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Category:1st AIF/4th
Div/13th Bde |
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- 50th Battalion AIF
(South Australia) [13th Infantry Brigade]
Formed Egypt 26 February 1916 from the 10th Battalion AIF.
- 2nd
Reinforcements departed Adelaide Aeneas
11 April 1916,
- 3rd Reinforcements departed Adelaide Seang
Bee 13 July 1916,
- 4th Reinforcements departed Adelaide Ballarat
12 August 1916,
- 5th Reinforcements departed Adelaide Commonwealth
12 August 1916,
- 6th Reinforcements departed Adelaide Port
Melbourne 23 October 1916,
- 7th Reinforcements departed Adelaide Afric
6 November 1916,
- 8th Reinforcements departed Adelaide Berrima
16 December 1916,
- 9th Reinforcements departed Adelaide Seang
Bee 10 February 1917,
- 10th Reinforcements departed Adelaide Themistocles
4 August 1917.
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Battle Honours:
Egypt 1916, Somme 1916-18,
Pozieres, Bullecourt, Messines 1917, Ypres 1917, Menin Road, Polygon Wood, Passchendaele,
Arras 1918, Ancre 1918, Villers-Bretonneux, Amiens, Albert 1918, St
Quentin Canal, Hindenburg Line, Epehy, France and Flanders 1916-18
by
Ross Mallett (ADFA)
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50th Battalion
The 50th Battalion was raised in Egypt
on 26 February 1916 as part of the “doubling” of the AIF.
Approximately half of its recruits were veterans from the 10th
Battalion, and the other half, fresh reinforcements from Australia.
Reflecting the composition of the 10th, the 50th was predominantly
composed of men from South Australia. The battalion became part of the
13th Brigade of the 4th Australian Division and was dubbed
“Hurcombe’s Hungry Half Hundred”, after its first CO, Lieutenant
Colonel Frederick Hurcombe.
After arriving in France on 11 June
1916, the 50th fought in its first major battle at Mouquet Farm between
13 and 15 August and suffered heavily. It took part in another assault
launched there on 3 September. The battalion saw out the rest of the
year alternating between front-line duty, and training and labouring
behind the line. This routine continued through the bleak winter of
1916–17.
Early in 1917, the battalion
participated in the advance that followed the German retreat to the
Hindenburg Line, and attacked at Noreuil on 2 April. For his actions at
Noreuil Private Joergen Jensen was awarded the Victoria Cross. Later
that year, the focus of AIF operations moved to the Ypres sector in
Belgium. There the battalion was involved in the battle of Messines
between 7 and 12 June and the battle of Polygon Wood on 26 September.
Another winter of trench routine followed.
Utilising troops freed by the collapse
of Russia in October 1917, the German Army launched a major offensive on
the Western Front at the end of March 1918. The 4th Division was
deployed to defend positions south of the River Ancre in France. At
Dernancourt, on 5 April, the 50th Battalion assisted in the repulse of
the largest German attack mounted against Australian troops during the
war. The German threat persisted through April, and on ANZAC Day 1918
the 50th participated in the now- legendary attack to dislodge the enemy
from Villers-Bretonneux.
The 50th Battalion continued to play
an active role during the Allies’ own offensive, launched on 8 August
1918. Its last major operation of the war was the attack on the
Hindenburg “outpost line” on 18 September, during which the 50th
composed part of the 4th Division’s reserve. The 50th Battalion ceased
to exist as a separate entity when it amalgamated with the 51st
Battalion on 6 March 1919.
- 720 killed, 1557 wounded
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Decorations
- 1 VC
- 1 DSO, 1 bar
- 1 OBE
- 16 MC, 2 bars
- 16 DCM
- 122 MM, 5 bars
- 8 MSM
- 25 MID
- 8 foreign awards
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