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Difference between revisions of "Charles William Price"

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| caption        = Australia's Fighting Sons of the Empire p.141
 
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| caption2        = phot courtesy Helen CLark
 
| dateofbirth   = unknown
 
| dateofbirth   = unknown
 
| placeofbirth   = Lambeth, Middlesex, England  
 
| placeofbirth   = Lambeth, Middlesex, England  

Revision as of 19:47, 19 February 2020

Charles William Price
Price Charles.jpg
Australia's Fighting Sons of the Empire p.141
Price Charles William.jpg
phot courtesy Helen CLark
Personal Information
Date of Birth unknown
"unknown" contains an extrinsic dash or other characters that are invalid for a date interpretation.
Place of Birth Lambeth, Middlesex, England
Death 29 Jul 1916
Place of Death Poziéres, France
Age at Enlistment 30 years, 11 months
Description 5'4¼" (1.63m) tall ; 143 lbs
64.864 kg
; fair complexion ; brown eyes ; dark hair
Occupation Quarryman
Religion Church of England
Address Armadale, Western Australia
Next of Kin Mother , Mrs Amelia Price
Military Information
Reg Number 2200
Date of Enlistment 21 Jul 1915
Rank Private
Unit/Formation 28th Battalion, 4th Reinforcement / 7th Brigade, 2nd Division
Date of Embarkation 4 Oct 1915 ‒ 27 Oct 1915
Ship Embarked On HMAT A20 Hororata
Fate Killed in Action 29 Jul 1916 at Poziéres, France
Monument Armadale War Memorial (West Armadale panel)
Villers-Bretonneux Memorial
Armadale and Districts Roll of Honour
Australian War Memorial
Medals 1914-15 Star
British War Medal
Victory Medal




Pre War

War Service

Joined the 28th Battalion at Tel-el-Kebir, Egypt on 19 Jan 1916. After a short stint on the Suez Canal near Ferry Post, they travelled to Alexandria to board HMAT A32 Themistocles, entering France through Marseilles on 21 Mar 1916.

Initially reported Missing on 29 Jul 1916, but confirmed as KIA on 5 October by Rev W.E. Dexter who buried him. The 28th Battalion had attacked the German front line north of Poziéres soon after midnight of 28/29 July 1916 and came under heavy machine gun fire when they found the wire unbroken, along with intense enemy artillery fire. Casualties were high, and the surviving attackers returned to their trenches soon after 2am. 63 KIA, 151 WIA, 257 MIA. More than 50% of the Battalion were casualties.

..."Killed in action at the Battle of Pozieres on 28th July, 1916". In his last letter he wrote....... "We have had some long marches and a 124 hours train journey. So we are now in another part of France. We went through some old fashioned villages and the folk living there seemed very religious. You always see the crucifix hanging on the wall and the holy pictures. I think they are mixed Belgians and French, and it's not very long before a mob of troops eat them out of bread, if they have any to sell, as our rations are not enough sometimes. There are plenty of biscuits, but the boys don't take kindly to them......I don't think we will be here very long, as there is almost bound to be something doing shortly. I should like to see every able bodied young fellow in it, as the Huns have the positions and have to be driven out. I should like to see their country treated as they have treated Belgium and France...."[1]

The Red cross file held by the Australian War Memorial only notes that he was declared missing and then declared to have been KIA.[2].

  • Villers-Bretonneux Memorial 2015 photo
  • Section of 28th Bn panels at Villers-Bretonneux 2015 photo


Post War

Notes

Mary Werndly, mother of two sons, both Killed in Action, was his sister. His brother Edward also died while in France.

  1. "The Drill of the Foot-Hills" (PDF) (1917). Western Australia. Mar 1917. p. 10. Retrieved 16 May 2017 – via State Library of Western Australia. 
  2. "Australian Red Cross Wounded and Missing Files - Charles William Price". Australian War Memorial. 2018. Retrieved 2 May 2018. 

External Links