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Welcome to Life Images by Jill.........Stepping into the light and bringing together the images and stories of our world. I am a photographer, writer and multi-media artist.
Focussing mainly on Western Australia and Australia, I am seeking to preserve images and memories of the beautiful world in which we live and the people in it.

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Showing posts with label Gallipoli. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gallipoli. Show all posts

Sunday, 27 April 2025

ANZAC Day - 25th April - 110th Anniversary

 Last Friday, 25th April, across the world, Australians and New Zealanders commemorated ANZAC Day - our national day born from the World War One 1915 landing on the Gallipoli Peninsula in Türkiye ** and remembered the supreme sacrifice of so many across far too many wars. Not only those killed during the wars, but those whom came home broken in body and spirit. 

Below is a group portrait of all the original officers and men of the 11th Battalion, 3rd Brigade, AIF (Australian Imperial Force). The group of over 685 soldiers are spread over the side of the Great Pyramid of Khufu (Cheops) near Mena camp was originally lent to the Australian War Memorial in the 1930s by Colonel K McLennan MBEAustralian War Memorial collection

On this day I remember my great-uncle Norman Albert Clayden who was killed at Gallipoli only two days after the landing. Last year on 11 November - Remembrance Day - I wrote the following piece from a prompt from my writer's group. I thought I would share it with you today. 

Home Writing – 11 November 2024

Prompt - The sun was preparing itself on the horizon – (quote from David Pollock's book – Wooleen Way)

 The sun was preparing itself on the horizon. Muffled oars dipped. Men pulled their great-coats closer around them and adjusted the straps of their packs. Cold hands clung to their weapons. Hearts thumped. They didn’t marvel at the soft golden fingers of dawn creeping towards them.

Lance Corporal Norman Albert Clayden of the 11th Battalion felt every muscle tense. His eyes strained to see the beach, from where he could hear the unmistakable sound of gunfire coming across the water.  Nothing had prepared him for this.

The boat ran aground and at the order the men jumped over the gunnels into waist deep water, struggled to get a firm foot hold, and waded through the wash as it pulled and dragged at their legs. A bombardment of bullets struck the water all around them. Men fell. Blood stained the water. 

Norman’s breath rasped in his throat as he stumbled up the beach, soaking wet and weighed down by his rifle and sodden pack. He threw himself onto the sand as bullets rained down. Chaos. Orders were tossed into the air.

"Get up Clayden! Get moving!"

Ahead of him men were already clambering up the cliff, grabbing at bushes, dragging boxes of ammunition, digging their bayonets into the earth as they climbed under the constant unrelenting gunfire. Impossible. A world away from where Norman had enlisted only seven months before in rural Western Australia.

At dawn on 27th April, pinned down by enemy fire in a pothole on his way to reinforce an outpost in Wire Gully, Norman was shot in the head. He was 19. He has no known grave. His name is engraved on the war memorial at the Lone Pine Cemetery at Gallipoli. 

Australian War Memorial collection - showing hospital in the foreground


We know from birth records that Norman was 19 when he was killed, although his enlistment papers show his age as 22. During the First World War, the minimum enlistment age was 21 years, or 18 years with the permission of a parent or guardian. Therefore we assume that his parents didn't know he had enlisted, or hadn't given their permission for him to enlist. 

It was a common practise. On the Australian War Memorial web site is a list of boy soldiers who died before their 18th birthday during World War 1. Australian War Memorial - Boy Soldiers

** While English speakers have historically referred to the country as Turkey, it has been spelled and pronounced Türkiye (Tur-kee-yeah) in Turkish since the establishment of the modern Turkish republic in 1923.  Ref: sbs.com.au

We also today think about my husband's uncle Richard Ramsden who died in a prisoner of war camp in Myanmar (Burma) on 29th October 1943 in World War 2 - aged 23 - buried at Thanbyuzayat War Cemetery, Mynanma - a place where his family have never been able to visit as it is in a restricted zone.

I have many more posts about ANZAC Day. Here are just a few: 

ANZAC Day 2024

Remote Sunrise Reminders - ANZAC Day 2023

ANZAC Day dawn service - 2022

View from Lone Pine Cemetery, Gallipoli - photo taken by my sister Jen Shearing

A beautiful sunrise as we left the Dawn Service on ANZAC Day. 

Thank you so much for stopping by. I value your comments and look forward to hearing from you. I will try to visit your blogs in return. Have a wonderful week. 

I am linking up to the link-ups below. Please click on the links to see fabulous contributions from around the world - virtual touring at its best!

my sister at Lone Pine memorial
If you are looking for a translate button - it's there near the top on the right hand side. 
   

Hello there! I love reading your comments. If you scroll down to the bottom you can comment too! I would love to hear from you.
Until then, enjoy your day...Life only comes around once, so do what makes you happy and be with people who make you smile. 

Sunday, 28 April 2024

Anzac Day 2024


"They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old;
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them."
Lest We Forget

The 'Ode of Remembrance' comes from the poem "For the Fallen", written by Laurence Binyon.

These words are spoken at war memorials - the big and the small - all across Australia and New Zealand, and around the world at Gallipoli in Turkey, France, New Guinea and many other places on Anzac Day - 25th April - the anniversary of the dawn landing at Gallipoli in 1915 - the day that we have set aside to remember those who lost their lives or have come home damaged from war. 

I believe it is Australia's most important national day. 


Every year we go to the Dawn Service to remember two family members who we have never met but who are part of the reason we live in the freedom of Australian as we do. 

Norman Clayden - my great uncle who was killed at Gallipoli on 27th April 1915, just two days after the beach landing - aged 19 - no known grave.
As well as his name on the Lone Pine memoral at Gallipoli, and the Perth War Memorial in Western Australia, we last year found his name on the memorial at Pingelly in the Western Australia wheatbelt, from where he enlisted. He looks so proud in his uniform this photo.


And my husband's uncle Richard Ramsden who died in a prisoner of war camp in Myanmar (Burma) on 29th October 1943 in World War 2 - aged 23 - buried at Thanbyuzayat War Cemetery, Mynanma - a place where his family have never been able to visit. We only just recently learnt about some of what he might have gone through as a wounded and sick captured soldier who was forced to work.


Two young men cut down in their prime. What a waste. With the wars still going on around the world, it is obvious we have learnt nothing.
We are grateful to the people who look after these resting places far across the oceans.


I have shared some of this before in different ways -

Anzac Day 2022

Anxac Day 2019 - Field of Lights, Albany

Remote Anzac Sunrise Reminders - 2023

Gallipoli and Anzac Day 2021

Thank you so much for stopping by. Do you have an Anzac Day commemoration where you live? Is there someone you remember on that day?

I value your comments and look forward to hearing from you. I will try to visit your blogs in return. Have a wonderful week. 

I am linking up to the link-ups below. Please click on the links to see fabulous contributions from around the world - virtual touring at its best!

Monday, 24 April 2023

Remote Sunrise Reminders - 25th April Anzac Day 2023

The 25th April marks an important national day in Australia's and New Zealand's calendar. And the Dawn Service is a vital part of that day - for it was a dawn that the Allied servicemen landed at Gallipoli on 25 April 1915. 

In cities and towns all across Australia you will find war memorials to remember those who have made the supreme sacrifice in war. Some like the Australian War Memorial in Canberra require a two day visit to fully absorb it all. In Western Australia three of our most significant examples are the Kings Park War Memorial overlooking Perth and the Swan River, the Desert Mounted Corps Memorial in Albany, and the HMAS Sydney Memorial in Geraldton.

You can see them below - clockwise from left - Geraldton, Perth, Albany. 

On our travels around Western Australia we often stop at town war memorials and read the names inscribed there.  In small towns there might be just a simple stone column with only a few names. Despite their size they are a significant part of the town and district’s history.

We have found the simplicity of some memorials really stir the emotions.

Not many sunrise locations in Western Australia look east over the ocean. The ANZAC WAR MEMORIAL in the Onslow Memorial Park at Beadon Point in Onslow takes advantage of this. Unveiled at sunrise on Anzac Day 2008, the memorial was designed by internationally acclaimed artists Joan Walsh-Smith and Charlie Smith.

The Corten steel sculpture is a stylized interpretation of the Australian Defence Force’s Rising Sun insignia badge, and is geographically positioned so that the sun rising over the bay shines directly through the arch at dawn on Anzac Day. The inscription simply says “We will remember them”.

The Smith’s say is was a surprisingly difficult feat of astrophysics to calculate exactly where the sun would rise on the 25th of April, to ensure the sun would be exactly central within the six metre high arch. This was achieved with the assistance of the surveying skills of Shire Engineer, Jeffery Breen.

“Our difficulty was the fact that we would be installing the memorial months before Anzac Day.” There must have been a huge sigh of relief when the sun rose that first Anzac morning.

Even though our stay in Onslow wasn’t in April, I was so enthralled by the atmosphere surrounding the memorial, I visited it at sunrise every morning of our stay. It is easily accessed along the path from the caravan park.

The Onslow War memorial was dedicated on the 15th September 2008, by Reverend Steve Cloudsdale, Chaplain to the Pilbara Regiment and attended by the Federal Minister for Veterans’ Affairs, the Hon Alan Griffin MP. The ceremony also marked the 65th anniversary of the bombing of Onslow by enemy aircraft. Pilots from 2 FTS RAAF Pearce performed a fly past.

Nearby two brass slouch hats also created by Smith Sculptors and dedicated to the Onslow Volunteer Defence Corp, rest on a concrete bench. Soldiers wear their slouch hats with a khaki hatband, known as a 'puggaree', with the Rising Sun badge on the left-hand side.

The Navy used the Onslow jetty for refuelling during World War II and the RAAF operated a radar station at Onslow. The town was bombed on the night of 15 May 1943 when Japanese planes dropped three bombs on what they thought was the airstrip, but was actually a claypan. There were no casualties or damage.

Following the success of the Onslow memorial, the Shire of Ashburton was approached by Swansea RSL in New South Wales and the Smith’s agreed to build a replica at Swansea. The Swansea RSL Rising Sun Anzac Memorial was completed in 2015.

Joan and Charlie and their team at Smith’s Sculptors in Perth also designed and built the HMAS Sydney memorial in Geraldton, as well as many other commemorative and public artworks, including the National Memorial to the Australian Army on Anzac Parade in Canberra.

 Location: Onslow Memorial Park, Beadon Point, Second Avenue, Onslow.


                                            ***********

 On a trip through the wheatbelt in 2022 we visited the LIGHT HORSE MEMORIAL, on Yeerakine Rock, near Kondinin, after reading about it in our tourist brochure.

Overlooking wheatfields and facing the rising sun on the eastern summit of Yeerakine Rock, a three and a half metre high corton steel silhouette cutout sculpture depicts a Light Horseman on his horse. Designed and created by artisans from Arforms in Bilbra Lake, Perth, the sculpture is layered and embossed to add realism and detail. Funded in part by more than $1000 from community fundraising, the memorial was officially unveiled on 25 April 2015 to commemorate the Anzac Centenary.

The sculpture is dedicated to the many men and horses from the Kondinin district who served in World War 1 in the 10th Light Horse Regiment, as well as other service personnel. Recorded on a plaque are the names of locals who lost their lives in WWI and WWII, shattering the small community.

The 10th Australian Light Horse Regiment AIF (Australian Imperial Force) was the only AIF light horse regiment recruited in Western Australia during the WW1. The regiment began in October 1914 when it became apparent that Western Australia could provide more than a single squadron of mounted soldiers.

The regiment joined the 3rd Light Horse Brigade in Egypt and served dismounted at Gallipoli. The regiment's most notable actions were the charge at the Nek on the Gallipoli Peninsula on 7 August 1915, and Hill 60 on 29-30 August 1915 which was the last major assault of the Gallipoli Campaign. The Light Horse regiments were noted for their plume of emu feathers on their slouch hats.

Used by indigenous people for thousands of years as a water source and elevated lookout, the rock was first sighted by Europeans by Surveyor General John Septimus Roe when he camped there on 22 September 1848. A water catchment was built in 1927 to provide water for Kondinin. There are two walk trails through the sheoak woodlands, one leading to the summit to see the memorial and expansive views. There are interpretative panels along the way.

My only regret was that I wasn’t there at sunrise to see the sculpture silhouetted against the rising sun.  Please wear suitable walking footwear and a hat. If walking at sunrise, please take a torch.

In Kondinin itself you can visit the Kondinin War Memorial and the Memorial Garden located on the corner of Jones Street and Gordon Street. On Anzac Day transport will be available from the rock’s first carpark for the drive up for those unable to walk. Contact the Kondinin Shire Office for details.

Location: Sloan Road, Yeerakine Rock, located 13km south of Kondinin via the Williams-Kondinin Road

                                           ************

The simple wooden cross of the VIETNAM VETS MEMORIAL in the 80 Mile Beach Caravan Park south of Broome, draws people every April and August.

Located at the edge of the caravan park just below the sand dunes and surrounded by a low white picket fence, it was built by Vietnam Veterans who stay at the caravan park annually. It remembers those who have lost their lives in the various conflicts in which Australia has been involved. 

Vietnam Veteran, Ray Miles from Wongan Hills, later in life stayed at the Caravan Park for a few months each year. It was here he conceived the idea for the memorial. With the help of others he raised the funds for the materials and the caravan park owners set aside a space for the construction and committed to its maintenance.  For all those involved and others, it is a special place to remember mates lost in Vietnam.

The memorial was officially opened and blessed by the Rev Judy Knowling of Frontier Services on 18th August 2010. This simple white cross is made the more poignant by its remote location, and yet hundreds attend the services annually on Anzac Day 25 April and Vietnam Veterans Day 18 August, on the anniversary of the Battle of Long Tan in 1966.

The design of the cross is the same as the Long Tan Cross, designed by ‘Pioneers’ from the 6RAR-NZ Anzac Battalion’s Assault Pioneer Platoon and constructed in the 6RAR-NZ lines at Nui Dat in Vietnam on the third anniversary of the battle, on 18 August 1969.

Australia's military involvement in the Vietnam War from August 1962 to April 1975 was the second longest in duration of any war in Australia's history.

Eighty Mile Beach Caravan Park is popular with people travelling north. Long stretches of beach, popular for fishing and beach combing, 80 Mile Beach is the longest uninterrupted beach in Western Australia extending 220km. It is classified as an important bird area for shorebirds.

Location: 80 Mile Beach Caravan Park, Wallal Downs, via Great Northern Highway and Eighty Mile Beach Road (unsealed), 375km south of Broome.


Recently during our little Easter weekend trip through some of the Western Australian wheatbelt we visited the town of Pingelly which looms large in my father's family history. I went into their Memorial gardens and found on the wall there the name of my great uncle Norman Albert Clayden who died at the age of 19 on 27 April 2015 at Gallipoli. I had seen his name on the war memorial in Perth and Canberra, but somehow seeing it on this local memorial made it seem more real. He was in the 11th Battalion. I have blogged about him before. He has an unmarked grave at Gallipoli. 

A couple of weeks ago I found a discrepency in the date of his death. It was not the 2 May as reported in the official records, but it was actually 27 April only two days after the Allied landing at Gallipoli. Such a terrible waste of young life. I actually have some more research to do after going to a historical writer's talk the other day. He said the descrepency could have come about between the date of his death, and the date it was reported to the command post. 


When you travel around, I hope you take the time to visit our war memorials, and learn something about our history and the men and women who gave their lives.

My article, Remote Sunrise Reminders was published in April 2023 edition of On The Road magazine. 



You might also be interested in:
Anzac Day Field of Lights - Albany 2019

More information:

Monument Australia: www.monumentaustralia.org.au     

Smith Sculptors: www.smithsculptors.com.au

Things to See and Do in Onslow: www.onslowbeachresort.com.au/in-onslow/

Artforms: www.artforms.com.au

Kondinin Tourism: www.kondinin.wa.gov.au/tourism/attractions/visiting-kondinin  

80 Mile Beach Caravan Park: www.summerstar.com.au/caravan-parks/eighty-mile-beach

The Battle of Long Tan: www.battleoflongtan.com

Thank you so much for stopping by. I value your comments and look forward to hearing from you. I will try to visit your blogs in return. Have a wonderful week. 
I am linking up to the link-ups below. Please click on the links to see fabulous contributions from around the world - virtual touring at its best!

Monday, 25 April 2022

ANZAC Day Dawn Service - 25 April 2022


It is three years since we were able to attend an ANZAC Day Dawn Service due to Covid restrictions. But today we were able to attend again at the war memorial in Bunbury with many others to commemorate and remember those who lost their lives or came home broken defending our freedom. It is a solemn and reflective occasion as we stand with heads bowed during the minute silence, the reading of the Ode, and the sounding of the last post on the bugle. 

It was not lost on us this morning the significance of the Ukrainian and Polish flags also flying at half mast at the memorial in remembrance of the deadly destructive war raging in the Ukraine today.  


As we drove home we stopped to view the magnificent blood red sunrise over Koombana Bay. It seemed a fitting reminder of the blood still being spilt in conflicts around the world. Will humanity never learn from the past?


A few facts about ANZAC Day. 

"ANZAC" is an acronym for Australia and New Zealand Army Corps. -  the name given to a combined force of First Australian Imperial Force and New Zealand Army troops who rowed ashore on Turkey’s Gallipoli Peninsula at around dawn on Sunday, the 25th day of April, 1915, barely nine months after the outbreak of World War I. 

ANZAC Day marks the anniversary of the Gallipoli Campaign of WWI- the first major military action fought by Australian and New Zealand forces during WWI.

Each year on the 25th of April we reflect on all Defence Force personnel, past and present, and the sacrifices they’ve made. ANZAC Day is one of Australia’s most important national occasions.

Not only at the grand momuments, but in the little towns too, throughout Australia, people gather to remember and pay respect.


Traditionally, rosemary is worn on ANZAC Day. Rosemary is found growing wild on the Gallipoli peninsula.

The Australian War Museum in Australi's national capital, Canberra, is one of our most important memorials, achives and museums. The names of those killed in action in the first and second world wars are written on the remembrance walls.

Here we laid poppies for my Great-Uncle Norman Clayden who died at Gallipoli on 27th April, 1915 (aged 19 - no known grave), and my husband's uncle Richard Ramsden who died in a prisoner of war camp in Myanmar (Burma) on 29th October 1943 in World War 2.  (aged 23 - buried at Thanbyuzayat War Cemetery, Mynanma).



The RED Poppy symbolises peace, death and sleep of the fallen servicemen and women. While the PURPLE Poppy represents remembrance of the animal victims of war. The ORANGE Poppy represents the acknowledgement of the Service families, and also acknowledges the families’ loss due to veteran suicide. The WHITE Poppy worn between 1918 - 1939 symbolises the wearers’ commitment to peace.

'Lest We Forget' is an expression of remembrance

The 'Ode' comes from the poem "For the Fallen", written by Laurence Binyon. The verse, which is commonly known as 'The Ode Of Remembrance', is as follows:

"They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old;
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them."
Lest We Forget


The first ever recorded Dawn Service in Western Australia was conducted by Anglican Chaplain Padre White (44th Battalion AIF) on 25 April 1923 in Albany, and has been held ever since with several thousand-people participating each year.

For many Australian's Albany was the last sighting they had of Australian soil before sailling to Egypt.  Below is the war memorial on Mt Clarence in Albany.  You can read more here: Albany Field of Lights for ANZACs


On the way to the Dawn Service this morning, we heard the haunting sounds of the didgeridoo on the radio from Canberra. The sound always stirs something deep inside. For the first time,
Ngarla Maumaharathe Indigenous ANZAC Day Service was held in Perth.

I have just now picked up off my shelf a small poetry book which was my mother's entitled "The Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels" collected by Sapper Bert Beros and dedicated to Australian soldiers and the peoples of New Guinea, the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels, who gave invaluable help to the Allies during WW2. I opened the book randomly and this poem was on the page - here is an exerpt -

The Coloured Digger - written at Donadabu rest camp, dedicated to Private West

He came and joined the colours when the War God's anvil rang,
He took up modern weapons to replace his boomerang,
He waited for no call-up, he didn't need a push,
He came in from the stations and the townships of the bush.
......
He proved he's still a warrior, in action not afraid,
He faced the blasing red-hot fire from mortar and grenade;
He didn't mind when food was low, and we were getting thin,
He didn't growl or worry then, he'd cheer us with his grin.
......
You might like this You Tube video


This afternoon we went for a drive around to some of the war memorials in our local area - Burekup, Dardanup, Boyanup, Capel, Bunbury and Rathmines (also in Bunbury). It was a lovely afternoon and we saw some memorials which we had never seen before, or had seen but never stopped at. Thankyou to Capelberry Cafe in Capel for serving us coffees and delicious Anzac biscuits sandwiched with chocolate ganache, even though they were about to close up for the day.

A few of my previous posts about ANZAC Day here:


Thank you so much for stopping by this ANZAC Day. I value your comments and look forward to hearing from you. I will try to visit your blogs in return. Have a wonderful week. 
I am linking up to the link-ups below. Please click on the links to see fabulous contributions from around the world - virtual touring at its best!
   
MosaicMonday at Letting Go of the Bay Leaf
Sharon's Sovenirs 
Our World Tuesday
Pictorial Tuesday 
ThroughMy Lens 
Image-in-ing
My corner of the world through my camera 
Wednesday Around the World at Communal Global hosted by Randomosity. 
       and Little bird - Pienilintu
Thankful Thursday 
Welcome to Nature Thursday

Hello there! I love reading your comments. If you scroll down to the bottom you can comment too! I would love to hear from you.