Soldiers who left wills
I’ve come across wills in soldiers’
service records on a number of occasions but just recently I’ve been looking at
wills made by Coburg men before they set off for the front. I was surprised at
the quite large sums some of them left and then I noticed that the money often
came from Life Insurance Policies they’d taken out with the Australian Mutual
Provident Society or similar.
One man, Frederick Alexander Hamilton of
11 Shaftsbury Street, Coburg, left his mother Selina £800, much of it from two
life policies with AMP.
25942
Driver Frederick Alexander Hamilton, 1st Divisonal Ammunition Column
died on 1 February 1919 and is remembered at the Memorial Avenue of Trees, Lake
Reserve, Coburg, tree number 50. He had survived the war only to die of
pneumonia at the 1st Australian Dermatological Hospital in Bulford,
Wiltshire.
Exterior
view of the Administrative Headquarters of the 1st Australian Dermatological
Hospital, taken c.April 1919.
Image courtesy AWM. Image D00456.
Frederick Hamilton was buried a long way
from home, but someone cared enough to place a sprig of wattle on his grave at
Tidworth Cemetery in late January 1930 around the time of the anniversary of
his death, surely some comfort to parents who were never likely to visit their
son’s grave.
From Frederick Hamilton's official file.
Another man, 2321 Private Albert Ernest Warner, 22nd
Infantry Battalion, a 37 year
old woodworking machinist of Bell Street, Coburg, had bought a parcel of land
in the Coburg Township Estate. He was also buying a piano on hire purchase. Perhaps
he inherited a love of music from his mother, who in the 1881 English census is
listed as a music teacher. Albert Warner
was born in Worksop, Nottinghamshire and married Emily Webster Dobinson in
Liverpool in 1898. They emigrated to Australia at some time after the 1911
Census but his wife died soon after, in 1914. They had no children, but Albert
was clearly planning a future in Coburg, a future that he was never to enjoy.
Studio portrait of 2321 Private
(Pte) Albert Ernest Warner, 4th Reinforcements, 22nd Battalion, of Coburg, Vic. Taken c. October 1915.
Image courtesy AWM. Image DA11074.
Albert Warner was killed in action in France on 5 August
1916. In his will he left everything to Alice Elsie May Smith (later referred
to as Alice Elsie May Scott). They were living at the same address (Bell
Street, Coburg) when he embarked and in a letter to the authorities in 1939 she
described herself as his fiancee. After
his death, she inherited his estate, went on to marry Oscar Boase and remained
in the area, living in Gaffney Street, Pascoe Vale at the time of her 1939
letter.
By using the service records and wills
together, a much more realistic picture of the soldier emerges, as can be seen
in the case of Albert Warner. If you’ve never used the online resources
available at the Public Record Office of Victoria, you really should check them
out.
Once you’re on the website, follow the
‘Access the Collection’ link. From there
you’ll see ‘PROV’s digitised records and online indexes’ and once there select
‘Wills and Probate Records’. Wills are
digitised up until the middle 1920s so you can read them online. I was searching for
soldiers who died between 1914 and 1918 so I limited my search to those years,
put ‘soldier’ as occupation and ‘Coburg’ as residence and went from there. I
found 16 soldiers from Coburg and one from Pascoe Vale. There are many more
from Brunswick.
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