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The Spirit of the Digger

Page 39

by Patrick Lindsay


  Roberts-Smith, Leonard William 2

  Robinvale 112

  robotic bomb disposal units 12

  Rogers, Trooper James 42

  Rommel, Lieutenant General Erwin 133, 137, 140, 172, 173, 174

  Rommel Panzer Corps 178

  Ross, Alexander Gordon 96

  Ross, Lance Corporal Noel 60–1

  Ross, Lieutenant Colonel 104

  Ross, Major 32

  Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) 125, 128, 132, 230–1, 285, 296

  3 Squadron 116

  10 Squadron 131

  Royal Australian Navy (RAN) 128, 158, 230–1, 296, 297

  Royal Flying Corps 112

  Royal Navy 48, 54

  RSL 122

  Rudd, Kevin 34

  Russell, Sergeant Andrew 302

  Russell’s Top 75

  Russia 66, 87, 128, 230, 243

  Ruthven, Sergeant William 106

  Sabben, Lieutenant David 266

  Sadlier, Lieutenant 110

  Saigon 242

  Sailly-Laurette 115

  St Quentin 110

  Salisbury Plain 120–1

  Samchok 231

  Sanananda 157, 160, 163, 167, 215

  Sandakan 17

  Sanderson, Lieutenant General John 298

  Sari Bair 55

  SAS xii, xiii, 2, 13, 294, 297, 299–301, 303

  Task Force Group in Afghanistan 303–5

  Trooper X 300–1

  Saunders, Captain Reg 232–3

  Saunders, Harry 232–3

  Schwarzkopf, General Norman 297

  ‘scorched earth’ approach 42

  Sea of Marmara 47, 48, 50

  2nd AIF 129, 133, 142, 172

  1st Australian Corps 129

  Seddulbahir 67

  Selerang Barracks 185, 186

  selflessness 17, 62, 154

  Seoul 232

  September 11 2001 attacks 298

  Serong, Brigadier Ted 264

  Seton, Carden 210

  Shaggy Ridge 220–2, 226

  ‘shaped charges’ (IEDs) 11

  Sharp, Lieutenant Gordon 265

  shell shock 103, 104

  Shephard, Ben

  A War of Nerves 103

  Sher, Private Greg 304

  Shout, Captain Alfred 74

  Shrapnel Gully 84

  Silas, Ellis 53, 68

  Silver, Corporal E.P. ‘Hi Ho’ 224

  Silvester, Reverend 211

  Simberi Island 207, 208

  Simpson, Private John 17, 68

  Simpson, Warrant Officer Ray 246, 248

  Sinai Peninsula 109

  Singapore 126, 130, 145, 183–4, 185, 205

  Singleton’s School of Infantry 2

  16th NZ Field Regiment 233

  Skyros 54

  Slingersfontein 40–1

  Smith, Major Harry 265, 268

  Smith, Ross 269

  Smith, Sapper Darren 6, 304

  sniffer dogs 9, 10

  Solomon Islands 209

  Somalia 297, 298

  Somme, Battle of 88–90, 93, 101, 154

  Songkitti, General 289

  South-East Asia 2

  1965 240

  South-East Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) 243

  South Korea 230, 232

  South Vietnam 243–5

  Spanish flu 120

  Sparrow Force 274, 276–7

  Sphinx, The 83

  Spragg, Private Griffith 166–7

  Stalin, Joseph 229

  Stanley, Captain Maury 267, 268

  Statue of St Colette 113

  Steward, Captain H.D. ‘Blue’ 147

  Stopford, Lieutenant General Sir Frederick 70, 72

  Stormy Trench 104, 105–6

  Strange, Lieutenant Colonel L.A.

  Recollections of an Airman 117

  Strout, Squadron Leader Graham 231

  Sudan, the 39

  Sugar Loaf 91–5

  suicide bombers 9

  Sukarno, President 283, 295

  Suvla Bay 70, 72, 75, 81

  Swanton, Warrant Officer R.J. 246

  Swiss Alps 88

  Symons, Lieutenant William 74

  Syria 109, 152

  Tabar Island 208

  Tactical Coordination Line 273, 280

  Taliban xi, 4, 9, 10, 13–14

  ‘rolling ambush’ 14

  Talmage, Jack 208

  Talon, the 12

  Tan Son Nhut Airport 242, 269

  Tarrant, Lieutenant Richard Thomas 63–4

  Te Ranga 38

  Templeton, Captain Sam 144

  terrorist attacks 298

  Teshima, Lieutenant General 202

  Tet offensive 269

  Thailand 140, 189

  Thompson, Sergeant Bob 152

  Thompson, Sergeant Major Wally 18–19, 20, 22–3, 24, 25, 26–7, 30–1, 261–3

  Thomson, Private Brent ‘Thommo’ 278

  Till, Sergeant Brett 304

  Timor 274–6

  Australian involvement 276

  Fretelin 284

  Tobruk 131, 133, 134–9

  Tokyo 144

  Townsend, Colonel Colin 266

  Treacy, Lieutenant ‘Mocca’ 170

  Treaty of Lisbon 276

  trench warfare 88, 91

  psychological effect of bombardment 102, 103

  Truman, President Harry 230, 232

  Tubb, Lieutenant Frederick 74

  Turkish Army 50–1, 57–8, 65, 68, 74, 80, 87

  United Nations 230, 273, 284, 286, 290, 295, 296, 299

  Assistance Mission East Timor (UNAMET) 285, 290

  Australia and peacekeeping missions 295

  University of Istanbul 45

  unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs) 12

  US Army

  33rd Division 116

  72nd Tank Battalion 233

  126th Regiment 162, 163

  173rd Airborne Brigade 248, 257

  503rd Paratroop Regiment 215

  US Congress 11

  US Department of Defense 11

  US Division of Foreign Affairs, Defense and Trade 11

  USS Wasp 210

  van der Post, Colonel Laurens 200, 204

  War Diaries of Weary Dunlop 183

  Vasey, General 163

  VBIEDs (vehicle-borne IEDs) 9

  Vella Lavella Island 211

  Verdun 87–8

  Victoria Cross (VC) 1, 4, 13–15, 17, 42, 53, 67, 74, 96, 103, 104, 106, 110, 137, 153, 156, 175, 226, 246, 247

  Australian and Imperial, distinguished 13

  Viet Cong 245, 246, 253, 258–9, 264

  Viet Minh 229, 243

  Vietnam 243

  Vietnam Veterans’ Association 270

  Vietnam War 9, 16, 30, 240, 241–71, 287

  anti-war movement 242, 269

  casualties 261

  conscription 261–2

  tunnel rats 254–9

  Welcome Home March 271

  ‘Vietnamisation’ policy 269

  Ville-sur-Ancre 106

  Villers-Bretonneux 29, 102, 110–12

  Adelaide Cemetery 112

  Australian National Memorial 112–13

  von Richthofen, Baron Manfred (the Red Baron) 113

  von Sanders, General Otto Liman 54–5, 65, 68, 70

  Vouza, Jacob Charles 210–11

  Vredefort 42

  WA Mounted Infantry 42

  Wackett, Captain L.J. 116

  Waddell, Nick 210

  Wagstaff, Major C.M. 53

  Wake Island 140

  Wampum 218

  War Services Homes Act 122

  Warlock 12

  Warm Bad, Battle of 42

  Watson, Lieutenant 83

  Watson’s Pier 83

  Waugh, Steve 79

  Weir, Peter

  Gallipoli 72

  West Timor 273, 276, 283

  Western Front 17, 86, 87–108, 110–19

  map 93

  Westmoreland, General 2
45, 257, 264, 267–8

  Wheatley, Doc 277

  Wheatley, Warrant Officer Kevin ‘Dasher’ 16, 246

  Whelan, Private Kevin ‘Spud’ 148

  White, Lieutenant A.T. 52

  White, Lieutenant Colonel A.H. 76

  White, Reverend Arthur Ernest 125

  Whitechurch, Corporal J.H. ‘Bluey’ 224, 227

  Whiteside, Sergeant Clair 92

  Whitlam government 269

  Wilmansrust 43

  Wilmot, Chester 138, 139

  Tobruk 1941 137

  Wilson, Clay 11

  Wilson, Eric 100

  Wilson, Samuel 100

  Wilson, ‘Snowy’ 28

  Wilson, Woodrow 122

  Witton, Lieutenant George 43–4

  Wolf Valley 55

  Woodward, Corporal Brett ‘Woody’ 273–4, 277–9

  Wootten, Brigadier George 166

  World War I 17, 19, 22, 38, 41, 42, 174–227

  Armistice 118

  Australian casualties 121

  Gallipoli see Gallipoli

  Middle East see Middle East

  Western Front see Western Front

  World War II 30, 128–40, 296

  Japanese threat to Australia 145, 276

  radio telecommunications 206–7, 209–10

  Worsley, Private Luke 303

  Wright, Malcolm 214

  Wyllie, Lieutenant Guy 42

  Yongju 231

  Young, Captain 110

  Young, Mark 236

  Yudhoyono, President Susilo Bambang 285

  Photographic Insert

  As the weeks grew into months on Gallipoli, the Anzacs’ toehold turned into a shanty town nestled in the nooks and crannies of the rugged shoreline around their landing place.

  (State Library of New South Wales 0298)

  For eight months the Anzacs and the Turks fought a relentless war of attrition from trenches like these, often only metres apart. One exasperated Digger said, ‘Of all the bastards of places this is the greatest bastard in the world.’

  (State Library of New South Wales 0306)

  A Digger carries a wounded mate to safety. This is a powerful image of the mateship that flourished on Gallipoli and that will forever symbolise the spirit of the Anzacs. In the background is North Beach, looking to Suvla Bay. The photo was possibly a re-enactment, but one of an event frequently seen during the conflict.

  (Australian War Memorial G00599)

  Australian sculptor Peter Corlett’s evocative Cobbers statue, in the Australian Memorial Park at Fromelles, depicts Sergeant (later Lieutenant) Simon Fraser of the 57th Battalion as he carries one of a score of wounded Diggers he rescued from no-man’s land after the battle on 19 July 1916. Fraser survived Fromelles but, sadly, fell at the Battle of Bullecourt and his body was never recovered.

  (Patrick Lindsay)

  A remarkable aerial photo taken by the Royal Flying Corps showing almost the entire Fromelles battlefield on 19 July 1916. It shows (from the bottom of the frame) the Australian line, then no-man’s land and the German front line. The destroyed Fromelles township is centre-frame, about one-third down from the top. Pheasant Wood stands just to the left of the town.

  (Australian War Memorial E05990)

  A studio portrait of Henry Victor (Harry) Willis of 31st Battalion, from Alberton, Victoria, who was killed at Fromelles and was one of the missing Diggers of the battle. The first identifiable relic found during the search for the missing Diggers was Harry Willis’s medallion from the Shire of Alberton.

  (Australian War Memorial DA11327)

  The fate that awaited more than 30 Australian Coastwatchers should they be captured by the Japanese during the Pacific War. This chilling photo was found on a dead Japanese soldier’s body and is believed to show the execution of Sergeant Len Siffleet, a radio operator and Coastwatcher at Aitape, New Guinea on 24 October 1943.

  (Australian War Memorial 101099)

  Two Coastwatchers in northern New Guinea in mid-1943 with their absurdly cumbersome ‘portable’ AWA 3BZ teleradio. The equipment included separate transmitter, receiver, speaker, amplifier, petrol-driven charger, batteries and massive aerial. It weighed around 150kg and required 12 to 15 strong men to carry it through the jungle.

  (Australian War Memorial 015364)

  Many Coastwatchers’ health suffered as a result of the combination of operating under constant stress and contracting the virulent tropical illnesses they were exposed to, like malaria. Here an unnamed Coastwatcher cleans his weapon as he watches over his malaria-stricken mate.

  (McPhee family)

  The grisly aftermath of the infamous Tol Massacre on New Britain Island on 3 February 1942, following the Japanese invasion of Rabaul on 23 January 1942. Japanese soldiers turned on Australian POWs, who had just surrendered, tied them together in small groups and systematically murdered them by bayoneting and shooting.

  (Australian War Memorial P09455.001)

  The boys of Kokoda. A snapshot by Kokoda hero Captain Stan Bisset MC of some of the men in his brother Butch’s B Company of the 2/14th Battalion as they prepared to head up the Kokoda Track. Lieutenant Harold ‘Butch’ Bisset would die in his brother’s arms at the Battle of Isurava on 30 August 1942.

  (Stan Bisset)

  Captain Stan Bisset MC at Gona in January 1943. Stan had narrowly escaped death a few hours earlier when a sniper neatly removed a chunk of his right eyebrow during the fighting along the beach only 50 metres behind him.

  (Stan Bisset)

  An iconic image capturing the unique comradeship between the Kokoda Diggers and their beloved Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels (the Papuan villagers who evacuated the wounded by carrying them tenderly down the treacherous Kokoda Track terrain and brought supplies and ammunition to the front line).

  (Stan Bisset)

  The spirit of Kokoda reflected in the warm embrace of two veterans of the campaign, Stan Bisset and Fuzzy Wuzzy Angel Ovuru Ndiki, of Nauro village. The photo was taken at the Sydney Cenotaph in 2002 as the two old comrades reminisced.

  (Patrick Lindsay)

  The terrible suffering of those who fell into the hands of the Japanese in Changi and the Thai-Burma Railway during WWII. Their devotion to each other took mateship to a spiritual level and enabled many to survive their unspeakable treatment.

  (Australian War Memorial 019199)

  A group of the men from 4 Platoon, B Company, 3rd Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment, who distinguished themselves at the Battle of Kapyong in the Korean War in 1951.

  (Australian War Memorial 147350)

  Private Ben Chuck, 27, pictured on active duty in the Afghanistan hills, was one of three Diggers killed in a helicopter crash during an operation in Kandahar Province, Afghanistan, on 21 June 2010.

  (Chuck family)

  Ben’s death left his family devastated.

  (Chuck family)

  Ben’s father received a memorial flag after his funeral.

  (Chuck family)

  Private Ben Chuck

  (Chuck family)

  Corporal Ben Roberts-Smith won his Victoria Cross for an action in Afghanistan in June 2010. He had earlier won the Medal for Gallantry in Afghanistan in 2006.

  (Department of Defence)

  Keith Payne was the fourth Australian winner of the Victoria Cross in the Vietnam War, for ‘repeated acts of exceptional personal bravery’ in Kontum Province in May 1969.

  (Australian War Memorial ART27773)

  Trooper Mark Donaldson became the first winner of the Victoria Cross for Australia for his remarkable bravery in Afghanistan in September 2008.

  (Australian War Memorial P09587.001)

  The Ataturk memorial at Anzac Cove, Gallipoli, immortalises the magnanimous words of Turkey’s Gallipoli hero, Mustafa Kemal, later known as Kemal Ataturk, modern Turkey’s first president. Written in 1934, the words are addressed to the mothers of the fallen and concludes: ‘… having lost their lives on this land they have become our sons as well.’

  (
Patrick Lindsay)

  The hauntingly beautiful Ari Burnu cemetery at Bee Point was created in 1915 and stands near the cape at the north end of Anzac Cove. It contains some of the first Anzac casualties of the campaign among the remains of 252 Commonwealth servicemen, 42 of which are unidentified.

  (Patrick Lindsay)

  Lone Pine, Gallipoli, not much bigger in area than two tennis courts, is where 4000 Turkish soldiers and 2200 Anzacs died for their countries. Many of them lie entangled in a vast mass grave under the stone memorial, which stands over the Turkish trenches. The Australian trenches were where the gravestones in the foreground now lie.

  (Patrick Lindsay)

  In a little over six weeks between July and September 1916, the AIF suffered more than 23,000 casualties near Pozières in the Somme. Of these nearly almost 7000 were killed in action, died of wounds or were missing.

 

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