Date |
Year |
Title |
Event |
1 July |
1916 |
First day of the battle of the Somme |
This was the worst single day in the
history of British arms with 60,000 men being killed or wounded. The
battle of the Somme then continued for four months and resulted in
more than 1,200,000 casualties on both sides. |
1 July |
1945 |
7th Division landed at
Balikpapan,
Borneo |
The landing at Balikpapan was the
largest and final Australian amphibious landing of the Second World
War. |
2 July |
1950 |
No. 77 Squadron flies 1st combat mission
in Korea |
First combat mission flown by No. 77
Squadron in Korea. No. 77 Squadron was the first Australian unit
committed to the war in Korea. |
2 July |
1952 |
Operation Blaze |
A Coy. 1RAR, raids Chinese positions on
Hill 227 during Operation Blaze, Korea. The objective of the operation
was to capture a prisoner and destroy the Chinese position's garrison. |
2 July |
1993 |
Death of Sir Edward 'Weary' Dunlop |
Sir Edward 'Weary' Dunlop gained fame
for the medical services he rendered to his fellow prisoners of the
Japanese on the Burma-Thailand railway during the Second World War. |
3 July |
1900 |
Leeuw Kop, South Africa |
400 Imperial Bushmen in action at Leeuw
Kop, South Africa. |
3 July |
1950 |
Pilots of No. 77 Squadron involved in
friendly fire incident |
Pilots of No. 77 Squadron accidentally
destroy a train carrying American and Republic of Korea soldiers
having been assured by the United States 5th Air Force Tactical
Control Centre that the area under attack was in North Korean hands. |
4 July |
1918 |
Battle of Hamel, France |
The Battle of Hamel was the first
set-piece operation planned and conducted under Lieutenant General Sir
John Monash. It came to be regarded as a model for later Western Front
battles. |
4 July |
1918 |
Lance Corporal T.L. Axford, VC |
Lance Corporal T.L. Axford, 16th
Battalion, originally from Carrieton, South Australia, wins the
Victoria Cross at Vaire and Hamel Woods, France. |
4 July |
1918 |
Private H. Dalziel, VC |
Private H. Dalziel, 15th Battalion,
originally from Irvinebank, Queensland, wins the Victoria Cross at
Hamel Wood, France. |
4 July |
1941 |
Acting Wing Commander H. Edwards, VC. |
Acting Wing Commander H. Edwards, No.
105 Squadron, Bomber Command, RAAF, originally from Fremantle, Western
Australia, wins the Victoria Cross in a raid on Bremen. |
5 July |
1945 |
Death of Prime Minister Curtin |
Prime Minister Curtin led Australia
through the darkest period of the Second World War when the threat
from Japan was at its greatest. He died in office in 1945.. |
6 July |
1918 |
Corporal W.E. Brown, VC |
Corporal W.E. Brown, 20th Battalion,
originally from New Norfolk, Tasmania, wins the Victoria Cross at
Villers-Bretonneux, France. |
6 July |
1941 |
Battle of Damour, Lebanon |
This was the final battle in Lebanon
against the Vichy French. |
6 July |
1943 |
Darwin bombed |
Darwin was bombed 64 times during the
Second World War. |
7 July |
1942 |
9th Division in action at El Alamein. |
General Rommel's forces had pushed the
allies back to El Alamein in June 1942, the July battles involved
allied attempts to push German and Italian forces back, none of the
three attempts were successful. |
7 July |
1942 |
Horn Island Bombed |
Horn Island was bombed by Japanese
aircraft 9 times during the Second World War. |
7 July |
1956 |
Last RAAF transports return from Korea. |
The last Australian servicemen did not
depart Korea until 1957. |
8 July |
1942 |
460 Squadron raids Wilhelmshaven |
13 Wellingtons of no. 460 Squadron
participated in a night time bombing raid on this major German port
severely damaging an armour plate shop and the Deutsche Werke ship
building yards. |
9 July |
1941 |
Damour taken. |
Damour was the main military base and
administrative centre for the Vichy French forces in Syria. The
Australian victory at Damour opened the way to Beirut and led the
Vichy French to seek an armistice. |
9 July |
1943 |
No. 3 and No. 450 Squadrons RAAF and 8
RAN corvettes involved in the allied invasion of Sicily. |
Known as Operation Husky the invasion of
Sicily was the second largest undertaken in Europe during the Second
World War, Overlord being the largest. The operation involved 180,000
troops and 2,590 ships. |
10 July |
1911 |
Formation of Royal Australian Navy
(RAN). |
In its original form the Royal
Australian Navy consisted of the battlecruiser Australia and several
cruisers, destroyers and submarines. When the new fleet arrived in
Australia on 4 October 1913 the day was declared a public holiday and
was described in the press as the greatest day in Australia's history. |
10 July |
1940 |
Beginning of the Battle of Britain. |
The Battle of Britain was an aerial
battle between the Royal Air Force and the German Luftwaffe for
control of the skies over southern Britain, a necessary prerequisite
for the planned German invasion of the island. After some three months
of intensive aerial operations both sides had lost heavily but the
Germans were forced to abandon their plans for a cross-channel
invasion of England. |
10 July |
1941 |
Private J.H. Gordon, VC. |
Private James Gordon, 2/31st Battalion,
originally from Rockingham, Western Australia, wins the Victoria Cross
near Jezzine, Lebanon. |
10 July |
1951 |
Negotiations between the United Nations
Command and the Communists begin at Kaesong. |
Negotiations between the opposing sides
in the Korean War continued for two years before an armistice was
finally declared. |
11 July |
1941 |
Vichy French surrender in Syria. |
The five-week long Syrian campaign
represented the first occasion that the Australian 7th Division was
committed to action. The campaign was based on the premise that the
Vichy French forces would offer only token resistance, though this
turned out not to be the case. Of the 34,000 Allied troops
(Australian, British, Indian and Free French) committed to the
campaign 3,900 became casualties. |
12 July |
1965 |
Last 3RAR ambush of Malayan Emergency |
The last ambush conducted by the 3rd
Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment was mounted from Malaysia against
targets at Babang in Kalimantan. |
13 July |
1953 |
HMAS Tobruk begins a two-week patrol of
the northern part of Korea's east coast. |
This was the Tobruk's last patrol before
the war in Korea ended in late July 1953. |
14 July |
1918 |
Fighting at Abu Tellul, Palestine., |
A heavy attack by about 1,000 men of the
German Asia Corps on Australian Light Horse positions at Abu Tellul, a
prominent hill on the west bank of the Jordan River, Palestine, is
defeated. This was the only occasion on which the German Asia Corps
was known to have carried the primary role in an attack in the Middle
East during the First World War. |
15 July |
1940 |
Volunteer Defence Force (VDC) formed. |
The Volunteer Defence Force (VDC),
composed mainly of World War One veterans, was formed for home defence
by the RSL |
16 July |
1940 |
HMA Ships Stuart and Waterhen at Bardia. |
HMA Ships Stuart and Waterhen were on
screen at the bombardment of Bardia. |
17 - 18 July |
1918 |
Lieutenant A.C. Borella, VC. |
Lieutenant
A.C. Borella, 26th Battalion,
originally from Borung, Victoria, wins the Victoria Cross at
Villers-Bretonneux, France. AT 36 Borella was the oldest member of the
1st AIF to receive this award. |
19 July |
1916 |
Battle of Fromelles. |
5,533 Australians were killed or wounded
in this battle, most on the night of 19-20 July. Fromelles was the
first battle for the Australians on the Western Front. |
19 July |
1940 |
HMAS Sydney sinks the Bartolomeo
Colleoni |
HMAS Sydney sinks the Italian cruiser
Bartolomeo Colleoni in the battle of Cape Spada off Crete. |
20 July |
1943 |
HMAS Hobart torpedoed. |
HMAS Hobart torpedoed off San Cristobal,
Solomon Islands. Seven officers and six ratings were killed in the
attack. Though badly damaged the Hobart was able to reach Espirtu
Santo the next day. |
21 July |
1942 |
Japanese forces land at Buna and Gona. |
Buna, Gona and Sanananda were to become
the scenes of heavy fighting over the period November 1942 - January
1943 when the Japanese withdrawal from the Kokoda trail enabled the
allies to plan the encirclement of these important Japanese positions.
Gona was the first to fall to the Allies and Buna was the second after
weeks of heavy fighting. |
22 July |
1917 |
Four members of the Australian Army
Nursing Service win the Military Medal. |
Four members of the Australian Army
Nursing Service, Sisters Cawood, Deacon and Ross-King and Staff Nurse
Derrer, won Military Medals for rescuing patients trapped in a burning
Casualty Clearing Station at Trois Arbes, France. These were the first
bravery awards won by Australian nurses in action. |
22 July |
1938 |
Australian National War Memorial opened
at Villers-Bretonneux, France. |
Opening of the Australian National War
Memorial at Villers-Bretonneux, France. This Memorial lists the names
of 11,000 Australian missing from the fighting around
Villers-Bretonneux. |
22 July |
1942 |
Beginning of the battle of the Kokoda
Track, New Guinea. |
Having been stopped in their attempt to
reach Port Moresby by sea at the Battle of the Coral Sea, the Japanese
were forced to try and take the town by land. The only route open to
them was over the Owen Stanley Ranges via the Kokoda Track which
became the scene of heavy fighting. |
22 July |
1942 |
Private A.S. Gurney, VC. |
Private A.S. Gurney, 2/48th Battalion,
originally from Dayawn, Western Australia, wins the Victoria Cross at
Tel el Eisa, Egypt. |
23 July |
1916 |
Battle of Pozieres begins. |
Pozieres was the first protracted battle
for the Australians on the Western Front. Part of the Somme
battlefield Pozieres was the scene of several major attacks by the
Australians between 23 July and 5 August 1916. More than 12,000
Australians became casualties in the fighting at Pozieres. |
23 July |
1916 |
Lieutenant A.S. Blackburn, VC. |
Lieutenant
A.S. Blackburn, 10th
Battalion, originally from Woodville, South Australia, wins the
Victoria Cross at Pozieres, France. |
23 July |
1916 |
Private J. Leak, VC. |
Private J. Leak, 9th Battalion,
originally from Portsmouth, United Kingdom, wins the Victoria Cross at
Pozieres, France. |
24 July |
1900 |
Captain N.R. Howse, VC. |
Captain N.R. Howse, New South Wales Army
Medical Corps, originally from Somerset, United Kingdom, wins the
Victoria Cross at Vredefort, Orange Free State. Howse's was the first
Victoria Cross awarded to an Australian and remains the only
Australian medical officer to win this award. |
24 July |
1945 |
Private F. J. Partridge, VC. |
Private F. J. Partridge, 8th Battalion,
originally from Grafton, New South Wales, wins the Victoria Cross on
the Bonis Peninsula, Bougainville. |
24 - 25 July |
1916 |
Private T. Cooke, VC. |
Private T. Cooke, 8th Battalion,
originally from Kaikora, New Zealand, wins the Victoria Cross at
Pozieres, France. |
26 July |
1940 |
Formation of the Royal Australian Air
Force Nursing Service (RAAFNS) |
The RAAFNS was established in response
to the need for a greater number of nursing personnel as the RAAF
underwent a rapid expansion early in the war. Membership of the RAAFNS
expanded from 45 in December 1940 to 616 in December 1945. The service
was disbanded at the end of the war, but in 1948 a peace-time service
was formed. |
26 July |
1942 |
Darwin bombed by Japanese aircraft. |
Darwin was bombed 64 times during the
war. |
26 July |
1945 |
Japan issued with ultimatum to
surrender. |
Towards the end of the Second World War
the Japanese Government was divided between those who wanted their
country to fight to the finish and those who advocated surrender on
the terms set out in the Allied ultimatum that was put forward at the
Potsdam conference. With the Government unable to resolve the deadlock
the matter was left in the hands of the Emperor who surrendered on 15
August 1945. |
26 July |
1950 |
Australian troops committed to Korea. |
Acting Prime Minister Fadden announces
the commitment of Australian ground forces for service in Korea. |
27 July |
1942 |
Formation of the Australian Women's Land
Army. |
With many male agricultural workers
leaving their farms to enlist Australia required rural labour to
produce food and other raw materials for the war effort. Women's
organisations responded by setting up 'land armies' in each state and
many of these women were later absorbed into the Australian Women's
Land Army. It was open to all women who were British subjects or
'friendly aliens' between the ages of 18 and 50 not already engaged in
rural work. |
27 July |
1942 |
Japanese capture Kokoda. |
Having been stopped in their attempt to
reach Port Moresby by sea at the Battle of the Coral Sea, the Japanese
were forced to try and take the town by land. The only route open to
them was over the Owen Stanley Ranges via the Kokoda Track which
became the scene of heavy fighting. |
27 July |
1942 |
Fighting at Ruin Ridge. |
2/28th Battalion in disastrous action
against German troops at Ruin Ridge, western Egypt. |
27 July |
1953 |
Fighting in Korea ends. |
Cease Fire signed in Panmunjon, Korea,
bringing hostilities to an end. |
28 July |
1916 |
Sergeant C. Castleton, VC. |
Sergeant C. Castleton, 5th Machine Gun
Company, originally from Suffolk, United Kingdom, wins the Victoria
Cross at Pozieres, France. |
28 - 19 July |
1942 |
Australians involved in heavy fighting
at Kokoda. |
Having been stopped in their attempt to
reach Port Moresby by sea at the Battle of the Coral Sea, the Japanese
were forced to try and take the town by land. The only route open to
them was over the Owen Stanley Ranges via the Kokoda Track which
became the scene of heavy fighting. |
28 July |
1942 |
Townsville bombed by Japanese aircraft. |
Townsville was bombed 4 times during the
war.. |
29 July |
1942 |
Townsville bombed by Japanese aircraft. |
Townsville was bombed 4 times during the
war.. |
30 July |
1942 |
Port Headland, Darwin and Horn Island
bombed by Japanese aircraft. |
Many towns and airfields in northern
Australia came under Japanese aerial attack during 1942-1943. Darwin
was the most heavily bombed Australian city in the war. |
31 July |
1900 |
Victorian naval contingent departs
Melbourne on SS Salamis for China. |
With many Australian soldiers fighting
in South Africa, Australia's commitment to the Boxer Rebellion in
China was a naval one. |
31 July |
1914 |
Labor leader Andrew Fisher declares
Australians will defend Britain 'to our last man and our last
shilling'. |
The extent Australia's sacrifice in the
First World War could not have been imagined when Fisher made his
famous commitment. |
July |
1962 |
Team leader of the Australian Army
Training Team Vietnam arrives in South Vietnam. |
The arrival of the Australian Army
Training Team, Vietnam, in South Vietnam signalled the beginning of a
decade long Australian involvement in the Vietnam War |