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| caption        = Australian Foresters working in a British sawmill during 1940  AWM Photo
 
| caption        = Australian Foresters working in a British sawmill during 1940  AWM Photo
 
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==Brief History==
 
==Brief History==
The '''2/1st Australian Forestry Company''' was formed in Sydney in March 1940 with men from the forest and timber industries in New South Wales, Queensland and South Australia. It sailed in the third convoy for Egypt, but with the entry of Italy into the war it was re-directed to the UK via Cape Town and landed in Liverpool in July 1940. Their first base was at Alton in Hampshire where they were utilised as defensive troops in case of a German invasion. In September 1940 they moved to Chathill in Northumberland to operate a sawmill until August 1941. Their next move was to Lockerbie in Dumfriesshire where they remained until they left for Australia via the USA in October 1943, arriving at the Royal Australian Engineers training Centre at Kapooka un December.
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n 1939, the British Government requested that Australia raise three, 200-man strong companies of foresters to support the British Expeditionary Force in France. Two forestry companies were quickly raised in 1940 as part of the Royal Australian Engineers (RAE). The two Forestry Companies sailed from Fremantle on the [[HMT Stratheden}} on 30 May 1940 destined for England via the Suez Canal but were diverted via Cape Town after France fell. They arrived in England in July and undertook further military training at Alton, southern England. They were immediately positioned to guard against invasion while the Battle of Britain was underway.
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As the threat of invasion receded, the men from the two Forestry Companies were deployed to Northumberland during September 1940. The 2/1 Forestry Company went to Seahouses, south of Berwick-upon-Tweed. Equipment was in short supply and there were no chainsaws, just axes and crosscut saws. The winter of 1940–41 was particularly cold and hard on the men as many had not seen snow before. They also were required to follow the British requirement which was to cut trees flush at ground level rather than two or three feet above the ground which sometimes required them to cut while kneeling in the snow and mud. All three Australian Forestry Companies were relocated to Dumfriesshire in Scotland during 1941, and then to Sussex in mid 1943. By the time the Forestry Group returned to Australia, 120 of its men had married British women and 40 children had been born. The Group departed the UK for Australia via America on 22 September 1943, but the wives of the men who had married in the UK were unable to accompany them until August 1944
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[[File:2-1st_Australian_Forestry_Company.jpg]]
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Following their return to Australia in November, the forestry companies, undertook jungle warfare training at Canungra and received some new equipment and were later deployed to the Northern Territory and Papua New Guinea. In PNG they continued to harvest logs and produce sawn timber including material for wharfs and jetties. They worked alongside New Zealand and American forestry companies. The 1st Platoon then moved to Wewak in June and these sawmills remained in production until after the end of the war.
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[[File:2-1st_Forestry.jpg]]
  
  
In July 1944 they were sent to operate a sawmill at McMinns Siding, 35 kilometers south of Darwin and expanded production in anticipation of an invasion of Ambon. Tis project was abandoned by December and the unit returned to Kapooka. In April 1945 it moved to Lae in New Guinea where  they established a sawmill at Yalu. 1st Platoon then moved to Wewak in June and these sawmills remained in production until after the end of the war.
 
  
File:[[2-1st_Forestry.jpg]]
 
 
===Unit Personnel===
 
===Unit Personnel===
* [[Luke Pense]]  
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* [[Luke Pense]] 29 Mar - 10 Dec 1945
  
  

Latest revision as of 01:53, 10 February 2023

2-2nd Forestry.jpg
Australian Foresters working in a British sawmill during 1940 AWM Photo
Forestry Group New York.jpg
Forestry Group marching down Broadway, New York. Said to be the only occasion that armed foreign troops have marched through an American city since Independence.


Brief History

n 1939, the British Government requested that Australia raise three, 200-man strong companies of foresters to support the British Expeditionary Force in France. Two forestry companies were quickly raised in 1940 as part of the Royal Australian Engineers (RAE). The two Forestry Companies sailed from Fremantle on the [[HMT Stratheden}} on 30 May 1940 destined for England via the Suez Canal but were diverted via Cape Town after France fell. They arrived in England in July and undertook further military training at Alton, southern England. They were immediately positioned to guard against invasion while the Battle of Britain was underway.


As the threat of invasion receded, the men from the two Forestry Companies were deployed to Northumberland during September 1940. The 2/1 Forestry Company went to Seahouses, south of Berwick-upon-Tweed. Equipment was in short supply and there were no chainsaws, just axes and crosscut saws. The winter of 1940–41 was particularly cold and hard on the men as many had not seen snow before. They also were required to follow the British requirement which was to cut trees flush at ground level rather than two or three feet above the ground which sometimes required them to cut while kneeling in the snow and mud. All three Australian Forestry Companies were relocated to Dumfriesshire in Scotland during 1941, and then to Sussex in mid 1943. By the time the Forestry Group returned to Australia, 120 of its men had married British women and 40 children had been born. The Group departed the UK for Australia via America on 22 September 1943, but the wives of the men who had married in the UK were unable to accompany them until August 1944

2-1st Australian Forestry Company.jpg


Following their return to Australia in November, the forestry companies, undertook jungle warfare training at Canungra and received some new equipment and were later deployed to the Northern Territory and Papua New Guinea. In PNG they continued to harvest logs and produce sawn timber including material for wharfs and jetties. They worked alongside New Zealand and American forestry companies. The 1st Platoon then moved to Wewak in June and these sawmills remained in production until after the end of the war.

2-1st Forestry.jpg


Unit Personnel



Notes

Content has come from The Unit Guide - Volume 3 - The Australian Army 1939-1945, page 3.572 - Graham R McKenzie-Smith - Big Sky Publishing - 2018


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