John Charles BOWDEN

BOWDEN, John Charles

Service Number: 1929
Enlisted: 24 September 1915
Last Rank: Second Lieutenant
Last Unit: 59th Infantry Battalion
Born: South Yarra, Victoria, Australia, November 1880
Home Town: South Melbourne, Port Phillip, Victoria
Schooling: St Paul's Cathedral Choir School, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Occupation: Bank Manager
Died: Killed In Action, France, 19 July 1916
Cemetery: No known grave - "Known Unto God"
Memorials: Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, Kyabram & District R.S.S. & A.I.L.A. Honour Roll, Kyabram St. Andrew's Church of England Great European War Roll of Honour , V.C. Corner Australian Cemetery Memorial
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World War 1 Service

24 Sep 1915: Enlisted AIF WW1, Private, 1929, Depot Battalion
3 Jan 1916: Embarked AIF WW1, Private, 1929, 31st Infantry Battalion, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '16' embarkation_place: Brisbane embarkation_ship: HMAT Kyarra embarkation_ship_number: A55 public_note: ''
6 Mar 1916: Transferred AIF WW1, Sergeant, 59th Infantry Battalion
21 Mar 1916: Promoted AIF WW1, Second Lieutenant, 59th Infantry Battalion
19 Jul 1916: Involvement AIF WW1, Second Lieutenant, 59th Infantry Battalion, Fromelles (Fleurbaix), --- :awm_ww1_roll_of_honour_import: awm_service_number: awm_unit: 59th Australian Infantry Battalion awm_rank: Second Lieutenant awm_died_date: 1916-07-19

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Biography contributed by Chris Buckley

John, born in 1880 in South Yarra, Victoria was the second of three children of William Henry Boweden )born 1838 in Somerset in England) and Ellen O'Shaunessy (born 1847 in Limerick, Ireland). William and Ellen married 1876 in Emerald Hill in Victoria, and Ellen died in 1883 when John was three years of age.

John commenced work as a Bank Clerk in Melbourne, Victoria and married Jessie Dudley Johnson (born 1870 in Alexandra, Victoria) in 1912 in Melbourne, Victoria. John was a Bank Manager when he enlisted in Bendigo, Victoria in the AIF. John  served as a Private (Service No: 1929) initially at 23rd Depot Battalion Royal Park and 19th Depot Battalion Geelong before being transferred on 28 December 1915 to 31st Battalion 2nd Reinforcements. Jonh served briefly with the 46th Battalion in 1916 and was tranferred to 59 Battalion and promoted to 2nd Lieutenant. Initial reports of John's death indicated that he was MIA, then died of wounds in a German PoW Camp. John's death was finally confirmed - he died of GSW near Pheasnat's Wood at Fleurbaix, Fromelles in France on 19 July 1916.

According to eye witness accounts ' ... on 19th of July at Fleurbaix he and Mr Bowden went out of the trench together and Mr Bowden held up the barbed wire for him to get under - they went on together ..... when Mr Bowden fell and informant thinks he was shot dead, he saw him drop...' (Pte John Wood)

'Informant says he saw 2nd Lieutenant J C Bowden badly wounded and feels pretty certain he died about 100 yards from German trenches on 19th July ... he'd heard him groaning and the Germans kept sniping at him'. (I A O'Neill)

 

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Biography contributed by Steve Larkins

The following is an extract of John Bowdens Service Record and Red Cross investigations into the dead and missing men of the AIF.

Parents: William H and Ellen BOWDEN. Native of South Yarra, Victoria
Other details
War service: Egypt, Western Front

Disembarked Suez, 31 January 1916.

Allotted to and proceeded to join 46th Bn, 6 March 1916.

Transferred to 59th Bn, 16 March 1916.

Appointed Acting Sergeant, 16 March 1916.

Appointed 2nd Lieutenant, 21 March 1916.

Embarked Alexandria to join the British Expeditionary Force, 18 June 1916; disembarked Marseilles, France, 29 June 1916.

Reported missing in action, 19 July 1916.

War Office List 180A: 'DIED, whilst Prisoner of War in Germany (Effects forthcoming).' LATER PROVEN TO BE INCORRECT

War Office List No X/32249: 'LIST OF DEAD Pay Book transmitted to Foreign Office 27-9-16 by Comm. International de la Croix Rouge, Geneva through His Majesty's Minister at Berne.'

AAG, 3rd Echelon: 'To be reported as "KILLED IN ACTION".'

Red Cross File No 471002 has statement from 2020 Pte J. CHURCH, 4 August 1916: 'There is a creek just off the end of a sap running out from our lines into No man's land (sic) where we went across on July 19th at Fleurbaix. I saw Lt. Bowden lying by this creek as I went over in the charge. I was about this spot for some time lying down waiting for the advance. I saw him crawl from the creek to our front line trenches and from there out into the bushes again on No Man's Land. When last I saw him his left leg was covered in blood and his left arm was strapped to his side by some of his equipment. He looked awfully bad. I did not see or hear anything more about him. He must have crawled into the bushes and died there.'

Second statement, 3093 Pte J.A. O'NEILL, 59th Bn, 12 August [?] 1916: 'Informant says he saw 2nd Lt. J.C. Bowden badly wounded and feels pretty certain he died about 100 yards from German trenches 19 July. Lieut Bowden was just a little in front to the left of informant when he fell.'

Third statement, 3008 Pte E. BLACKMORE, 59th Bn (patient, The County Hospital, York, England), 16 September 1916: '... I saw Lieut. J.C. Bowden hit and fall ... I asked about an officer and they told me that Lieutenants Carr, Morrow and Bowden were killed; this was at 6.30 at night.'

Letter, Prisoners Care Department, Central Committe of the German Red Cross Societies, Belin, to International Red Cross Society, Geneva, 21 January 1918: 'After the battle near Fromelles on the 19.7.16 the Identity Discs were removed from all the fallen men and sent in. The name of Bowden is not reported in the lists of graves. It may be assumed that possibly Lieutenant Bowden was buried in one of the five large British Collective Graves before the Fasanen Waldchen (Pheasants Wood) near Fromelles, or in the Collective Grave (No. 1 M 4.3) in the Military Cemetery at Fournes.'

Letter, AIF Administrative Headquarters, London, to Base Records, Melbourne, 14 July 1919: 'Lieutenant Bowden was reported Killed in Action 19.7.16. The report which was received from the Prisoner of War Care Department, Berlin, states that Lieutenant Bowden was killed near Fromelles. His pay book and identity disc were recovered, but the exact location of the grave is not known. It is thought however, that Lieutenant Bowden was buried in one of the five large collective British graves near Pheasants (sic) Wood near Fromelles, or in the collective grave in the Military Cemetery at Fournes. No further information has yet been received.'

Letter, Australian Graves Services, to Base Records, 20 April 1920: 'Information has come to hand that the above named Officer's grave has been located in the German Cemetery, Fournes. Will you please register it and advise the next of kin accordingly.' Handwritten note in red ink on letter: 'Incorrect see file'.

Letter, Official Secretary, Australia House, London, to Base Records, Melbourne, 5 April 1922: ' ... as a result of an exhumation carried out by the D.G.R.& E. it has been ascertained that the grave formerly registered as that of the above named Officer does not contain his remains. He was originally reported buried in a collective grave in Fournes German Cemetery, and as it was desired to ascertain the identities of the other remains buried in the same grave the above mentioned exhumation was undertaken in the presence of an Australian representative, who was satisfied that none of the bodies was that of an Australian Officer or soldier. Extensive investigations have been made since the exhumation took place but all to no purpose, therefore the Imperial War Graves Commission have intimated that it is their intention to mark Lieut. Bowden's records "No trace on research". This office has done likewise.'

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