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VC
Winners from South Australia |
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A list of winners and a brief synopsis of their citations appears below.
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Lieutenant Arthur Seaforth
Blackburn,
10th Battalion was awarded the Victoria Cross on the 23rd July 1916 at
Pozieres, France.
Blackburn joined the 10th Battalion on the 19th August 1914. He
took part in the landing at Gallipoli on 25th April 1915, and was
commissioned as 2nd Lieutenant in August 1915. He went with the
Battalion to France, where he took part in an attack on the Somme near
Pozieres. He was to join the 9th Battalion with his company to support
an advance under heavy gunfire. Blackburn made four successive bombing
parties, many of whom were killed. The enemy strongpoint was destroyed
and over 350 meters of trench was captured. For this exploit,
Lieutenant Blackburn was awarded the Victoria Cross.  |
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Corporal Phillip Davey,
10th Battalion was
awarded the Victoria Cross on 28th June 1918 at Merris, France. Davey
joined the 10th Battalion on 22nd December 1914. He joined the Battalion
with the first reinforcements two weeks before the landing at Gallipoli.
He contracted enteric fever while there and was evacuated home. In June
1916 he re-embarked for France with the 18th Reinforcements, and arrived
at the Battalion on 3rd October of that year. He was promoted Corporal
on the 24th April 1918.
On 28th June, while at Merris, his platoon came under heavy fire from
almost point-blank range. Many were killed, and Davey single-handedly
attacked the enemy machinegun with bombs. Returning for more bombs, he
finally took the position, killing eight crew, then turning the gun on
the enemy. In doing so he foiled a counter-attack. For his bravery and
initiative, Corporal Davey was awarded the Victoria Cross.  |
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Private Reginald Roy Inwood,
10th Battalion,
was awarded the Victoria Cross on the night of the 20-21 September 1917
at Polygon Wood, east of Ypres, Belgium. On 20 October 1914, he embarked
for Egypt, took part in the Landing at Gallipoli, and later served with
the 10th Battalion in France. It was during the Battle of Menin Road
that Pte Inwood won his VC.
11th Battalion captured the first objective, 12th Battalion the second
and 9th and 10th Battalions the third. Inwood went out alone to destroy
an enemy strongpoint. Instead, he captured nine prisoners, killed
several others and allowed the advance to continue to the third
objective.
The next morning Inwood and a member of 7th Battalion, went out against
an enemy machinegun which was causing casualties. They crept up behind
the gun, and captured the gun after bombing the crew. The surviving
crewman was forced to carry the gun back to Australian lines.  |
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Private Joergen Christian Jensen
50th
Battalion, was born in Loegstoer, Denmark and migrated to Australia with
his family in 1909. He was to be awarded the Victoria Cross on 2nd April
1917 at Norieul, France.
Claiming to be a labourer, Jensen enlisted in Adelaide on 23rd March
1915, and was posted to 10th Battalion as a reinforcement. He served
with 10th Battalion on Gallipoli, and went to France with them. He was
wounded in August 1916, and on his return to active service, was posted
to 50th Battalion.
At 0530, 2 April 1917, the 50th and 51st Battalions attacked an 'Outpost
Village' at Norieul. The advance on the right flank was checked by an
enemy machine-gun and forty-five men in a strongpoint. The gunner at the
post was shot, enabling Jensen to get close enough to bluff the enemy
from that position, and another nearby, into believing they were
surrounded. He then stood up on the parapet, waving his helmet until
the firing and shelling ceased. He then ordered his prisoners to
Australian lines. Norieul fell the next day in heavy fighting.  |
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Private James Park Woods
48th Battalion, was
awarded his Victoria Cross near Le Verguier, North-west of St Quentin,
on 18th September 1918. Born in Gawler, in 1891, Woods was employed as a
vigneron in Caversham Western Australia at the time of his enlistment on
29th September 1916. Posted as a reinforcement to 48th Battalion,
arriving at their position on 13th September 1917.
Woods won his VC during the attack on the Hindenberg Line. His unit succeeded
in capturing 480 prisoners along with the first objective.
46th Battalion fought through, and was subsequently held up on the right
flank. A Company of 48th Battalion was sent to their aid, and Woods and
three Compadres conducted a reconnaissance. Locating a strongly held
enemy position, with excellent fields of fire, Woods attacked. At least
thirty enemy soldiers fled, leaving behind a four heavy and two light
machineguns. They held the position against a strong counterattack,
Woods lay on the parapet throwing bombs that were passed up to him. This
continued until help arrived and consolidated the position.  |
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Sergeant Thomas Currie Derrick
2nd/48th
Battalion was awarded the Victoria Cross at Sattelberg, New Guinea on 24
November 1943. Derrick enlisted on 5 July 1940 and was allotted to the
2nd/48th Battalion. He was promoted Corporal on 11th July 1941 while
serving in Tobruk, North Africa. He was awarded a DCM on 20th July,
1941, and was promoted Sergeant on the 28th July. He was wounded at El Alamein, and was to rejoin his unit in the Ramu and Markham
Valleys.
During the advance, near Sattelberg, about 600m from the summit,
Derrick's Company was ordered to outflank a strongly held and
well-sighted Japanese position. Each attempt was thwarted by the
accuracy of the fire. Derrick went forward ahead of his section,
and grenaded a Machinegun nest. He ordered his second section to
advance. They were held up by six more enemy posts. Derrick again went
forward, throwing grenade after grenade at the enemy posts, causing them
to flee leaving behind weapons and grenades. Four more times, Derrick
was to advance, throw grenades, and silence enemy positions. By
10.00am that morning, the Australian Flag was hoisted over Sattelberg.  |
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Private Percival Eric
Gratwick, 2nd 48th
Battalion, was awarded the Victoria Cross on 25-6 October 1942 during
the Battle of El Alamein.
Gratwick's Company was advancing on the left flank and was forced to
ground by well-directed enemy fire. The Platoon Commander, Sergeant and
many others were killed. The strength of the platoon was reduced to just
seven. Gratwick charged the nearest enemy position with bayonet fixed
rifle and a grenade. Throwing a grenade into the pit, he jumped in,
killing all of the occupants, even an entire mortar crew. He then
charged through heavy machine-gun fire toward a second position
inflicting still more casualties. He was killed just short of the second
position by a burst of machine-gun fire. He was buried in Tel El Eisa
cemetery on 27th October 1942, and was later re-interred at the El
Alamein.  |
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Private Arthur Stanley Gurney, 2nd/48th
Battalion, was awarded his Victoria Cross near Tel El Eisa, on 22nd July
1942. Born in Western Australia, Gurney enlisted on 6th December 1940
and embarked from Fremantle for the Middle East on 6th July 1941. He was
posted to the 2nd/48th Battalion on 12 September when the Battalion was
part of the Tobruk Garrison.
Gurney won his VC during an attack at Tel El Eisa. His Company was held
up by intense machinegun fire from positions 100 meters ahead, all
officers either wounded or killed. Gurney, without hesitation, charged
the nearest machine-gun, bayoneting three crewmen, and silencing the
post. He continued on to the second, bayoneting a further two, taking
the third member prisoner. He was the victim of a grenade attack, but
raised himself up, and charged a third position. Gurney disappeared from
view, and his body was later found in one of the pits. He is buried in
the El Alamein Cemetery.  |
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Sergeant William Henry Kibby,
2nd/48th
Battalion, was awarded the Victoria Cross during the Battles for El
Alamein, Egypt between 23-31 October, 1942.
Kibby was born in Durham, England and settled with his parents in
Glenelg, South Australia in 1914. He was employed as a fibrous plaster
fixer and interior decorator, and enlisted on 29 June 1940. Kibby was
posted to 2nd/48th Battalion on 27th August 1940, and on 14 September
was promoted Corporal. He embarked on 17 November, trained in Palestine,
and then moved with the Battalion to Derna and then took part in the
Tobruk Garrison. After breaking his leg in June 1941, Kibby was
hospitalised, only to rejoin the Battalion at Tel El Eisa in October
1942. On 23rd October, Kibby's Platoon Commander was killed, and he
shouted for his platoon to attack an enemy machinegun. They did not hear
him over the battle noise, so Kibby alone silenced the position, killing
three enemy and capturing twelve others. On the 26 October, Kibby moved
from section to section directing fire, and himself several times went
out to mend communication lines to enable mortar support. On the night
30-1 October, Kibby again distinguished himself. He went out alone to
silence the last remaining machinegun hampering the advance of the
Battalion, and destroyed the gun, but not before he himself succumbed to
a burst of enemy machinegun fire.  |
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Private Leslie Thomas
Starcevich, 2nd/43rd
Battalion, was awarded his Victoria Cross Near Beaufort, British North
Borneo (now Malaysia) on 28th June 1945. Starcevich (Starcey to his
mates) was born in Subiaco, Western Australia on 5 November 1918. He
enlisted on 9th April 1941, embarked at Fremantle on 9th September, and
arrived at 2nd/43rd Battalion on 30 December in Palestine. After he was
wounded at Tel El Eisa on 17 July, 1942, he returned in time to see the
Battle of El Alamein begin on 23rd October. The 2nd/43rd returned to
Australia in February 1943 and left for New Guinea in September the same
year. Starcey took part in the battles of Lae and Finschafen, and went
with the Battalion to Beaufort in June 1945. Starcevich was a Bren
gunner, and his unit was held up under heavy fire from two enemy
machineguns. He assaulted each position in turn, killing five enemy, and
forcing the rest to withdraw. The advance continued until fire from
another machinegun again held them up. Starcevich, without regard for
his own personal safety, rushed forward capturing the gun and killing
seven enemy. By the 29 June the fighting was just about all over.
Starcevich was actually awarded his medal on the 28 August 1947 by the
Governor of Western Australia, Sir James Mitchell.  |
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T/Corporal Lawrence
Weathers, 43rd Battalion received
his Victoria Cross for his efforts north of the French village of Peronne
on 2nd September, 1918. During an attack, his party was held up by a
strongly held trench. Weathers went forward alone with a supply of
bombs. He returned once, and with three comrades bombed the enemy while
under heavy fire. Weathers eventually gained the enemy parapet, and
together with his comrades, succeeded in capturing the trench, 180 enemy
soldiers and three machine-guns. Due to this single action of bravery,
the final objective was secured with a vastly decreased loss of life had
the trench remained in enemy hands.  |
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