machine guns mounted on the superstructure. She had her square-box pattern boilers removed in 1883 and replaced by cylindrical boilers, which gave her a top speed of 9 knots, or a knot less than her original speed.

Cerberus was used as an explosives store ship for about 30 years until 1921, when she was towed to Geelong for use as a depot ship for the newly formed submarine base. She was rechristened Platypus II. She was later sold for little more than forty pounds and towed from Corio Bay to Williamstown Dockyard on 14th May 1924 for dismantling. She was purchased from the Melbourne Salvage Company by the Brighton Yacht Club and used to form a breakwater at Black Rock.

A drawing of the ship Cerberus.

Victorian Naval expenditure in 1865 was £7,743, which rose to £17,135 by 1875. This did not allow for the £73,520 towards the cost of Cerberus and £28,520 for Nelson. The naval strength was then 20 officers, 284 petty officers and seamen, and 40 boy seamen. Naval Reserve strength mustered aboard Nelson for shot and shell practice in 1883 was 216 officers and men.
The next year, the first class torpedo boat Childers joined the fleet, armed with four torpedoes for releasing over the side by dropping gear, and two Hotchkiss guns. The same year, the steam hoppers Batman and Fawkner of the Melbourne Harbour Trust were added to the fleet as auxiliaries. Batman mounted a 14-ton gun and two Nordenfelts, while Fawkner was fitted with a 4-ton gun and two Gatlings.

The fleet in 1889 consisted of Nelson, Cerberus, Batman, Fawkner, Childers, Nepean, Lonsdale, Victoria, Albert, Gordon, Commissioner, Lion, Gannet and Lady Loch. Nepean and Lonsdale were second-class torpedo boats, each armed with two Whitehead and two spar torpedoes. The gunboat Albert was of 350 tons displacement with 400 IHP engines driving her at 10 knots. She was built of steel with a turtle deck and a bridge deck amidships enclosing the engines. She was armed with a 12.5-ton 8-inch gun forward and a 4.5-ton breechloader aft. She also mounted two 9 pdrs. and two Nordenfelt machine guns.

The larger vessel, Victoria, was 530 tons and mounted one 10-inch gun, two 12 pdrs. and two Nordenfelts. Both gunboats were meant for harbour defence and behaved very badly in rough weather, or indeed, with any sea running at all. Victoria was sold to the West Australian Government in 1896.

The Customs steam launch Lion and the Harbour Trust launch Commissioner, when operating with the Victoria Navy, each carried two Whitehead torpedoes. The Harbour Trust tug Gannet mounted a 14-ton gun and two Gatlings. Lady Loch was built for the Department of Trade and Customs, and as a Victorian Navy vessel, mounted a 4-ton gun and two Nordenfelts.

Gordon was a turnabout torpedo launch armed with two Whitehead torpedoes and a Nordenfelt. There was also Pharos, a composite auxiliary screw steamer built at Williamstown in 1865. She was brigantine rigged and built for survey purposes, but was found to be totally unsuitable, and the old Colonial Victoria was recommissioned from reserve. Pharos was chiefly used for laying buoys and carrying stores to lighthouses and telegraph stations. She was sold out of Government service and was used as a tug and excursion steamer before finishing her life as a hulk. The Government tugs Bendigo and George Rennie, both sidewheel paddle steamers, also operated with the Victorian Navy for varying periods.

The last vessel built for the Colony of Victoria was the first-class torpedo boat Countess of Hopetoun.

A drawing of the first class torpedo boat Countess of Hopetoun.

She was built at the yard of Yarrow and Co. on the Thames, and as the contract called for delivery at Williamstown, she was sailed out rigged as a three-masted schooner. The voyage lasted 154 days. Her displacement was 75 tons, and her dimensions were 130 feet by 13 feet 6 inches beam. She had a 6-inch torpedo tube built into her counter and two 14-inch tubes on a revolving platform aft. Three heavy machine guns were mounted for protection. Her original speed exceeded 24 knots, but when she was slipped in August 1892, an accident on the cradle buckled her keel and retarded her top speed. She was christened in the Alfred Graving Dock by Lady Hopetoun, wife of the Governor of Victoria. The dock was flooded, and Lady Hopetoun pressed a switch that fired a torpedo to shatter a bottle of champagne suspended over the mouth of the forward torpedo tube.
Rear Admiral George Tryon conferred with the Premiers of the Australian Colonies on questions of naval defence, and as a result, a Colonial Conference was held at London in 1887. This resulted, among other things, in the passing of the Australasian Naval Defence Act.

It was decided to supplement the Australian Station with an auxiliary squadron. The Colonies concerned paid 5 per cent of the initial cost and $182,000 annually towards maintenance. The squadron in 1891 comprised the five third-class cruisers Katoomba (flagship), Mildura, Ringarooma, Tauranga and Wallaroo and the two torpedo gunboats Boomerang and Karrakatta. Three cruisers and one gunboat were to be kept in commission, and the remainder in reserve at Australian ports.

The Auxiliary Squadron visited Williamstown in 1891 and was made very welcome. The vessels were Tauranga. Ringarooma, Wallaroo, Boomerang and Karrakatta. The permanent Victoria Naval Forces in 1895 numbered 175 officers and men. They were divided up, while Cerberus and the torpedo boats were in port, between Cerberus, Nelson and the Dockyard or Torpedo Depot. The Government ordered the disbandment of the Naval Brigade in 1895. This did not become effective until 30th June 1904.

In 1900, a force from the Victorian Naval Brigade was raised to take part in quenching the Boxer Rebellion. Three times the required number of volunteers was obtained, and a selection had to be made. The force, under Captain Tickell, sailed in the steamship Salamis in September 1900 and saw service until March of the next year. The sailors disembarked at Taku and moved up the Pei-Ho River to Tientsin by lighter. They took part in putting Cheng-Ting Fu to the torch and in the attack on the Pei-Tang fort, arrived too late and were just in time to see it fall to the Austrian troops. The only other action they saw was during abortive affrays about Tientsin.

Naval Commandants of NSW, Queensland, South Australia and Tasmania and the Secretary of the Victorian Defence Department prepared a report in 1899, which laid the foundations for a single united Australian fleet. State Naval forces were transferred to the Commonwealth in March 1901, and were administered under State Acts and regulations until the Commonwealth Defence Act 1903 came into force on 1st March 1904.

Indigenous Sailors - The Black Watch

Moving forward to post-WWI. Not sure if any Aboriginal sailors actually served in WWI, we do know that there was a crew of 19 aboard HMAS Geranium called ‘The Black Watch’.

An image of Aboriginal Sailors.

These Aboriginal Sailors worked on Geranium when she was conducting a mapping survey of waters across the north and west of Australia in 1926. HMAS Geranium was launched on 8 November 1915 and commissioned on 6 March 1916 under the command of Lieutenant Commander James Forest Dewar, RN.

Geranium served as a minesweeper and convoy escort in the Mediterranean during 1916-1919.

On 17 January 1920, Geranium was re-activated, under the command of Lieutenant Arthur Smith, RN, in preparation for minesweeping training duties. She was commissioned as HMAS Geranium on 14 February 1920 under the command of Lieutenant Frederick Arthur Pearce, RN and operated briefly in Tasmanian waters in March. She returned to Sydney on 22 March and was alongside for the next two months. Lieutenant Commander William Mervyn Vaughan-Lewis, RN, took command of Geranium on 27 April 1920, and the vessel supported Admiral Jellicoe’s visit to Australia during May-June 1920. She was decommissioned at Sydney on 30 June 1920.

Prior to 1920, the charting of Australia’s coastal waters had been the responsibility of the Royal Navy. Following the end of the war, this responsibility was transferred to the RAN and the Australian Hydrographic Service was formed on 1 October 1920. The Royal Navy agreed to assist with survey work until the RAN could take over full responsibility, and HMS Fantome operated in Australian waters during 1920-23 and HMS Herald during 1924-26.

HMAS Geranium was commissioned as a survey vessel on 1 July 1920 at Sydney, under the command of Lieutenant Commander Vaughan-Lewis. Her ship's company as a minesweeper was 77, but as a survey vessel it increased to 113 personnel, including up to six seaman officers, an engineer lieutenant, a surgeon lieutenant and a paymaster officer. The ship's minesweeper design made it suitable for handling survey equipment, but she was to prove to be less than suitable for surveying duties in tropical Australian waters, as she had been designed for operations in the northern hemisphere.

The ship’s first survey task was to conduct a reconnaissance of Napier Broome Bay on the north-west coast of Western Australia. She sailed from Sydney on 17 August 1920, steaming via Townsville, Cairns and Darwin to arrive at Napier Broome Bay in mid-September to conduct a survey of the area for its use as a naval anchorage.

HMAS Geranium after recommissioning in 1920.

An image of HMAS Geranium

On 26 September 1920, a survey party was landed at Napier Broome Bay and during the day, Warrant Officer (Gunner) John Henry Davies went missing. A search was conducted over the next five days, including the use of Aboriginal trackers from a nearby mission station, but no sign of the unfortunate officer was found. Some weeks later, Gunner Davies’ badly mauled body was located in mangroves some distance from the bay. His remains were buried at Pago Mission Cemetery, and his death was attributed to being killed by a crocodile.

In 1923, after spending time between the North-Northwest Coast and the East Coast of Australia, she returned to Darwin. During this visit to Darwin, six Aboriginals from Bathurst Island embarked to undertake additional labouring duties. These men wore a naval uniform, with a cap bearing an HMAS Geranium tally band, and were paid a daily wage that was the equivalent of the cost of a glass of beer, while the senior Aboriginal was paid a daily wage equivalent to a glass of whiskey. While they wore naval uniform and were paid, they were not enlisted in the RAN.

They also slept on the upper deck in an area separate from the ship’s company. It was commonplace in the Royal Navy to take on board local labour in Asia, India and Africa for mundane work such as cleaning, but it was rare for the RAN, especially in Australian waters. Some of Geranium’s sailors were less than happy to have these men on board and made their displeasure well known.

Geranium departed Darwin on 15 June and returned to the Gulf of Carpentaria. Not long after arriving back in the survey area, a group of officers, while visiting one of the small islands, found an ochre-painted log that had been hollowed out and contained the remains of a long-deceased Aboriginal. The log had originally been plugged with clay at each end. Surgeon Lieutenant William Edward Paradice, RAN, a noted collector of marine animals and insects for the Australian Museum, thought the item would make an excellent addition to the museum and decided to bring it back on board the ship.

When this log coffin was brought on board, the Aboriginal sailors went into immediate panic, calling out that the log "contained a devil" and that it should be taken ashore immediately or bad luck would befall the ship. The log coffin remained on board, and the Aboriginal sailors refused to go near where it was stored; this only added to the morose feelings of those on board.

On 27 June, the ship was operating near Vanderlin Island. That afternoon, Commander Bennett decided to anchor the ship for the night. Able Seaman Alick 'Chook’ Fowler recalled the events that followed - “The skipper told the bridge personnel that the ship would go to anchor. At about 1530, I asked the skipper if he required the sounding recorder, and he said, “No, Fowler, we’ve been in this area before”. I was the sounding recorder, and I could not remember being there before, but then who was to have a better memory than an officer?

The Captain then told me, “Go aft and tell No.1 (the First Lieutenant) we will be anchoring in five minutes”. So I left the bridge and made my way along the boat deck and down the ladder to the quarterdeck and found the First Lieutenant (Lieutenant Dixon). Just as I said, “Sir, compliments of the Captain, we are going to anchor in five minutes”, we hit a reef.

The ship rolled to starboard, then to port, straightened up with her snout up in the air and her stern partly submerged. The First Lieutenant then said to me, “Fowler, I think we are bloody well and truly anchored now”. Well, after that, it was all hands to the pumps, and whatever could be spared had to be moved aft. All the heavy gear from the mining room amidships below the mess-deck was manhandled off the ship into its boats.”

Geranium had struck an uncharted reef and was in serious trouble. Bennett put out two of the ship’s anchors astern of the stricken vessel - these had to be taken out by the ship’s boats and dropped overboard by hand. Her engines were then put to full astern to pull Geranium off the reef. One of the anchor cables parted under the strain, but the other held. The ship’s company were also mustered aft to ‘whip-jump’ the ship (jump and down to set up a resonance that could help shake the ship free of the reef).

At around midnight, Geranium finally slid off the reef but then began to settle by the bow. Engineer Lieutenant George Arnold Hutchison (who had served in the Navy since 1910 and had been on board HMAS Sydney when she had sunk the Emden in 1914) took charge of the damage control efforts. Trees from nearby islands were cut down for use as shoring, while the pumps were used to remove the ingress of water. The ship was then moved to a nearby bay and settled onto the mud flat at low tide, for repairs to continue. A collision mat and coal bags, filled with cement, were used to pack the damaged hull areas.

She was re-floated the next day at high tide, but her keel was badly buckled and holed in places. On 1 July, the Royal Navy survey vessel HMS Fantome, also operating in northern Australian waters, supplied an extra collision mat and cement to plug the leaks and escorted the ship to Thursday Island.

It was here that the Aboriginal coffin was taken ashore, but the ship’s bad luck was not yet over as the cutter conveying the coffin collided with a pearling lugger en route. The six Aboriginal labourers were also put ashore at Thursday Island as they could not be taken to Sydney. The reef that Geranium struck (south of Wheatley Islet) was subsequently named Disaster Reef, and the bay she stopped at for repairs was named Geranium Bay.

Our Indigenous Heroes Team

Sources:

Muster - Victorian Navy

Indigenous Histories-Philippa Scarlett

RAN History

Our First News – 1/8/2025

We have recently updated our records to include information on the Boer War, World War I, select World War II units, and the Torres Strait Infantry Battalions. During the next few months, we will be uploading Papua New Guinea Battalions before their Independence in 1975.

Additionally, the database features records of individuals who served in the Victorian Navy, including confirmed Aboriginal service member Thomas Bungalene, highlighted in our Stories section. While several others with similar descriptions remain unconfirmed as Aboriginal, their records are included in the hope that future verification will be possible. The database also features contributions from wartime workers, such as members of the Labour Corps and Hygiene Squads. Notably, figures like Dolly Gurinyi Batcho, who later advocated for Aboriginal land rights, are featured.

Our priority now is to address the remaining gaps in the online records. If you find minimal information about your veteran, we encourage you to use the "Tell Their Story” section on the menu bar and complete the form provided. This will enable us to prioritise the completion of individual service records and deliver updates efficiently. Or you can contact us through our email form.

Our dedicated volunteers are systematically reviewing each service record to supplement missing data—a process that requires considerable time and attention to detail. It is important to note that some historical registrations, particularly concerning Aboriginal births, marriages, and deaths from the late 19th to mid-20th centuries, may be incomplete due to past citizenship laws.

The names included in our database are sourced from reputable institutions such as the Australian War Memorial (AWM), National Archives of Australia (NAA), National Library of Australia (NLA), Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC), Virtual War Memorial Australia (VWMA), as well as a range of documents and publications, all duly referenced on our website.

Our resources and acknowledgments section contains links for further research and information about library purchase options. The process of gathering these materials has taken over two years and is ongoing.

This project is committed to recognising all Indigenous servicemen and women, regardless of the duration of their service. Individuals who attempted to enlist are also acknowledged in our historical database.

We invite community members to share family stories about ancestral defence or wartime service to help document Indigenous contributions to Australia’s Defence Forces.

We would welcome new volunteers to support the continued success of this initiative, so don't hesitate to get in touch with us if you think you can spare a couple of hours from anywhere in Australia.

Keep Happy,

Zita – Team Leader

Our Indigenous Heroes - They Also Served National Project

Gallipoli Scholarship Fund

Our Indigenous Heroes-They Also Served supports news that is directly related to Veterans and their offspring.

Gallipoli Scholarship Fund

There is an opportunity for an Aboriginal young person who is a descendant of an Aboriginal veteran to apply for a Scholarship with the Gallipoli Scholarship Fund.

The Calleo Indigenous Community Fund (CICF) strives to support the enhancement of employment, education, and career development opportunities for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. As the CICF grows, we are committed to supporting more causes and individuals to enable the development and creation of education and employment success for Indigenous and Torres Strait Islander people.

To provide more opportunities for eligible descendants of veterans, the Gallipoli Scholarship Fund is establishing additional Bursaries with Ex-Service and not-for-profit organisations, RSL Clubs and Sub-Branches, Australian Government entities, Corporations, Foundations and individual donors.

Scholarships and Bursaries
The person can be in either their first or second year of tertiary education, undertaking studies in any field at any university or TAFE in Australia. (If TAFE, they must be enrolled in a degree or advanced diploma - not a short course.)

To be eligible for this bursary, they must:

The Bursary provides $8,000 pa for up to three years of study (subject to the scholar continuing). 
In addition to this stipend, Gallipoli Scholars also receive:

The Calleo Indigenous Community Fund (CICF) supports employment, education, and career development for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. CICF continues to expand its support for relevant initiatives and individuals.

Grant proposals are welcome from both individuals and organisations. Please review these guidelines before submitting your application, or contact hello@calleoindigenous.com.au for further advice. To express your interest, complete the EOI form below; only applicants aligned with CICF’s objectives will receive a response.

Contact: 02 6223 2002. hello@calleoindigenous.com.au
Unit 4, 18 Bentham Street
Yarralumla ACT 2606

Affiliated members of the Calleo Group