Thursday, 23 April 2015
WW1 cemetery walk at Coburg Cemetery
Last Sunday a group of 40 people braved the weather and went on a highly successful WW1 cemetery walk that featured eight old boys of Coburg State School.
Part of the larger Coburg Historical Society ANZAC Centenary project, the walk has been funded through a grant obtained by the Greater Metropolitan Cemeteries Trust and was organised by members of the Friends of Coburg Cemetery and Coburg Historical Society.
The walk will be repeated on Sunday 17 May, Sunday 21 June and Sunday 15 November and bookings are now open for these walks.
If you have an interest in the Coburg area or if you'd like to support the organisers, why not come and join us on one of these three walks.
For more details or to book your place, you can either email me at gcheryl52@gmail.com or email Friends of Coburg Cemetery at focc.group@gmail.com
Saturday, 18 April 2015
Moreland remembers World War One travelling exhibition
Last Tuesday I attended the launch of Moreland Remembers World War One, a travelling exhibition commissioned by Moreland City Council.
You can see the exhibition, which is comprised of 10 themed banners and some memorabilia, including the Coburg State School Soldiers Book, as follows:
Exhibition at Brunswick Library 14 April – 8 May 2015 during Library opening hours.
Exhibition at Coburg Library 11 – 29 May 2015 during Library opening hours.
Exhibition at Glenroy Library 1 – 19 June 2015, during Library opening hours.
If you are unable to visit the exhibition in person, it is available online on the Moreland City Council website at www.moreland.vic.gov.au.
Tuesday, 14 April 2015
Battle to Farm: WW1 Soldier Settlement records in Victoria
(From The Empire Called blog)
This fantastic online resource has just been
released by the Public Record Office of Victoria and you can search it here.
I've already located a number of Coburg men who took up soldier settlement blocks, including Cyril Westhorpe.
1655 Private Walter Cyril Roy (Cyril) Westhorpe, 8th Light Horse Regiment and his brother 18755 Private William Wilson (Wilson) Westhorpe, 5th Field Ambulance, were the sons of Walter and Emma Westhorpe of ‘Myrtleford’, 14 Dean Street, Coburg. They were both old boys of Coburg State School and are featured in Coburg Historical Society’s ANZAC Centenary project, ‘A hundred men, a hundred heroes: the old boys of Coburg State School go to war’.
Image courtesy AWM. Image
ID P04700.003. c 1916. Studio portrait of standing, 1654 Signaller (Sig) George
Leslie Newstead, and seated, 1655 Sig Cyril Westhorpe. Sig Newstead and Sig
Westhorpe both attended Signal School between October and November 1915, before
embarking, as Privates (Pte), with the 8th Light Horse Regiment, 11th
Reinforcements, on 13 November 1915 aboard HMAT Clan McCorquodale (A6). Both
survived the war, with Pte Westhorpe returning to Australia in 1916 and Pte
Newstead in 1919.
Cyril Westhorpe arrived in Egypt in December 1915 but
within a few months was admitted to hospital with influenza and by April 1916
had been declared medically unfit and was returned to Australia in June
suffering from phthisis, a disease of the lungs. On his return, he was placed
on a pension and soon took up life as a farmer on a Soldiers’ Settlement block
at Balliang East, just 45 kilometres west of Melbourne in the Shire of
Moorabool. You can read the records relating to this here.
He married Grace Whiteoak in 1919
and it seems he took up residence at Balliang East in the early 1920s. He
called his property ‘Sunnyside’ and farmed there until 1937, when he moved back
to Melbourne. He moved around a bit and last appeared on the electoral rolls in
Box Hill in 1968. He died in Brisbane the following year aged 75 and is buried
at Fawkner Cemetery with his wife Alice, who died in 1958.
Monday, 6 April 2015
Members of the Coburg Presbyterian Church congregation go to war
Presbyterian Church,
Coburg, built in 1899 and at that time located on the west side of Sydney Road near the
corner of Munro Street. Image found in Coburg Historical Society collection. Source unknown.
Members of the Australian Expeditionary Force from Coburg Presbyterian Church. Left to right: George Waite (3431 Private George Harold Waite, 5th Infantry Battalion); Jack Aitken (7471 Corporal John Eadie Aitken, 1st Divisional Train Supply); T. Williams; Arch Murray (2nd Lieut Archibald James Murray, 29th Btn.); Mel Robertson (3484 Private Melrose Noel Robertson, 14th Infantry Battalion); Jim Buchanan (6133 Private James Reid Buchanan, 2nd Field Ambulance). Image courtesy Coburg Uniting Church Archive.
3431
Private George Harold Waite, 5th Infantry Battalion, was a 20 year
old civil servant when he enlisted on 3 July 1915. He lived with his widowed
mother Isabella in White Street, Coburg. Although he embarked with the 5th
Battalion, he transferred to the Army Pay Corps and worked at Admin. HQ in
London. He returned to Australia in November 1919.
7471
Corporal John (Jack) Eadie Aitken, 1st Divisional Train Supply, was a motor
body builder aged 21 when he enlisted on 30 July 1915. He lived with his
widowed mother Nannie at ‘Oamaru’, 40 Walsh Street, Coburg at the time of his
enlistment. In May 1918, he was invalided to England with a sprained ankle but
was otherwise injury and illness free. He returned to Australia in July 1919,
became a career soldier and lived in Coburg until his death in 1976 aged 82. As
an old boy of Coburg State School, he will be featured in Coburg Historical
Society’s ANZAC Centenary Project.
Apart from the fact that T.R. Williams is listed on the Coburg Independent Order of Rechabites Honour Board and is featured in this
photograph, I have yet to identify him.
2nd
Lieutenant Archibald (Arch) James Murray, 29th Infantry Battalion, was a Coburg Lacrosse
Club member and had been in the Victorian Scottish Regiment (52nd
Infantry) for 6 years prior to enlistment.
3484
Private Melrose (Mel) Noel Robertson, 14th Infantry Battalion, was
another member of the Coburg Lacrosse Club and had served in the Victorian
Scottish Regiment for three and a half years before enlisting.
6133
Private James (Jim) Reid Buchanan, 2nd Field Ambulance, was a 24
year old tailor living with his mother Margaret in Reynard Street,
Coburg when he enlisted on 11 June 1915. He, too, was a member of the Coburg
Lacrosse Club. He also played for the Olmurita Tennis Club and was a member of
the local branch of the Australian Natives Association.
Wednesday, 1 April 2015
Artillery practice at Broadmeadows
Australian
Expeditionary Force at Broadmeadows. Artillery practice with the 18 pounder
quick firing guns. From a stereographic slide by Geo. Rose. Image courtesy
Coburg Historical Society.
The young man at the back of the
trio seems to be in a shiny new uniform, as does the fellow in front of him.
I’m not so sure about the chap on the left who appears to be looking through
the sight of the gun. I’m guessing that he’s a bit older than the others and
judging by the state of his hat, he could well have had previous military
experience. All conjecture, of course, and I’d be interested in hearing your
take on the situation.
What interests me most in this
photograph is the long line of spectators who are watching the three soldiers
intently. I wonder what they made of it all? And in the background are the
ubiquitous tents of the Broadmeadows Camp. Horses, too, all in a line, just
waiting…