BRADLEY, Jack Edward, Lance Corporal, 12th Battalion

Rank: Lance Corporal

Regimental Number: 2836

Place of Birth: Fremantle

Address: 1 Silas Street, East Fremantle

Next of Kin: Father, Mr Benjamin Bradley

Enlistment Date: 12 July 1915

Unit Name: 12th Battalion

Age embarkation: 18

Marital Status: Single

Occupation: Carpenter


History

Corporal JACK EDWARD BRADLEY

Corporal Jack Edward Bradley (2836), 20 years of age, was born and educated at Fremantle. He enlisted on July 12th, 1915, and was attached to the 12th Battalion. He sailed for Egypt in October, 1915, and later proceeded to France. He was in action Pozieres, Lagnicourt, Bullecourt, and Passchendaele. Later he contracted trench feet and was sent to England, eventually being invalided home to Australia. He was discharged in April, 1918.

Australia’s Fighting Sons of the Empire

“The above soldiers are sons of Benjamin and Alice Bradley, of Silas-Street, East Fremantle”

JOSE, John Joseph, Lance Corporal, 11th Battalion

Rank: Lance Corporal

Regimental Number: 313

Place of Birth: Kerang, Victoria

Address: 20 Moir Street, Perth, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Mrs Ivy Ada Jose

Enlistment Date: 2 September 1914

Unit Name: 11th Battalion, C Company

Age embarkation: 30

Marital Status: Married

Occupation: Wood machinist

Date of Death: 24 January 1951

Place of Burial: Karrakatta Cemetery

Links: -


HART, Albert Owen, Lance Corporal, 11th Battalion

Rank: Lance Corporal

Regimental Number: 440

Place of Birth: Sydney, New South Wales

Address: 50 Duro Road(WW1), South Fremantle

Next of Kin: Mrs Hart

Enlistment Date: 14 August 1914

Unit Name: 11th Battalion, D Company

Age embarkation: 23

Marital Status: Single

Occupation: Boundary rider

Date of Death: 30 May 1916

Place of Burial: Rue-Petillon Military Cemetery (Plot I, Row H, Grave No. 50), France

Links: -


PRINCE, Victor Edward Lewis, Lance Corporal, No 6 Tunnelling Company

Rank: Lance Corporal

Regimental Number: 4256

Place of Birth: Wimbledon, England

Address: 84-86 Hubble Street(WW1: 154), East Fremantle, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Father, Lewis John Prince

Enlistment Date: 10 February 1916

Unit Name: No 6 Tunnelling Company

Age embarkation: 18

Marital Status: Single

Occupation: Civil engineer

Date of Death: -

Place of Burial: -

Links: Timeline on Ancestry link: https://www.ancestryinstitution.com/family-tree/person/tree/4780437/person/130200977691/story


RUTHERFORD, Richard Henry, Lance Corporal, 44th Battalion Machine Gun Section

Rank: Lance Corporal

Regimental Number: 912

Place of Birth: Nhill, Victoria

Address: 93 Market Street(WW1), Fremantle, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Wife, Mrs Florence May Rutherford

Enlistment Date: 6 January 1916

Unit Name: 44th Battalion Machine Gun Section

Age embarkation: 24

Marital Status: Married

Occupation: Engine fitter

Date of Death: -

Place of Burial: -

Links: -


DRAPER, Percy Smedley, Lance Corporal, 4th Battalion

Rank: Lance Corporal

Regimental Number: 2279

Place of Birth: Clifton, New South Wales

Address: Clifton, Illawarra Line, Sydney, New South Wales

Next of Kin: Wife, Mrs E Draper

Enlistment Date: 27 January 1915

Unit Name: 4th Battalion, 6th Reinforcement

Age embarkation: 33

Marital Status: Married

Occupation: Butcher & Grocer

Date of Death: 6 August 1915

Place of Burial: No known grave

Links: -


BATEMAN, Albert, Lance Corporal, 3rd Pioneer Battalion

Rank: Lance Corporal

Regimental Number: 2999

Place of Birth:

Address: 33 Solomon Street, Beaconsfield, Fremantle, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Mother, Mrs Annie Bateman

Enlistment Date: 12 July 1916

Unit Name: 3rd Pioneer Battalion

Age embarkation: 23

Marital Status: Single

Occupation: Clerk

Date of Death:

Place of Burial:

Links:


PATON, James Gilbert, Lance Corporal, 3rd Pioneer Battalion

Rank: Lance Corporal

Regimental Number: 1088

Place of Birth: Lindsay Scotland

Address: 94 Hubble Street(WW1: 168), East Fremantle, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Wife, Mrs Lavinia Paton

Enlistment Date: 8 February 1916

Unit Name: 3rd Pioneer Battalion, D Company

Age embarkation: 28

Marital Status: Married

Occupation: Motor Man

Date of Death:

Place of Burial:

Links:


History

1925 Death on April 3, at her late residence, 168 Hubble-street, East Fremantle. Lavenia, dearly beloved wife of James Paton and fond mother of Kathleen… (reference)

RESIDENTS

1915 - 1917 & 1920 - 1925: Paton, James G.

JACKSON, Ernest A, Lance Corporal, 51st Battalion

Rank: Lance Corporal

Regimental Number: 3376

Place of Birth: Port Adelaide South Australia

Address: 19 Glyde Street(WW1: 41), East Fremantle, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Father, A Jackson

Enlistment Date: 26 July 1915

Unit Name: 51st Battalion

Age embarkation: 29

Marital Status: Single

Occupation: Horse driver


History

ERNEST ALEXANDER JACKSON
(1892-1975)

Ernest ‘Ernie’ Alexander Jackson, (service number 3376) was awarded a Military Medal for his courageous acts during World War l.

He was the firstborn of 7 siblings; his father Alexander Melmoth Jackson, and his mother, Mary Ann Elizabeth Gibson, lived in Port Adelaide, South Australia. The family moved to Western Australia around 1896 and lived at 41 Glyde St (now no. 19) East Fremantle, where 5 of his siblings were born. He worked as a horse driver in Fremantle prior to his enlistment with two of his brothers, Harold Melmoth Jackson (16th Battalion (killed) and Roy Melmoth Jackson (15th Battalion) (Reference). 

In July 1915, Ernest enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) at the age of 23, where he was assigned into the 11th Infantry Battalion reinforcements, the first ever Battalion recruited in Western Australia. (Reference). The battalion was raised within weeks of the declaration of war in August 1914 and embarked for overseas after just two weeks of preliminary training.

He embarked on the HMAT Ulysses A38 from Fremantle on 2nd Nov 1915 and arrived in Egypt on the 26th Nov (Reference). Subsequently, the 11th Battalion was heavily involved in defending the front line of the ANZAC beachhead and served at ANZAC until evacuation in December.

After the withdrawal from Gallipoli, the 11th Battalion returned to Egypt. It was split to help form the 51st Battalion...(Reference) In March 1916, this battalion sailed for France and the Western Front. From then until 1918, the battalion took part in bloody trench warfare. Its first major action in France was at Pozieres in the Somme valley in July. (Reference)

Within a fortnight of arriving in France, the 51st Battalion launched an attack at Mouquet Farm, and suffered casualties equivalent to a third of its strength. After Mouquet Farm, the battalion, alternated between front-line duty, training and labouring behind the line throughout the winter of 1916-17, and in early 1917, took part in the advance that followed the German retreat to the Hindenburg Line, attacking Noreuil in April, a fortified village used to delay the Australian advance. Later in the year, as the focus of the AIF's operations shifted to the Ypres sector in Belgium, the Battalion engaged in the battle of Messines between 7 and 12 June. (Reference). 

Just before the battle of Polygon Wood between 26 and 27 September, Private Ernest A. Jackson suffered from severe Pyrexia (High temperature) of unknown origin, and was sent to Alexandria Hospital in England to recuperate before rejoining his unit in December 1917. (Reference) (Reference)

Following the collapse of Russia in October 1917, the Germans began a series of Offensives on the Western Front in France. The 51st Battalion assisted in the repulse of a large German attack on 5th April, launching a critical counter-attack. (Reference). On the evening of the 24th of April, the 51st Battalion and 52nd Battalion of the 13th Brigade (about 1500 men), planned to encircle and trap the Germans, around the village of Villers-Bretonneux, in the dark of night. (Reference

The Germans, however, detected the movement and swiftly launched a counter-attack, turning the operation into a gravely dangerous situation. Captain Robert Forsyth, medical officer of the 52nd Battalion, recalled:

“… an officer shouted 'Still!' I could see a long single line of men standing motionless as far as I could see in either direction, and, as the light faded, the darkness in front started to tap, tap, tap, and bullets whistled round and the line shuffled forward with rifles at the ready like men strolling into fern after rabbits. The whistle of bullets became a swish and patter, and boys fell all ‘round me, generally without a sound.”

[Forsyth, quoted in Charles Bean, The Australian Imperial Force in France during the Main German Offensive, 1918, Volume V, The Official History of Australia in the War of 1914–1918, Sydney, 1941, p.582]

Along with some British battalions, the job of retaking Villers-Bretonneux was assigned to two Australian brigades of the 4th and 5th Divisions—the 13th, commanded by Brigadier-General William Glasgow, and the 15th, commanded by Brigadier-General Harold 'Pompey' Elliott.

Private Ernest A. Jackson played a significant part in the planning and coordination of the night attack by risking his life through German heavy machine guns and shell fire that felled many, to carry messages between the Brigades and the Forward Brigade Station along with a comrade, Private Samuel Royston Brown. His contribution resulted in the well coordinated night attack to successfully recapture the town from the Germans despite the gravity of the situation, and was later nominated along with his comrade to receive a Military Medal.

“On night 24/25th April 1918 during a counter-attack by the Battalion on a strong enemy position south of VILLERS-BRETONNEUX those two men, who are Battalion Runners, continually carried messages through heavy machine gun and shell fire to the Company’s and Forward Brigade Station. When other communications failed they were ever ready to carry messages regardless of their own personal safety. Their coolness and courage throughout the operation were conspicuous.” (Reference)

Private Ernest A. Jackson received the Military Medal - for Bravery in the Field- on the 1st of May 1918, and was given the rank of Lance Corporal shortly after, before being discharged on the 3rd of June 1919. 

He returned to Fremantle and was recorded as living at various addresses around East Fremantle: from 1922-25 at 76 Duke St Fremantle and from 1925-34 at Silas St East Fremantle.

In 1934 he married widower, Ivy May Jardine (nee Rundell 1894-1981), who had lost her first husband two years earlier. (Reference

1932 Death on September 8, at Cottesloe, Robert JARDINE, dearly loved husband of Ivy May Jardine, of 16 Palmerston-street, Buckland Hill, and loving father of Joyce, Roma and Robert ; aged 39 years. (reference)

He subsequently lived at her home- 16 Palmerston Street, Buckland Hill from 1936-1963.

In 1975 Ernest died, at the age of 82, and was buried in the Garden Of Remembrance at Karrakatta Cemetery (Section EC Site 4 Position 0133). He is also commemorated on the East Fremantle Municipality Roll of Honour.

Ivy died in September 1981 and was buried with Ernest at Karrakatta.

Researched and written by Xing Yun Lee for www.streetsofeastfreo


1918 Mr. and Mrs. A. Jackson, of 41 Glyde street, East Fremantle, have received word that their son, Private E. Jackson, has been awarded the Military Medal. (reference)

1919 Soldiers And Sailors: Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Jackson, of 41 Glyde-street, East Fremantle, have been informed by the Base Records Office, Melbourne, that their son, Lance-Corporal E. Jackson, M.M., 51st Battalion, is expected to arrive home early in April, having left England on February 28. He has had three years and four months' active service in Egypt and France. (reference)

DONOVAN, Martin Joseph, Lance Corporal, 44th Battalion

Rank: Lance Corporal

Regimental Number: 173

Place of Birth: Gladstone, Tasmania

Address: Canning Road, East Fremantle, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Mother, Mrs Christina Donovan

Enlistment Date: 30 December 1915

Unit Name: 44th Battalion, A Company

Age embarkation: 21

Marital Status: Single

Occupation: Warehouseman

Date of Death: -

Place of Burial: No known grave

Links:


DIXON, Versary William, Lance Corporal, 28th Battalion

Rank: Lance Corporal

Regimental Number: 3001

Place of Birth: New South Wales

Address: 36 Tuckfield Street(WW1: 41), Fremantle

Next of Kin: Mother, Mrs Ada Dixon

Enlistment Date: 21 August 1915

Unit Name: 28th Battalion, 7th Reinforcement

Age embarkation: 21

Marital Status: Single

Occupation: Baker

Date of Death: 29 July 1916

Place of Burial: No known grave

Links:


 

HISTORY

 

CAMPBELL, John Alex, Lance Corporal, 12th Battalion

Rank: Lieutenant

Regimental Number: 1009

Place of Birth: Fremantle, Western Australia

Address: 10 Alcester Gardens(WW1), East Fremantle, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Mother, Mrs Campbell

Enlistment Date: 4 September 1914

Unit Name: 12th Battalion, H Company

Age embarkation: 26

Marital Status: Single

Occupation: Chemist

Date of Death: 28/12/1917

Place of Burial: Kandahar Farm Cemetery (Plot II, Row H, Grave No. 5), Neuve-Eglise, Belgium

Links:


History

Lieutenant JOHN ALEXANDER CAMPBELL

Lieutenant John Alexander Campbell, a son of Jane and the late Malcolm Campbell, was born and educated at Spalding, S.A. He enlisted in August, 1914, and sailed two months later with the 12th Battalion. He was wounded at the Landing on Gallipoli, and after the evacuation sailed with his unit from France. He gained his Commission at Pozieres, and was Killed in action on the 27th December, 1917.

Australia’s Fighting Sons of the Empire