Difference between revisions of "John William Pryor"
From Our Contribution
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
| dateofbirth = 7 Feb 1908 | | dateofbirth = 7 Feb 1908 | ||
| placeofbirth = Narrogin, Western Australia | | placeofbirth = Narrogin, Western Australia | ||
− | | death = | + | | death = 29 Sep 1978, aged 70 |
− | | placeofdeath = | + | | placeofdeath = Armadale, Western Australia |
| enlistmentage = 33 years, 2 months | | enlistmentage = 33 years, 2 months | ||
− | | description = | + | | description = 5'5" (1.65m) tall |
− | | height = | + | | height = 5'5" (1.65m) |
| weight = | | weight = | ||
| complexion = | | complexion = | ||
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| shipembarked = HMT Queen Mary | | shipembarked = HMT Queen Mary | ||
| embarkedshipnote = Fremantle to Suez via Ceylon (Sri Lanka) | | embarkedshipnote = Fremantle to Suez via Ceylon (Sri Lanka) | ||
− | | embarkationdatefrom2 = | + | | embarkationdatefrom2 = 6 Aug 1942 |
− | | embarkationdateto2 = | + | | embarkationdateto2 = 13 Aug 1942 |
− | | shipembarked2 = | + | | shipembarked2 = SS James Fenimore Cooper |
− | | embarkedshipnote2 = | + | | embarkedshipnote2 = Brisbane to Port Moresby |
− | | dateofreturnfrom = | + | | dateofreturnfrom = 29 Jan 1942 |
− | | dateofreturnto = | + | | dateofreturnto = 25 Mar 1942 |
− | | shipreturned = | + | | shipreturned = SS Île de France & SS Kosciusko |
− | | shipreturnednote = | + | | shipreturnednote = Suez to Bombay to Adelaide |
| dateofreturnfrom2 = 2 Oct 1942 | | dateofreturnfrom2 = 2 Oct 1942 | ||
| dateofreturnto2 = 6 Oct 1942 | | dateofreturnto2 = 6 Oct 1942 | ||
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| monumentother = | | monumentother = | ||
| monumentothernote = | | monumentothernote = | ||
− | | medal1 = | + | | medal1 = 1939-45 Star |
− | | medal2 = | + | | medal2 = Africa Star |
− | | medal3 = | + | | medal3 = Pacific Star |
− | | medal4 = | + | | medal4 = Defence Medal |
+ | | medal5 = War Medal 1939-45 | ||
+ | | medal6 = Australian Service Medal 1939-45 | ||
}} | }} | ||
Revision as of 02:46, 10 April 2019
Personal Information | |
---|---|
Date of Birth | 7 Feb 1908 |
Place of Birth | Narrogin, Western Australia |
Death | 29 Sep 1978, aged 70 |
Place of Death | Armadale, Western Australia |
Age at Enlistment | 33 years, 2 months |
Description | 5'5" (1.65m) tall ; ; brown eyes ; black hair |
Occupation | Kangaroo shooter |
Religion | Church of England |
Address | Seventh road, Armadale, Western Australia |
Next of Kin | Father , William Henry Pryor |
Military Information | |
Reg Number | WX11893 |
Date of Enlistment | 29 Apr 1941 |
Rank | Private |
Unit/Formation | 2nd/16th Australian Infantry Battalion |
Date of Embarkation | 9 Sep 1941 ‒ 22 Sep 1941 |
Ship Embarked On | HMT Queen Mary Fremantle to Suez via Ceylon (Sri Lanka) |
Date of Embarkation | 6 Aug 1942 ‒ 13 Aug 1942 |
Ship Embarked On | SS James Fenimore Cooper Brisbane to Port Moresby |
Date of Return | 29 Jan 1942 ‒ 25 Mar 1942 |
Ship Returned On | SS Île de France & SS Kosciusko Suez to Bombay to Adelaide |
Date of Return | 2 Oct 1942 ‒ 6 Oct 1942 |
Ship Returned On | AHS Manunda Port Moresby to Sydney |
Fate |
Wounded in action 1942 Returned to Australia |
Medals |
1939-45 Star Africa Star Pacific Star Defence Medal War Medal 1939-45 Australian Service Medal 1939-45 |
Pre War
War Service
Enlisted at the Claremont Recruit Depot, and was transferred to the 3rd Training Battalion at Northam camp. With almost no training he was granted pre-embarkation leave from 5 May until 11 May 1941, but did not go overseas until September. In he meantime he was transferred to the 1st Training Battalion, and spent from 23 Aug to 3 Sep 1941 in hospital with Pharyngitis. On 9 Sep 1941 he embarked as a member of the 21st Training Battalion on the HMT Queen Mary as part of Convoy US12A, bound for Suez via Trincomalee in Ceylon (Sri Lanka). They reached Suez on 22 Sep 1941 and disembarked into trucks to be driven north to a transit camp on the edge of the Great Bitter Lake. On 19 Jan 1942 John was posted to the 2/16 Battalion.
Ten days later, on 29 Jan 1942, as a member of the 2/16 Battalion he boarded the SS Île de France at Suez, a part of Convoy JS3, for Bombay. where they disembarked on 6 Feb 1942 and were sent to camps to await their embarkation on smaller, slower ships in the convoy that would carry them to Singapore. Clarence was allocated to the SS Kosciusko. The convoy set out for Singapore on 9 Feb 1942, and refuelled at Colombo. When Singapore surrendered on 15 Feb 1942 the slow moving convoy was approaching the Sunda Straits, and given that the Japanese had already landed on many of the Dutch East Indian islands (Indonesia), the convoy's destination was changed on the orders of Churchill to Rangoon, Burma to assist with its defence. Curtin, however, was determined to bring every possible soldier home to defend Australia and demanded that the convoy , now redesignated as Convoy SU1, turn around and sail for Australian ports. On 25 Feb 1942 the convoy again refuelled in Colombo, leaving there on 1 Mar 1942 for Fremantle which it reached on 15 Mar 1942. Around 350 of the members of the 2nd/16th Battalion from the SS Kosciusko failed to reboard when the convoy sailed for Port Adelaide which was reached on 23 Mar 1942. [1]
In Adelaide on 7 Mar 1942 John was charged with having failed to appear at a parade appointed by his Commanding Officer. Guilty he was awarded three day's Confined to Barracks. Shortly after the battalion was placed on trains for Queensland, and on 6 Aug 1942 the battalion boarded SS James Fenimore Cooper in Brisbane for Port Moresby which they reached on 13 Aug 1942. Quickly sent four days after arriving to the Kokoda Track where Militia units were attempting to delay the Japanese advance on Port Moresby. Following the 2/14 Battalion the 2/16th Battalion began the trek up the track on 17 Aug 1942. They had a 6 day trek to Isurava.
They participated in the later stages of the Battle for Isurava, and then the fighting retreat back down the track that began on 30 Aug 1942 to Efogi where they dug in on 6 Sep 1942. John was admitted to the 46th Australian Camp Hospital on 12 Sep 1942, and in the early morning of 8 Sep 1942, the 2/16 Battalion had suffered heavy casualties from a heavy Japanese machine gun that had outflanked them. Given the distance between the battlefield and the Camp Hospital and the time it took casualties taken to walk out to it, this is likely to be when he was wounded. John had had received a gunshot wound to the right arm resulting in a compound fracture. The battle at Efogi was to last several days.
After being patched up, John was embarked on the AHS Manunda on 2 Oct 1942 and evacuated to the 103rd Australian General Hospital in Baulkan Hills, a suburb of Sydney where he was admitted on 6 Oct 1942. Moved on by Ambulance train, on 26 Nov 1942 he was admitted to the 115th Australian General Hospital at Heidelberg in Victoria. Discharged from hospital on 1 May 1943 he was sent to WA where he enjoyed leave from 6 - 20 May 1943. On 22 Jul 1943 at Hollywood Hospital (109th Military Hospital Perth) he was assessed as fit to carry out certain duties which require only restricted medical fitness, but given he had no specialist skills or training it was decided to discharge John as Medically unfit category 'D'. John was discharged on 1 Sep 1943.
Post War
Notes
- ↑ Across the Sea to War, Peter Plowman, Rosenberg,2003, pp 325-364.