36th Battalion
The 36th Battalion was raised at
Broadmeadow Camp, in Newcastle, New South Wales in February 1916. The
bulk of the battalion’s recruits had been enlisted as a result of a
recruiting drive conducted amongst the rifle clubs of New South Wales by
the Minister for Public Information in the New South Wales government,
Ambrose Carmichael. Thus, the battalion became known as
“Carmichael’s Thousand”. Carmichael led by example and enlisted as
well, serving in the battalion as a captain.
The 36th Battalion became part of the
9th Brigade of the 3rd Australian Division. It left Sydney, bound for
the United Kingdom on 13 May 1916. Arriving there in early July, the
battalion spent the next four months in training. It crossed to France
in late November, and moved into the trenches of the Western Front for
the first time on 4 December, just in time for the onset of the terrible
winter of 1916–17.
The battalion had to wait until the
emphasis of British and Dominion operations switched to the Ypres Sector
of Belgium in mid-1917 to take part in its first major battle; this was
the battle of Messines, launched on 7 June. With the 9th Brigade held in
reserve during the battle for Broodseinde Ridge on 4 October, the
36th’s next major battle was around Passchendaele on the 12th. Heavy
rain, though, had deluged the battlefield, and thick mud tugged at the
advancing troops and fouled their weapons. The 36th secured its
objective but with open flanks and ineffective artillery support, was
forced to withdraw.
For the next five months the 36th
alternated between periods of rest, training, labouring, and service in
the line. When the German Army launched its last great offensive in the
spring of 1918, the battalion was part of the force deployed to defend
the approaches to Amiens around Villers-Bretonneux. It took part in a
counter-attack at Hangard Wood on 30 March, and helped to defeat a major
drive on Villers- Bretonneux on 4 April.
The fighting to defeat the German
offensive had exacted a heavy toll upon the 3rd Division, and the 9th
Brigade in particular. Reinforcements from Australia were dwindling and
thus it was decided to disband one of the 9th Brigade’s battalions to
reinforce the other two. The 36th was the battalion selected. In what
one of the battalion’s officers called an “unselfish act” the 36th
disbanded on 30 April 1918. Text from AWM
- 452 killed, 1253 wounded (including
gassed)
-
Decorations
- 1 DSO
- 11 MC
- 3 DCM
- 34 MM, 4 bars
- 3 MSM
- 13 MID
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