Matt Syron - Afghanistan Veteran

The following article aired on NITV - The Point and tells the story of Matt Syron both during his career in Afghanistan, and the struggles after he discharged.

SBS/NITV-The Point Article

From soldier to struggling civilian: Stories like Matt Syron's must be heard

The Biripi-Worimi and Darkinjung former solider has struggled with mental health issues since he left the service and is critical of the support processes within the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Before dawn, Matt Syron pulls on a black jacket adorned with four medals.

They honour his years of service to his country, which included more than nine months on the frontlines of the War in Afghanistan a decade ago. He’s heading to an ANZAC Day Service on the New South Wales Central Coast, accompanied by some of his fellow ex-servicemen and friends.

It’s a bittersweet day. For the Biripi, Worimi and Darkinjung man, it stirs up memories of mateship and pride at what he accomplished in the service, and it gives a chance to rekindle the sense of camaraderie he formed with other diggers across the country. But there’s another side to that coin. The day is also a reminder of what he, and many other former soldiers, have had to deal with post-service. “I've been through things that nobody else can understand,” he told The Point.

“We were told to forget about what we've been through and that was a bit of a shock to the system to be honest, because I thought they had our back.”

Matt stands proudly throughout the service with the sounds of The Last Post filling the air. There is a reflective look on his face, and a number of thoughts running through his head.

He’s remembering those who never came home, and the journeys of other Black Diggers past and present, who had to face monumental challenges both during and post service.

He also reflects on some of his comrades, who have been lost after returning home.

“A lot of friends of mine have gone the wrong way, and some of them aren’t here with us anymore.” he said.

In the wake of an announcement that there will be a Royal Commission into veteran suicides, Matt is sharing his story now in the hope it will help others to speak up and seek levels of support he, and other soldiers, have not yet received. There's been more veterans lost to suicide than those who died on duty since Australian Defence Force personnel were first deployed to Afghanistan two decades ago.

“There's too much of a stigma, the fact that people have to keep it to themselves and be the strong upholding soldier that is unwavering and can't be hurt … that's not true,” he said.

“We need to talk. We just need to talk.”

With all guns blazing

Matt has been out of the service for five years now. He has a family that includes four young boys who love his medals and listening to his stories, and it was his own family’s ties with the army that originally inspired him to join in the first place.

“A long time ago my pop showed me a photo of his dad, Daniel Syron. He was in the Light Horse in World War One and ever since then … it's been something inside of me that just always wanted to join the army and the older I got, the more I sort of, I couldn't get away from it,” he said.

“A cousin of mine - He's looked into our family history with our service and we've got like a 40 plus and still counting serving members from the Boer War to now, and that's a sense of pride for me like I get shivers up my spine and goosebumps every time I think about it.”

His two eldest boys, Chase and Vallen, were just toddlers when Matt joined the fight in 2009. At that time the younger man had a very different outlook on things ahead of his deployment to Afghanistan.

He tells of tears flowing when saying goodbye to the family, then excitement as he got on the plane with his comrades. But once they landed, the reality of the situation soon hit.

“It felt like a dream to be honest with you … it become very real, an eye-opening experience, nothing can prepare you,” he said. “You can train as much as you want but once you hit the ground over there that's when it starts to really sink in.”

Matt served in Uruzgan province as part of Mentoring Task Force Two in 2010 and 2011 training the Afghan National Army. His role included protecting and assisting when trouble came, which he said happened regularly. “We weren't really expecting so much, so much time in the fight … that's basically what happened pretty much once we got there for quite a while,” he said. “You cannot prepare for it.”

Going to war was an extremely confronting experience for Matt but returning home would prove just as challenging.

From Soldier to Civilian

He said a couple hundred discharge papers were handed in from his battalion alone and there was a “heartbreaking” mass exodus at one time. “I was just at a bit of a loss to be honest with you, I didn't want to go back to my old life,” he said.

“It was just heartbreaking for me because I planned on staying in for the rest of my life .. I loved my job as I just lost the passion.”

Despite losing that passion, he found the immediate transition from soldier to civilian particularly tough. He turned to alcohol and drugs as a way of dealing with how he felt.

“I couldn't control my temper and I drunk myself into a stupor and slept for days and it didn't affect my work, but it affected my friendships and it affected my relationships,” he said. “I subsequently got divorced from it and I can’t apologise to my family enough for how I used to be. It wasn't me, it’s still a bit shameful for me to be honest with you. “I wasn't a physical person I was more of a yelling and screaming and drinking, but it was just not what my boys should have seen as a father figure.”

'Just a number'

Alongside his personal issues, Matt says things weren’t made any easier by the attitudes within the bureaucracy when he reached out for support.

In fact, he says the Department of Veterans Affairs made him feel worse.

“They at first told me that they didn't have any service record of me. So that was another heartbreaking experience,” he said.

“Everything’s just so long-winded like, you've got to get the paperwork, obviously it has to be done but the amount that they drop on you and some of it's just confusing if you don't work things properly, you know, they can misconstrue things and they really make it daunting.”

Speaking to The Point, The Minister for Veterans Affairs Darren Chester stressed that there’s almost twelve billion dollars per year provided by the Department to help our veterans, which includes 230 million for mental health support. But he conceded they could do better with their processes. “There’s also no question that there are some issues and some ways to improve it and some problems with the system that has been identified as being too complex.” Minister Chester said.

Minister Chester's description aligns with Matt's experience when seeking support. Despite the Royal Commission announcement, Matt is sceptical of what it will achieve. When he first approached the Department for help in 2013, Matt says he could only access six dollars a fortnight under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act. He chose to dive straight back in to work instead.

From that point, the physical and mental toll led him to again reach out in the hope he could get some assistance with physiotherapy on his back and neck. He says it was a painstaking process involving loads of paperwork, red tape and being "passed around" to other people.

Then last year, Matt says that he was offered approximately three-hundred dollars a fortnight, a figure he says was tested against the income of his partner. “It just shouldn't be so bloody hard like they know what we've done, they know what we've been through … it's like an insurance company really, that's my opinion of it,” he said.

“We’re just a number to them.”

Keeping it together, just

Matt is currently flying across the country to work on the Coronavirus vaccine rollout in the state. On this day he has just flown into Newcastle from Central Queensland and will be heading home to the Central Coast.

He says he is taking on any work he can get in order to get by and is hopeful that by speaking up, he can connect with others and instigate some change. He wants to break the stigma of the super-solider who won’t admit to any weakness or chink in the armour. He wants others to talk to each other. “There’s guys out there that are legitimately in a lot of trouble and half the time they’re the ones that won’t say anything.” he said.

Matt’s now on the verge of 40, and he admits he is still not in a good headspace. He says the way he feels now is the worst since he’s returned from service. “I’m at the end of my tether but I am keeping it together because I have kids.” he said.

The four boys waiting for him at home and his wife are his primary focus. He is grateful for the love and support that others in his situation may not have. He sees a psychologist regularly and puts effort into doing the things he loves, like surfing. At Newcastle airport, he looks across the room and sees a bunch of young men in Army uniform, looking jovial as they prepare to travel to whatever training or assignment awaits them.

“I remember when I was that proud,” he said. “I hope you come out of it alright boys, because my mates and I didn’t.”

 - The Point airs every Tuesday, 7.30pm on NITV

Victor Bartley – 218834 - Lance Corporal, Australian Army

This article was published by the NSW War Memorials Register. I have also found many article in regional newspapers and on the Defence site which will be posted separately.

7th Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment,
Order of Australia Medal (OAM)
Australian Active Service Medal 1945-75 with clasp Vietnam
Vietnam Medal
Australian Defence Medal
Republic of Vietnam Campaign Medal
Infantry Combat Badge
Returned from Active Service Badge Infantry Front Line Service Medal
Royal Australian Regiment Badge

"In ’66, I was 19, and I got my national service papers, and they asked me, 'Are you of Aboriginal/Torres Strait Islander descent?' I ticked the box 'Aboriginal' and six, seven weeks later, I got a letter back from the Department of the Army exempting me from being conscripted. In ’67, the referendum happened, and I got to be a citizen in my own country.

Three of me mates got called up, two blackfellas and a whitefella. And I thought, they’re not going without me. Because they were conscripts, they did two years, but that smooth recruiter, he signed me up for six years."

Victor Bartley was born in Quilpie, Queensland. Victor’s father was an Aboriginal from around Wiradjuri, Dubbo area, and his mother was third-generation Scottish, but born in Cunnamulla in Queensland.

Victor said, “In 1966, when I was 19, I got my National Service papers served on me. They had a question: ‘Are you of Aboriginal descent?’ and I ticked the box, ‘Aboriginal’. About six weeks later, I got a letter back, stating something like, ‘Dear Sir, I hereby notify you that you are exempt from National Service, blah, blah, blah.’ At that time Australia was starting to get involved in the Vietnam War and I was thinking, I don’t want to be going and playing cowboys and Indians with these blokes.”

“In 1968, three blokes that I went to school with, who were a bit younger than me, got their National Service papers. Two were Aboriginal, but they didn't tick the box, so they automatically got called up. So anyhow I said, if these two black fellas and the white fella are gonna go to Vietnam and more than likely get killed, I might as well go to.”

“So, I got on the train all the way to Sydney, and I went to the recruiting office near York Street. The bloke there said, ‘G’day, where do you gonna go, Air Force, Navy or Army?’ And I said, ‘Army’. I thought I’d do three years, but the smooth-talking recruiting officer signed me up for six.”

“Now those six years were the best part of my life because those six years, plus the service in Vietnam, made me what I am today. The discipline, the mateship, the friendship, the comradeship … learning how to be a person and learning how to take orders and do what you're supposed to do when you're supposed to do it.”

“I went into 7th Battalion in September 1968. The battalion came back from Vietnam in 1967 and all the Nashos had got out, so the battalion had to be built up again. We had 16 months’ training before we left to go to Vietnam in January 1970. And in my opinion, we were one of the best trained units to go to Vietnam.”

“We were training in Townsville in the middle of summer getting ready to go to the tropics. It was so bad; we were getting dehydrated and falling like flies. The helicopters would come and pick us up and take us back to Shoalwater Bay where they had these big rubber pools full of ice and water, and hover and drop us into the ice.” “Then to make things worse they sent us to a place in the mountains to train in the middle of winter. Every night we went somewhere, and you were supposed to dig a little foxhole to get in, but you couldn’t dig in because the ground was frozen.”

The battalion arrived in Vietnam in February 1970. Victor said, “When we got off HMAS Sydney at Vung Tau, we were put on landing barges and then taken on trucks up to Nui Dat where we were stationed. In Vung Tau there were bars on the side of the road and all these good-looking sorts going, ‘Uc Dai Loi number one (Australians good!).’ I thought, hang on is there a war going on here? But we knew there was something going on because of the military presence, the helicopters going over, and the aeroplanes and things. But I think for the first couple of days, it just stuck in my mind, what a lovely place.”

“I think we had around four or five blokes, corporals, in the battalion who were on their second tour to Vietnam. And they were an invaluable source, telling us what we did and didn’t need to do. And what I had to look for as forward scout.” “On the first operation, we were out for six weeks in an area where the VC were known to be. We didn’t cover a big area. You’d go here, do an ambush, stay there for a day, go to another place, and do the same thing. We never had a shower or anything, but you couldn't smell anything because we all smelt the same.”

“They dropped us in on helicopters on the rice paddies. The helicopters would hover not land, and I was the bloke who had to get out first. I thought I’m not going to get out here, but the gunner said, ‘Out!’ and he kicked me out. And I’ve got this bloody big pack on me, and an Armalite, and the extra M-60 rounds, and I landed facedown, and I couldn't get up. So, the section corporal came behind and grabbed me. I got up, mud all over me. You know, that was a funny thing.”

“Each company had an area of responsibility. Delta Company covered an area near Fire Support Base Isa near the Long Hai mountains. We stayed there and we went out on ambush patrols in the surrounding rice paddies or down on the beach or up around the little valley-type of thing where there were known VC trails.”

“Sometimes if you had to hurry from point A to point B, say maybe ten kilometres, they'd send the armoured personnel carriers (APCs) to come pick us up and take us straight there. And the Viet Cong wouldn't be able to follow us by walking.” “I was a forward scout, so I looked where we went, and the second scout covered my back. Then you’d have the section corporal, who was the bloke with the compass talking to the second scout. In the jungle you can’t see, especially in the bamboo jungles. It’s only when you get out in the rice paddies that you could see, or in the place we called the Long Green which was sort of a semi-open area with just all small low stuff.”

“My end of day was being able to sit back, put the feet up, and lay down the head on the M-60 machine gun, if you were on machine gun duty, and then talk bullshit to your mate . We’d talk crap, but we’d have fun doing that.”

 “We had this old Scottish sergeant on his second tour, and one of his things was to make sure his soldiers had their haircut. It didn’t matter where they were. If you were out in the bush and the helicopter came in, he’d say, ‘Bring a barber in and cut these long-haired louts’ hair. I wanna see the bone lad.’ In other words, he wanted it cut really short.”

“There was one barbershop in Vung Tau where a lot of the Uc Dai Loi, the Australian soldiers, would go. And I was in Vung Tau with a mate of mine, and he wanted to go to a bar, and I wanted to go to the barber first. So we go down to the barbershop, and there are two big barber’s chairs, a big mirror, all the paraphernalia.

Anyway, I jump in the barber’s chair and I’m waiting, and then I hear laughing and then some sheilas come out looking at me and laughing and pointing. I thought, what’s going on here? My mate said, ‘It’s not a barbershop until four o’clock, it’s a brothel-shop now. That’s one of my most vivid memories of my little sojourn in South Vietnam.”

“When I was going to school, we were never taught anything about Australia's involvement in any of the wars, not the Boer War, First World War, Second World War or Korea. I learned all about the Magna Carta, about King Henry, and about Queen Elizabeth being in the Land Army in England. Now what I try to do is, I go to primary schools and high schools and tell them about my experiences. I ask them to come down to the cenotaph in the park, and I show them the names of some of their forefathers and tell them what they did. And I tell them what it was like for me to not be an Australian citizen in my own country until I was 20, and I tell them a bit about Aboriginal history from my side of things. If it's not taught in the schools, it's gonna be lost.”

“I think if anyone wants to come to Australia , they have to accept our way of life, our values, and appreciate that they’re coming from another country, be it war-torn, and know that Australia’s got more to offer for them and for their future generations.”

Private George Watego - 5934 - 1st AIF

FAMILY LIFE

Watego, George - 5934

George Watego was born in Burwood in 1891, son of Loyalty Island father, George & English mother, Mary. He had 4 sisters & 3 brothers, one of whom, Murray (Mick) also enlisted on the same day, but assigned to a different battalion. Home for the Watego family was Cudgen “Bundjalung” Country. Throughout the decades many inter-tribal marriages took place and now the Watego family extend the length and breadth of Australia, particularly along the mid to north, east coast of Australia. 

When war broke out in Europe, Murray along with his brother George and Peter Knowles (Murray’s brother-in-law), enlisted in Brisbane, on April 26th 1916. Although very proud ‘Torres Strait Islander/ South Sea Islander’ descendants, to join the AIF like so many other Indigenous Australians, the brothers lied about their indigenous background. This no doubt was due to the racial discrimination that denied non-Europeans the right to enlist at the time.

ATTESTATION

He was single labourer, living in Cudgen. His application showed his next of kin as a lady friend, Mrs. Doris Turner, of Annandale. His medical showed he was 25 years old, 5ft 5 inches tall (1.65m), weighed 155 lbs (70kgs), with a fresh complexion, light brown eyes & black hair. His eyesight was good. George was Methodist and had a tattoo on his left arm.  He was enlisted as a private into the 26th Infantry Battalion – 16th Reinforcements with service No 5934.

RIFLE RANGE TRAINING CAMP, ENOGGERA

As was the case with men from the Northern Rivers district in New South Wales, they trained at Rifle Range Camp, Enoggera near Brisbane. The Barracks Block was built as accommodation for men in two dormitories, each 36 feet by 22 feet (10.97 x 6.7 metres). Beds or bunks were not provided, instead each man slept on a palliasse with ground sheet on the floor. For many it was their first time away from home. Men from every walk of life, from clerks and teachers to factory and shop workers, were crammed together.

Now training for the new recruits began. Firstly, the men received their vaccinations for smallpox, rabies & plague, then a recruit had to be inducted into military forms of discipline, command, and order. This was partially achieved through a program of basic training carried and, in a sense, was maintained for a long as a man was in the service.

It involved marching and drilling with the rifle, cleaning and caring for personal equipment and being supervised and inspected in ways quite different to ordinary civilian life. For example, no boots should be allowed to get in a bad state of wear but must be sent to the bootmaker without delay for repair. Men who were found with hair long and unshaven had to have a haircut and shave.

Secondly, after basic training there followed the far more serious exercise of turning a man into a fighting soldier at least partially prepared for the kind of warfare he was about to experience overseas.

The topics and exercises in the syllabus of training were a world away from their former lives and included daily physical training, entrenching, wiring, firing rifle grenades, firing the Lewis light machine gun, dealing with gas attack, using hand grenades, using the bayonet, and the routines to be followed in the trenches.

This training was then put into practice during what were called ‘Field Days,’ when men would practice using the skills they had acquired in mock attacks both by day and by night. How well men had learnt to use their weapons, in cooperation with each other in training, would be tested in the harsh reality of the front line. Training would take several months.

The recruits were issued with their uniform: a khaki woollen jacket, heavy cord breeches and the famous slouch hat – turned up on the left and featuring a plain khaki band, chinstrap and “rising sun” badge. A soldier’s equipment also included a dixie (mess tin), water bottle, mug, .303 Lee-Enfield rifle and bayonet.

VOYAGE OVERSEAS

On 21st October 1916 the recruits left Australia, sailing upon the HMAT Boonah.They thought it was the start of a new adventure- for many it was their first time so far away from home. However, after some time at sea the biggest problem turned out to be boredom. Attempts at breaking up the boredom, apart from the regular drill, varied. Shipboard activities included regular church parades and concerts. Troops engaged in lifebelt drill; a cookhouse on deck; soldiers on fatigues peeling potatoes 'spud bashing'; going to the dentist; barber, pay day; soldiers cleaning personal equipment; medical inspection. Sports and recreation included boxing, deck quoits, draughts. Also, the commanding officer's morning inspection; kit inspections; submarine drill; recreation such as the on deck 'open air' library, deck billiards, pillow fighting and card games including Nap. As well, conditions on the ships were cramped and the risk of illness was constant.  It was a foretaste of what was to come.

DISCIPLINED

Whilst on the ship, George disobeyed an order in such a manner to show wilful defiance of authority a lawful command given personally by his superior officer. He forfeited 16 days’ pay.

ENGLISH TRAINING CAMP

They disembarked in Plymouth on 10th January 1917. They had already completed their basic training in Australia but over many more tough months, in the English training camp at Rollestone, the volunteers left their old lives farther behind. They began their training with physical fitness exercises, they were taught individual and unit discipline, how to follow commands, how to march, some basic field skills and how to safely handle his weapons.  Later, as soldiers specialised in a particular area (for example, machine gunner or signaller) they would be trained in specific skills and would take part in practice manoeuvres and sham fights. They would spend many hours learning training in the use of bayonets, anti- gas training and guard duty along with lectures on camouflage or trench warfare and much more.

DISCIPLINED APRIL 1917

On 22nd April George went AWL from the camp till 2.30pm on 23rd April, for which he forfeited 4 days’ pay and was confined to camp for 2 days.

FRANCE 1917

George Watego proceeded overseas on 24th April 1917 and arrived in Étaples, France, on 26th April. Like all Australian reinforcements, he was first sent to the Australian Infantry Base Depot at Étaples, a sprawling network of camps where men were acclimatised to life on the Western Front. During his short stay there, George would have been issued with his uniform and equipment, medically examined, and briefed on the routines of trench warfare. He underwent practical training, including bayonet and musketry drills, route marches, gas defence exercises, and instruction on signalling and trench construction. Étaples was also a place where men could recover from the voyage, write letters home, and begin to get used to the mud, cold, and general hardships of France.

On 30th April, George proceeded to join the 26th Battalion, arriving at billets in the rear areas near the front. Over the next two days he was gradually introduced to his new comrades and the routines of the battalion.

TAKEN ON STRENGTH MAY 1917

On 2nd May 1917 he was formally taken on strength, marking his official inclusion in the unit. From that point, he began alternating between working parties, training, and short rotations in support positions, preparing for the upcoming operations in the Arras sector.

WESTERN FRONT & TRENCH WARFARE

The soldiers now found themselves fighting the Germans in trench warfare. On the Western Front in 1914–1918, both sides constructed elaborate trench, underground, and dugout systems opposing each other along a front, protected from assault by barbed wire.

The area between opposing trench lines (known as "no man's land") was fully exposed to artillery fire from both sides. Attacks, even if successful, often sustained severe casualties. Trench warfare created a living environment for the men which was harsh, stagnant, and extremely dangerous. Not only were trenches constantly under threat of attack from shells or other weapons, but there were also many health risks that developed into large-scale problems for medical personnel. Apart from the inescapable cold during the winters in France & Belgium, trenches were often completely waterlogged and muddy, and crawling with lice and rats.

The time soldiers spent in the trenches varied depending on factors like their army's rotation system and the intensity of the conflict in their sector. On average:

The rotation system helped prevent complete physical and mental exhaustion, but the constant dangers of trench life meant there was rarely any true respite.

APRIL TO JUNE 1917

After being taken on strength on 2nd May 1917, George Watego spent the following weeks familiarising himself with the routines of the 26th Battalion. He would have alternated between working parties, route marches, and training exercises in the rear areas, gradually learning the layout of the trenches, the signals and routines of the battalion, and how to carry out pioneer and infantry duties in the Arras sector. This period also allowed him to get to know his fellow soldiers and adjust to the conditions of life on the Western Front before being admitted to hospital in early June.

HOSPITALISATION VENEREAL DISEASE JUNE 1917

On 4th June 1917, George Watego was admitted to the 6th Field Ambulance suffering from venereal disease (VD), a common but serious problem among troops on the Western Front. He was shortly transferred to the 39th General Hospital at Le Havre, where he received treatment according to the standards of the time. Management of VD in 1917 typically involved a combination of rest, isolation from the unit, and medical therapies such as applications of mercurial ointments or bichloride of mercury for syphilis, and bismuth or potassium permanganate treatments for gonorrhoea (sic). Soldiers were also given instruction on personal hygiene and preventive measures.

Treatment could be prolonged, sometimes lasting several weeks, and recovery required the soldier to remain away from active duty until fully cured. While under care, George would have lived in hospital wards alongside other men undergoing similar treatment, with daily inspections and strict routines to prevent reinfection or the spread of disease. After several weeks, he was deemed fit for duty and rejoined the 26th Battalion on 3rd July 1917.

JULY TO SEPTEMBER 1917

After rejoining the 26th Battalion on 3rd July 1917, George returned to the battalion’s routine in the Arras sector, alternating between support and reserve positions. During July and August, the unit was engaged in the aftermath of the spring offensives, repairing trenches, constructing strongpoints, and reinforcing defensive positions. Pioneers and infantry alike carried out long working parties, route marches, and training exercises to maintain readiness. Conditions were often harsh, with mud, rain, and the constant threat of artillery fire making even routine duties exhausting.

THIRD BATTLE OF YPRES AUGUST- SEPTEMBER 1917

By late August, the 26th Battalion had moved north to Belgium, near the Ypres Salient, in preparation for the Third Battle of Ypres (Passchendaele). The battalion rotated through front-line trenches, support lines, and rest billets, while also repairing roads, laying duckboards, and building dugouts under difficult conditions. Soldiers like George faced constant danger from artillery bombardments and sniper fire, and exposure to the wet and cold increased the strain on their health and endurance.

BATTLE AT WESTHOEK RIDGE, SEPTEMBER 1917

WOUNDED IN ACTION

On 20th September 1917, during the battle at Westhoek Ridge, George Watego was severely wounded in the head and jaw, a devastating injury that immediately removed him from front-line service.

HOSPITALISED & EVACUATED TO ENGLAND

He was first admitted to the 6th Australian Field Ambulance, where he received urgent first aid close to the battlefield, before being evacuated to England for specialist care. In London, he was admitted to King George’s Hospital, a centre equipped to treat serious facial and cranial wounds. Treatment at the time would have involved careful cleaning and dressing of the wounds, surgical intervention where possible, and long periods of rest to allow recovery. Soldiers often endured painful procedures and strict immobilisation, and recovery could be slow and uncertain.

COMMAND DEPOT WEYMOUTH DECEMBER 1917

On 23rd December 1917, George was marched into No. 2 Command Depot at Weymouth, a facility designed for men likely to be unfit for duty for more than three months. While at Weymouth, he continued drilling and training to keep physically fit and to stay abreast of the latest military techniques and equipment, which were evolving rapidly during the war. This period of convalescence allowed him to rebuild strength and maintain morale, even though he remained unable to return to active service at the front.

DEEMED UNFIT & REPATRIATED TO AUSTRALIA FEBRUARY 1918

After approximately six months of treatment and rehabilitation, George was deemed unfit for further military duty and was repatriated to Australia. He embarked aboard the Balmoral Castle on 1st February 1918 and was formally discharged as medically unfit on 8th May 1918, concluding his wartime service. His bravery and endurance during recovery marked a significant chapter in his life, reflecting both the human cost of the war and the resilience of soldiers facing severe injury.

His brother Murray Watego, who enlisted on the same day, was assigned to the 41st Infantry Battalion and after also being wounded in action was returned home on the same ship, as his brother. Neither knew they would be returning on the same ship.

FOR HIS SERVICE

For his service, George was awarded the 1914-15 Star, British War Medal, and the Victory Medal.

HOME LIFE

In June 1919 he married Sierra Leone Tabitha Turner (1886-1968) and found employment on the wharves of Brisbane, until his death in 1969.

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Private Leslie Thomas Wogas - 2448 - 1st AIF

The team at Snowy Valleys Heroes Inc (Our Indigenous Heroes-They Also Served) National Project, wish to thank Diane Ashmore for writing and sharing her story with us, we appreciate your assistance and commitment.

Leslie Thomas Wogas

HOME LIFE

Leslie Thomas Wogas was born 10th October, 1897 in Cudgen, son of Thomas & Florence A Wogas. The Wogas family & many relatives lived in and around the Murwillumbah area and Florence died in 1944 in Murwillumbah hospital.

ATTESTATION

Leslie travelled to Brisbane on 6th October 1917 to complete his application. He answered several questions on the document, and we find out he was born in Cudgen, was, 19 years and 11 months old and a single man. He gave his occupation as labourer. His next of kin was his father, John Thomas Wogas of Murwillumbah.

He then signed a declaration confirming he had answered the questions correctly and was willing to voluntarily agree to service in the Military Forces of the Commonwealth of Australia.

PAGE 2

CERTIFICATE OF ATTESTING OFFICER

On the second page of the attestation documents the attesting confirms the following

“The foregoing questions were read to the person enlisted in my presence. I have taken care that he understood each question, and his answer to each question has been duly entered as replied to by him.

OATH

He also made the following oath in the presence of the Attesting Officer: “I, ………………. … swear that I will well and truly serve our Sovereign Lord the King in the Australian Imperial Force until the end of the War, and a further four months thereafter unless sooner lawfully discharged, dismissed or removed therefrom: and that I will resist His Majesty’s enemies and case His Majesty’s peace to be kept and maintained; and I will in all matters appertaining to my services faithfully discharge my duty according to law - SO HELP ME, GOD.” 

PERMISSION TO ENLIST IF UNDER 21 YEARS OLD

Leslie also must have an application to enlist in the Australian Imperial Force signed by his parent/s.

The application states “ I Leslie Thomas Wogas, hereby offer myself for enlistment in the Australian Imperial Force for active service abroad and undertake to enlist in the manner prescribed, if I am accepted by the Military Authorise, within one month from date hereof”

Leslie then signs the form, stating his occupation and the date.

CONSENT OF PARENTS OR GUARDIANS (For persons under 21 years of age)

The form reads

“I hereby certify that I approve of the above application and consent to the enlistment of my son/ward for active service”

The parents then sign I the designated places.

ENLISTMENT DETAILS

He was enlisted as a private into the 11th Light Horse Regiment, 20th Reinforcement with service No 2448.

TRAINING AT RIFLE RANGE CAMP, ENOGGERA

As was the case with men from the Northern Rivers district in New South Wales, they trained at Rifle Range Camp, Enoggera near Brisbane. The Barracks Block was built as accommodation for men in two dormitories, each 36 feet by 22 feet (10.97 x 6.7 metres). Beds or bunks were not provided, instead each man slept on a palliasse with ground sheet on the floor. For many it was their first time away from home. Men from every walk of life, from clerks and teachers to factory and shop workers, were crammed together.

Now training for the new recruits began. Firstly, the men received their vaccinations for smallpox, rabies & plague, then a recruit had to be inducted into military forms of discipline, command, and order. This was partially achieved through a program of basic training carried and, in a sense, was maintained for a long as a man was in the service. It involved marching and drilling with the rifle, cleaning and caring for personal equipment and being supervised and inspected in ways quite different to ordinary civilian life. For example, no boots should be allowed to get in a bad state of wear but must be sent to the bootmaker without delay for repair. Men who were found with hair long and unshaven had to have a haircut and shave.

Secondly, after basic training there followed the far more serious exercise of turning a man into a fighting soldier at least partially prepared for the kind of warfare he was about to experience overseas. The topics and exercises in the syllabus of training were a world away from their former lives and included daily physical training, entrenching, wiring, firing rifle grenades, firing the Lewis light machine gun, dealing with gas attack, using hand grenades, using the bayonet, and the routines to be followed in the trenches.

This training was then put into practice during what were called ‘Field Days,’ when men would practice using the skills they had acquired in mock attacks both by day and by night. How well men had learnt to use their weapons, in cooperation with each other in training, would be tested in the harsh reality of the front line. Training would take several months.

The recruits were issued with their uniform: a khaki woollen jacket, heavy cord breeches, and the famous slouch hat – turned up on the left and featuring a plain khaki band, chinstrap and “rising sun” badge. A soldier’s equipment also included a dixie (mess tin), water bottle, mug, .303 Lee-Enfield rifle and bayonet.

HOME LEAVE

On 26th November 1917 Leslie was granted 4 days home leave to visit his family prior to embarkation. He left on 27th November and returned on 1st December 1917.

VOYAGE OVERSEAS FROM SYDNEY TO EGYPT

On 17TH December 1917his unit caught the troop train from Brisbane to Sydney and on 19th December 1917 they embarked on the HMAT A38 Ulysses. Alongside his comrades, Leslie marched aboard, his boots ringing on the gangway. As the ship’s lines were cast off and the quay began to slip away, the reality of war lay ahead, but for now, the sea breeze carried only the sound of voices and the excitement of men bound for adventure, duty, and the unknown.

The epic voyage across the ocean has been described as “the longest journey to war in the history of the world.” They thought it was the start of a new adventure- for many it was their first time so far away from home. However, after some time at sea the biggest problem turned out to be boredom. On the voyage, due to overcrowding, training was limited to mainly to lectures and a little physical training.

Sleeping & Living Arrangements

Recruits likely slept in a crowded troop deck below, where rows of hammocks or three-tier wooden bunks were crammed close together.

Air below decks could be stuffy, especially in warmer climates, and seasickness was common during the first few days.

Daily Routine

Reveille early each morning, followed by physical exercises on the open decks (weather permitting). There were parades and inspections—officers ensured uniforms, rifles, and kit were clean and in order. Training was a little problematic—drill without much space, rifle maintenance, lectures on military discipline, signalling, and trench warfare theory. The ship’s decks were used for marching in tight circles or practising bayonet thrusts into stuffed sacks. Rifle shooting was impossible at sea, so soldiers learned to strip and clean their weapons until it was second nature.

Meals

Three hearty meals a day were served; breakfast usually consisted of porridge, stew, and tea. Lunch included soup, meat, vegetables, and pudding. Meat, bread with jam and tea was served for dinner. The meals were served in shifts from the ship’s galley. Queues were long, and eating on a rolling ship meant many tried to eat quickly before nausea set in.

Health & Sanitation

Shipboard hygiene was critical—every man was ordered to scrub his section daily to prevent disease. Saltwater baths were the norm, with freshwater rationed for drinking.

The Voyage Experience

Entertainment included church drill, concerts, singalongs, card games, and makeshift cricket matches on deck when the weather allowed. To keep up morale, an area of the ship was roped off where regular boxing and wrestling tournaments were held. This became commonly known as the Stoush Stadium. No letters could be sent until they reached port, but men often wrote diaries or unsent letters to be posted later.

The troops engaged in lifebelt drill; a cookhouse on deck; soldiers on fatigues peeling potatoes 'spud bashing'; going to the dentist; barber, pay day; soldiers cleaning personal equipment; medical inspection.

CROSSING THE EQUATOR CEREMONY

The crossing the Equator ceremony, ‘Neptune’s Journey,’ was played-out on each troopship.

SIGHTS AT SEA

On the way to Egypt the ship would pass through the Great Australian Bight, cross the Indian Ocean, and stop at Colombo (Ceylon now Sri Lanka) for coal and supplies.

SECURITY

By late 1914, German raiders were active, so lifeboat drills were frequent, and lookouts kept watch for suspicious ships. Troopships generally sailed in convoys or at least took zig-zag courses to make torpedo attacks harder. Ships often travelled under blackout conditions at night, with lookouts specifically watching for periscopes or torpedo wakes.

APPROACHING EGYPT

After several weeks at sea, the men finally saw the dusty shoreline of Port Said or Alexandria. The reality of leaving home truly sank in. The recruits would soon exchange the ship’s cramped decks for the sandy training grounds of Egypt, preparing for what lay ahead.

MOASCAR TRAINING CAMP

When Leslie arrived at Suez on 16 January 1918 with the 20th Reinforcements of the 11th Light Horse Regiment, he was stepping into a well-established rhythm of training and preparation that had been refined over years of campaigning in Egypt and Sinai. From Suez he was marched into camp at Moascar, one of the principal Australian training depots near the Sweet Water Canal, where reinforcements were absorbed, hardened, and prepared for active service with their regiments in the field.

At Moascar, Leslie’s days would have been full and demanding. Physical conditioning was a priority, with route marches under the Egyptian sun designed to build stamina and accustom men to long hours in the saddle or on foot. Parade ground drill reinforced discipline and unit cohesion, while weapons training ensured that every man was confident with his rifle, bayonet, and revolver. Musketry practice was regular, often carried out on nearby ranges, with an emphasis on accuracy and speed—skills vital for Light Horsemen who were expected to fight both mounted and dismounted.

As a Light Horse reinforcement, Leslie would also have received instruction in mounted work, including horse management, saddling, and care in desert conditions. Even when horses were not immediately available, men trained as if they would soon rejoin their mounts, learning how to move swiftly into action, fight on foot, and then remount and advance. Field exercises rehearsed patrol work, outpost duties, and rapid deployment—preparing Leslie for the mobile warfare that characterised operations in Palestine.

Beyond the formal training, life at Moascar was about acclimatisation and readiness. The heat, dust, and flies of Egypt were constant companions, and learning to live and work effectively in such conditions was part of a soldier’s education. Periods of rest were brief, but letters home, shared meals, and quiet moments in camp helped forge friendships among the reinforcements, many of whom would soon face combat together.

On 29 April 1918 Leslie marched out of Moascar, his training complete. A few days later, on 5 May, he was taken on strength, formally joining his unit in the field. By then, the weeks at Moascar had transformed him from a newly arrived reinforcement into a prepared Light Horseman, ready to take his place alongside seasoned veterans in the final phases of the campaign.

DESERT WARFARE

When Leslie was taken on strength on 5 May 1918, he left behind the relative routine of the training camps and became part of the operational life of the 11th Light Horse Regiment. By this stage of the war, the regiment was an experienced and battle-hardened unit, engaged in ongoing operations in Palestine as part of the Desert Mounted Corps. Leslie would have been absorbed into a troop and quickly brought up to speed by men who had already seen extensive service in the desert campaign.

The months that followed were marked less by large set-piece battles and more by constant, wearing duty. Leslie’s daily life would have consisted of long hours in the saddle, patrols across wide stretches of country, and the ever-present tasks of picquet and outpost work. These duties were essential to maintaining pressure on the enemy, protecting the front line, and denying movement across key routes. Patrols often involved moving forward under cover of darkness or at first light, observing enemy positions, and withdrawing before contact could escalate.

When Leslie was taken on strength, he joined the 11th Light Horse Regiment while it was actively engaged in operations in Palestine as part of the 4th Light Horse Brigade. The regiment was holding forward positions along the front and maintaining constant pressure on Ottoman forces. For Leslie, this marked the beginning of sustained operational service rather than formal training, and he was quickly absorbed into the daily rhythm of a mounted fighting unit.

Training did not cease once Leslie reached the regiment. Instead, it became more practical and directly tied to operations. He would have taken part in mounted manoeuvres, dismounted action drills, and rehearsals for rapid advances and withdrawals. Time was also spent maintaining equipment, caring for horses, and ensuring weapons were kept in reliable condition despite the dust and heat. For a Light Horseman, the bond with his horse was vital, and much of Leslie’s effort would have gone into keeping his mount fit and serviceable under demanding conditions.

Throughout the late autumn and winter months of 1918, the regiment was heavily involved in patrol and outpost duties. Leslie would have taken part in reconnaissance patrols that pushed forward into contested ground, observing enemy positions and testing their strength. These patrols often led to brief but sharp encounters, with exchanges of rifle fire and the constant risk of ambush. Although this period did not involve large, named battles, the work was dangerous and exhausting, requiring long hours in the saddle and steady nerve under fire.

Between patrols, the regiment continued mounted and dismounted training under operational conditions, refining rapid deployment drills and rehearsing actions that could be called upon at short notice. Camps were temporary and often exposed, and the men endured heat, dust, flies, and shortages of water. Maintaining horses, weapons, and equipment was a daily necessity, and the strain of continuous service took a cumulative toll on health and endurance.

By September 1918, the regiment moved into a period of major fighting during the final Allied offensive in Palestine. The 11th Light Horse took part in the operations that culminated in the Battle of Megiddo, where mounted troops played a decisive role. Leslie would have been involved in fast-moving advances, covering great distances at speed as Ottoman resistance collapsed. This phase of the campaign combined intense bursts of combat with relentless pursuit, as enemy forces were harried, cut off, and forced into retreat.

Following the breakthrough, the regiment continued its advance northwards, carrying out pursuit operations, capturing prisoners, and securing key ground. The pace was demanding, with little opportunity for rest, and the physical toll of months of active service was increasingly evident.

HOSPITALISATION- MALARIA OCTOBER 1918

It was in the aftermath of these exhausting operations that Leslie’s health finally failed. On 27 October 1918, after nearly six months of continuous duty with his regiment in the field, he was admitted to hospital suffering from malaria, bringing this phase of his wartime service to an abrupt end.

Following his admission to hospital with malaria on 27 October 1918, Leslie was evacuated from the field and transferred to Alexandria, where he was admitted to the 21st General Hospital on 16 November. Malaria was a well-recognised and serious condition in the Middle East theatre, and treatment focused on controlling fever, preventing complications, and reducing the likelihood of relapse. Leslie would have been placed on bed rest and closely monitored, with his temperature taken regularly as the characteristic cycles of fever were managed.

The principal medication used was quinine, the standard and most effective treatment available at the time. Quinine was administered either orally or, in more severe cases, by injection, and although effective, it often caused unpleasant side effects such as nausea, ringing in the ears, and headaches. In addition to quinine, Leslie would have received supportive care including fluids to prevent dehydration, light but nourishing meals, and medications to reduce fever and relieve pain. Clean bedding, improved sanitation, and protection from mosquitoes were essential parts of treatment, aimed at both recovery and preventing reinfection.

CONVALESCENCE & CARE

By 19 November, Leslie’s condition had improved sufficiently for him to be transferred to the BRCC Depot at Mustapha. This marked a shift from acute hospital care to convalescence. Although no longer confined to bed, he would still have been under medical supervision and may have continued a reduced course of quinine to guard against relapse. Duties were light, and the focus was on restoring strength through rest, gentle activity, and a gradual return to routine.

On 27 November, Leslie was moved to the International Hospital at Moascar, closer to the main Australian camps. Here, medical oversight continued, but treatment was less intensive. The emphasis was on observation and recovery rather than intervention, ensuring that symptoms did not return as his activity levels slowly increased. Malaria was notorious for recurring if men returned to duty too quickly, and these staged transfers reflected the army’s caution.

On 7 December, Leslie was sent to a rest camp at Port Said. Rest camps provided a more relaxed environment, with better accommodation, regular meals, and minimal duties. Leslie would have been encouraged to rebuild his strength, spending time outdoors, sleeping properly, and gradually regaining fitness, all while remaining under medical observation.

REJOINED UNIT DECEMBER 1918

Having demonstrated sustained improvement, Leslie was finally cleared to rejoin his unit on 8 December 1918. His return marked the successful completion of a carefully managed recovery process, one that reflected both the seriousness of malaria and the army’s growing experience in treating and rehabilitating men affected by disease during the Middle Eastern campaign.

WAR ENDED

After rejoining his unit on 8 December 1918, Leslie returned to regimental life at a time when active fighting had ceased but routine duties and movement were still ongoing. Although he had been declared fit enough to resume service, malaria was notorious for recurring, particularly when men were exposed again to fatigue, climate, and disrupted rest.

RELAPSE OF MALARIA APRIL 1919
During the early months of 1919, Leslie’s health once more deteriorated. On 26 April 1919 he was again reported sick and admitted to hospital, marking a relapse or recurrence of his earlier illness rather than a new condition. Such relapses were well recognised by medical authorities, even among men who had previously completed treatment and convalescence.

Leslie remained under medical care through late April and into May. Treatment during this second admission would have followed the same established pattern: renewed courses of quinine to control fever and suppress the malarial parasite, strict rest, and close observation. Medical staff were particularly cautious at this stage, as repeated relapses could weaken a soldier significantly and prolong recovery. The aim was not only to relieve symptoms, but to stabilise his condition sufficiently to allow eventual repatriation.

By this point, with the war concluded and demobilisation underway, the emphasis of care had shifted from returning men to active units to restoring them to a condition suitable for return to Australia. Leslie’s continued illness made him a clear candidate for this process. Once his condition allowed, arrangements were made for him to leave the theatre of operations.

GOING HOME

On 20 July 1919, Leslie embarked for Australia aboard the transport Morvada, bringing his overseas service to a close. His final months reflect the enduring impact of tropical disease on soldiers of the Middle Eastern campaign, many of whom carried the effects of malaria long after the fighting had ended.

FOR HIS SERVICE

For his service Leslie was awarded the 1914-15 Star, British War Medal, and the Victory Medal. He was discharged 22 September 1919

HOME LIFE

Leslie married Bertha Victoria Noels in Sydney in 1938

WWI

Leslie enlisted WWII N2152 pm 16th November 1940 in Tweed Heads and served with the 15th Motor Regiment. He was discharged on 2nd February 1945

DEATH

Leslie died 26th November 1964, in Tweed Heads and is buried in the Anglican section of Tweed Heads Lawn Cemetery.

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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