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Category:1st AIF/5th
Div/8th Bde |
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- 29th Battalion AIF
(Victoria) [8th Infantry Brigade]
Formed Victoria June 1915. Departed Melbourne Ascanius
10 November 1915.
- 1st Reinforcements departed Melbourne Ascanius
10 November 1915,
- 2nd Reinforcements departed Melbourne Demosthenes
29 December 1915,
- 3rd Reinforcements departed Melbourne Ballarat
18 February 1916,
- 4th Reinforcements departed Melbourne Anchises
14 March 1916,
- 5th Reinforcements departed Melbourne Anchises
14 March 1916,
- 6th Reinforcements departed Melbourne Euripides
4 April 1916,
- 7th Reinforcements departed Melbourne Berrima
4 July 1916,
- 8th Reinforcements departed Melbourne Orsova
1 August 1916,
- 9th Reinforcements departed Melbourne Commonwealth
19 September 1916,
- 10th Reinforcements departed Melbourne Port
Melbourne 21 October 1916,
- 11th Reinforcements departed Sydney Afric
3 November 1916,
- 12th Reinforcements departed Melbourne Medic
16 December 1916,
- 13th Reinforcements departed Melbourne Suevic
21 June 1917,
- 14th Reinforcements departed Melbourne Ulysses
22 December 1917.
- Disbanded 12 October 1918.
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Battle Honours:
Egypt 1915-16, Somme 1916-18,
Bapaume 1917, Bullecourt, Ypres 1917, Menin Road, Polygon Wood, Poelcappelle,
Passchendaele, Ancre 1918, Amiens, Albert 1918, Mont St Quentin,
Hindenburg Line, St Quentin Canal, France and Flanders 1916-18
by
Ross Mallett (ADFA)
29th Battalion
The 29th Battalion was raised as
part of the 8th Brigade at Broadmeadows Camp in Victoria on 10
August 1915. Having enlisted as part of the recruitment drive that
followed the landing at Gallipoli, and having seen the casualty
lists, these were men who had offered themselves in full knowledge
of their potential fate.
The 8th Brigade joined the newly
raised 5th Australian Division in Egypt and proceeded to France,
destined for the Western Front, in June 1916. The 29th Battalion
fought its first major battle at Fromelles on 19 July 1916. The
nature of this battle was summed up by one 29th soldier: “the
novelty of being a soldier wore off in about five seconds…it was
like a bloody butcher’s shop.” Although it still spent periods
in the front line, the 29th played no major offensive role for the
rest of the year.
In early 1917, the German Army
withdrew to the Hindenburg Line, allowing the British front to be
advanced. The Germans, however, made selected stands to delay this
advance and the 28th Battalion was involved in defeating a
counter-attack at Beaumetz on 23 March. The battalion subsequently
missed the heavy fighting to breach the Hindenburg Line during the
second battle of Bullecourt as the 8th Brigade was deployed to
protect the Division’s flank. The only large battle in 1917 in
which the 29th Battalion played a major role was Polygon Wood,
fought in the Ypres sector in Belgium on 26 September.
Unlike some AIF battalions, the
29th had a relatively quiet time during the German Spring Offensive
of 1918 as the 5th Division was in reserve for a lot of the time.
When the Allies took to the offensive again, the 29th fought in a
minor attack at Morlancourt on 29 July, and then in August and
September took part in the great advance that followed the battle of
Amiens. The 29th fought its last major action in September when the
5th and 3rd Australian Divisions, and two American divisions
attacked the Hindenburg Line across the top of the 6-kilometre-long
St Quentin Canal tunnel; the canal was a major obstacle in the
German defensive scheme. The offensive of 1918, however, had
strained the AIF almost to breaking point. On 12 October the 29th
Battalion was disbanded to provide reinforcements for other 8th
Brigade units.
- 485 killed, 1399 wounded
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Decorations
- 3 DSO, 1 bar
- 1 MBE
- 20 MC
- 17 DCM
- 94 MM, 3 bars
- 3 MSM
- 17 MID
- 5 foreign awards
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