COLLINS, Henry George
Service Number: | 564 |
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Enlisted: | Not yet discovered |
Last Rank: | Sergeant |
Last Unit: | 6th Light Horse Regiment |
Born: | Not yet discovered |
Home Town: | Not yet discovered |
Schooling: | Not yet discovered |
Occupation: | Not yet discovered |
Memorials: | Albury St. Matthew's Anglican Church War Memorial |
World War 1 Service
21 Dec 1914: | Involvement Private, 564, 6th Light Horse Regiment, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '2' embarkation_place: Sydney embarkation_ship: HMAT Suevic embarkation_ship_number: A29 public_note: '' | |
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21 Dec 1914: | Embarked Private, 564, 6th Light Horse Regiment, HMAT Suevic, Sydney | |
10 May 1917: | Involvement Sergeant, 564, 6th Light Horse Regiment, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '2' embarkation_place: Melbourne embarkation_ship: HMAT Boorara embarkation_ship_number: A42 public_note: '' | |
10 May 1917: | Embarked Sergeant, 564, 6th Light Horse Regiment, HMAT Boorara, Melbourne |
Henry Collins
Henry George Collins was born in 1893 at Kensington, which is an inner suburb of Melbourne. At the time of his birth his father, Henry Hailey Collins (1862 to 1946) was 30 years old and his mother, Eleanor Jane, nee Murray (1861 to 1935), was 32 years old. Henry had 2 younger brothers one named Frederick James who was born in 1895 and died in 1918 and a younger brother, Arthur Collins, who was born in 1900 and died in 1978. Henry also had four older sisters; France Eleanor Janet (1884 to 1951), Elizabeth Rose (1885 to 1886), Ruby Constance Harriet (1887 to 1971) and Ivy Murray May (1890 to 1972). Henry also had another sister, but sadly we don’t have any records on her.
On the 29 November, 1914, Henry enlisted in the AIF (Australian Imperial Forces) at Holsworthy, New South Wales. He was given the service number 564 and was put on strength with the 26th Reinforcements for the 6th Light Horse.
Upon enlistment, Henry was a single, 21-year-old wool classer living in Albury. He stood 175 centimetres tall and weighed 63 kilograms. His complexion was given as fair, eyes blue and hair fair. Henry’s records show that he had the distinctive marks of a scar on his left wrist and three vaccination marks on his left arm. Henry’s religious denomination was given as Church of England.
Henry embarked on 21 December, 1914, on the HMAT A29 Suevic, sailing from Sydney, New South Wales. The trip would take him across the Great Australian Bight to Fremantle and on to Colombo, in Ceylon. On 22 January, 1915, the convoy arrived at Aden where it took on coal and water. The 28 January found the convoy entering the Suez Canal, a journey which would take about two to three days before finally arriving at Port Said. The 6th Light Horse disembarked at Alexandria arriving at their camp at Maadi on the 3 February. Throughout February Henry, along with his mates, would undergo a series of training exercises in all aspects of military life.
On the 1 March, the Regiment received orders to be ready to embark at short notice. This proved to be a ‘furphy’ as it wasn’t until the 16 May, 1915, that the Regiment left the camp at Maadi and embarked on HMAT Lutzow at Alexandria, bound for the Dardanelles. The ship anchored off ANZAC Cove at 9 pm on the 19 May. The Regiment disembarked the following day at 3 pm under shrapnel and sniper fire. It was here that the Regiment suffered its first two casualties with two men being wounded. Initially, the Regiment was attached to the 1st Infantry Brigade and underwent its first change of command as its CO (Commanding Officer), Lieutenant Colonel Cox, was wounded by shrapnel fire and replaced by Major Fuller. Lieutenant Colonel Cox would rejoin the Regiment in early July. During its time on Gallipoli, the 6th Light Horse became responsible for a sector on the far right, or southern, section of the ANZAC line, and played a defensive role until it left the peninsula on 20 December. The image below shows the bivouac area of the 6th Light Horse while at Gallipoli. While Henry was on Gallipoli he was promoted to temporary Corporal on 19 November but would revert back to Trooper early in the New Year as NCO’s (Non-Commissioned Officer) returned to the Regiment after recovering from being ill or wounded.
After some time spent at Maadi, Henry, along with his unit, marched out to Serapeum. They would spend some time in the Hill 70 and Et Maler areas along the Canal Zone and it was during this time that Henry was first promoted to Corporal then Lance Sergeant and finally full Sergeant on the 1 July, 1916.
During the engagements in the Et Maler area, Henry was severely wounded with gunshot wounds to the left foot and hand. Henry would pass from the 2nd Light Horse Field Ambulance to the 26th Casualty Clearing Station at Kantara to No. 1 Australian Stationary Hospital as Ismailia and finally the 3rd Australian Hospital at Cairo. Henry’s wounds were sufficiently severe for him to be returned to Australia for a period of three months and struck off strength. HMAT A11 Ascanius would take Henry back home, with him disembarking at Sydney on the 2 October, 1916.
On the 20 June, 1917, Henry stepped off HMAT A42 Boorara at Suez, once again joining the fight against the Turks and Germans. After being stationed at the Isolation Camp at Moascar for two days he was initially taken on strength with the 2nd Light Horse Regiment before being transferred to his old unit, the 6th Light Horse, on the 1 August. In early November he was admitted to the 12th Light Horse Field Ambulance suffering from diarrhoea. This complaint would keep him in hospital until the 29 November.
1918 would see Henry with the 6th Light Horse Regiment, other than a small period of time in hospital with gastro complaints. In early January he was promoted to RQMS (Regimental Quartermaster Sergeant) although he would revert back to SQMS (Squadron Quartermaster Sergeant) on the 15 July, 1918. As a QMS, Henry would be responsible for supplies and stores for either the Regiment (RQMS) or Squadron (SQMS).
On the 9 July, 1919, Henry was provided with leave to the United Kingdom for a period of approximately two months. As part of the Repatriation Scheme of the AIF, Henry was provided with non-military employment in the UK. He worked for Francis Willey Wool Merchants of Bradford as a wool classer. His personal report for this position states that he was given two months practical training in the Warehouse and that the methods he was taught were of the very latest and that the knowledge he gained would prove most beneficial for him once he was discharged from the AIF.
On the 22 November, 1919, Henry embarked on the HMAT A60 Aeneas at Suez, returning to Australia some weeks later. He was finally discharged from the AIF on the 19 February, 1920. For his service during the war, he was awarded the 1914/15 Star, the British War Medal and the Victory Medal.
Records indicate that Henry married Jean Mavis Enever in 1941 in Albury, New South Wales. Jean was born in 1910 and died in 1995. They had no known children.
From 1900 to 1951 Henry lived in a small house in Albury, NSW. He continued to live in Albury with his wife, Jean. Between 1951 to 1979 they lived in Pambula, NSW. Henry passed away in 1979, at the age of 86.
Extract from "Light Horsemen of the Upper Murray", Year 5 and 6 Project, Corryong College.
Submitted 20 April 2019 by Stephen Learmonth