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Rupert Gregg

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Rupert Gregg
Gregg Rupert.jpg
Sunday Times 3 Nov 1918 page 6
Personal Information
Date of Birth not known
"not known" contains an extrinsic dash or other characters that are invalid for a date interpretation.
Place of Birth Collingwood, Victoria
Death 26 Aug 1918
Place of Death near Bray, France
Age at Enlistment 26 years, 9 months
Description 5'5" (1.65m) tall ; 122 lbs
55.338 kg
; dark complexion ; brown eyes ; dark hair
Occupation Horse driver
Religion Roman Catholic
Address Jarrahdale Bush Landing, Western Australia
Next of Kin Wife , Mrs May Edith Gregg
Military Information
Reg Number 798
Date of Enlistment 21 Feb 1916
Rank Private
Unit/Formation 44th Battalion, 1st Reinforcement to D Company, 15 Platoon / 11th Brigade, 3rd Division
Date of Embarkation 6 Jun 1916 ‒ 21 Jul 1916
Ship Embarked On HMAT A29 Suevic
Fate Wounded in Action 10 Jun 1917 Messines
Wounded in Action 4 Oct 1917 Broodseinde
Wounded in Action 25 Aug 1918 Bray
Died of Wounds 26 Aug 1918 at 55th Casualty Clearing Station
Monument Jarrahdale War Memorial
Jarrahdale Honour Roll
ANZAC Memorial Park (Byford)
Australian War Memorial
Medals British War Medal
Victory Medal



Pre War

Rupert married Edith May Lakeman in Perth during 1908. (Her given names were reversed on her Burial record). Rupert had trained as a pastry cook for 4½ years in Victoria before coming to WA.

War Service

Allocated to the 44th Battalion, then forming up and training in Claremont. Rupert travelled with them to England, and on 18 Jun 1916 while still aboard the Suevic he was charged with gambling and fined a day's pay. While in England he also ran foul of military law, and on 16 Nov 1916 he was charged with having been AWOL from midnight 9 Nov until 3pm 13 Nov 1916. Awarded 4 days Field Punishment No.2, and loss of 8 days pay.

The 44th Battalion trained at Larkhill before it proceeded to France through Southampton on 25 Nov 1916, and by 28 Nov 1916 they were in billetes at Steenwerck, northern France. In France Rupert was sent to an army school (nature not disclosed) for a fortnight in April 1917. On 8 June 1917 the battalion participated in the attack on Messines Ridge, and while they suffered relatively light casualties in the taking of ground, they were then subjected to an incredibly heavy bombardment which caused some 300 casualties for the battalion alone. Rupert was one of these, being treated in turn by 9th Australian Field Ambulance, and the 2nd Australian Casualty Clearing Station before being admitted to the 12th General Hospital in Rouen the next day. On 29 Jun 1917 he was released to the 2nd Convalescent Depot, where he remained, being treated for Shell shock until 19 Sep 1917 when he was released to the Base Depot. On 29 Sep 1917 he was back with the 44th Battalion at Poperinghe in Belgium.

Soon after his return the Battalion was sent back to the front, and on 4 Oct 1917 he received a shell wound to his left arm. Rupert was one of a small number of casualties suffered by the battalion in their attack, with almost all resulting from enemy artillery action. Rupert was treated by the 64th Field Ambulance and the 4th Casualty Clearing Station, before being admitted to the 1st Canadian Stationary Hospital in Étaples On 11 Oct 1917 he was embarked on the HS Stad Antwerpen for England where he was admitted 11 Oct 1917 to the War Hospital at Clacton-on-sea in Essex. On his recovery he was granted furlough from 11 - 25 Dec 1917, and took the opportunity to extend it until 5pm on 3 Jan 1918. Found guilty of AWOL and awarded 10 days Field Punishment No.2 and 20 days loss of pay.

In Feb 1918 he was transferred to Tidworth where he was on the strength of the AIF headquarters. On 1 May 1918 he was transferred to the Overseas Training Brigade until 3 Jul 1918 when he again proceeded overseas to France, where he rejoined the 44th Battalion near Hamel on 10 Jul 1918.

Rupert was soon after in trouble, being charged on 3 Aug 1917 with
"An act to the prejudice fo good order and military discipline in that he (1) wilfully gave information on military matters in a written letter by him on 26 Jul 1918, contrary to censorship regulations, and (2) wilful endorsed a envelope with a signature purporting to be that of an officer censoring military correspondence. Award 7 days Field Punishment No. 2 by Maj W.H.Rockliffe 29 Jul 1918.

On 25 Aug 1918 Rupert was wounded a third time, on tis occasion with a shell wound to his abdomen. Carried from the field, he was seen by the 9th Field Ambulance and the 55th Casualty Clearing Station where Rupert died the following day and was buried in the Daours Cemetery.

The Red Cross File contains a brief report on his death [1].
" We were lying down about 20 minutes before the hop-over in the early morning, under heavy machine gun fire, awaiting orders, when Gregg was hit by a Machine Gun bullet. I was about 6 feet away. He was paced on a stretcher and taken to the Regimental Aid Post about 250 yards off." Piggott A.M. 2319

A Newspaper in W.A. reported that Rupert Gregg of Jarrahdale had been wounded and was considered to be in a dangerous state.[2]

Wife May, and five children living in Jarrahdale. May died 15 May 1959 aged 68 in East Victoria Park.

  • Daours Cemetery Plan
  • Commonwealth War Graves Commission

Notes

Buried in Daours Communal Cemetery Extension, France (Plot VIII, Row A, Grave No 18). Daours is about 10 kilometres east of Amiens on the northern side of the Somme River.

  1. "Australian Red Cross Wounded and Missing Files - Rupert Greg". Australian War Memorial. 2018. Retrieved 2 May 2018. 
  2. Kalgoorlie Sun 15 Jul 1917 page 3

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