PATTERSON, Alexander South
Service Number: | 2222 |
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Enlisted: | 10 May 1915 |
Last Rank: | Private |
Last Unit: | 15th Infantry Battalion |
Born: | Toowong, Queensland, Australia, December 1898 |
Home Town: | Toowong, Brisbane, Queensland |
Schooling: | Brisbane Boys Grammar School, Queensland, Australia |
Occupation: | Student |
Died: | Killed in Action, France , 27 August 1916 |
Cemetery: |
No known grave - "Known Unto God" |
Memorials: | Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, Brisbane Grammar School Memorial Library WW1 Honour Board 2, Villers-Bretonneux Memorial (Australian National Memorial - France) |
World War 1 Service
10 May 1915: | Enlisted AIF WW1, Private, 2222, 15th Infantry Battalion | |
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12 Jun 1915: | Involvement Private, 2222, 15th Infantry Battalion, Battle for Pozières , --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '11' embarkation_place: Brisbane embarkation_ship: HMAT Karoola embarkation_ship_number: A63 public_note: '' | |
12 Jun 1915: | Embarked Private, 2222, 15th Infantry Battalion, HMAT Karoola, Brisbane | |
19 Apr 1917: | Honoured Military Medal, Mouquet Farm, This soldier is recommended for meritorious conduct as a runner during operations south of MOUQUET FARM from August 6th to 11th 1916 |
James and Alexander Patterson
From Brothers-at-War [Alexander & James Patterson], State Library of Queensland
One such collection, is that of the Patterson brothers of Toowong. Five brothers enlisted between 1914 & 1918, including 18 year old twins, Alexander & James. When they enlisted in May 1915, they were assigned to the 15th Battalion.
They departed together on HMAT Karoola and their letters show that they served together on Gallipoli, sharing the same dugout.
"We are cramped like a lot of rabbits here all in dugouts. Alec & I have one to ourselves ... shells keep flying over us to the beach all day" - Jim to his mother, 4 August 1915.
Just days later Jim was wounded during a major offensive at Suvla Bay and evacuated for treatment first to Malta then to England. They met up again in Moascar Camp, Egypt and traveled to northern France via Marseilles in June 1916.
The Battalion was billeted at Bois Grenier. Alec wrote - "We are having a good time here in the billets, . . . we have not been asphyxiated yet, but there have been a few alarms". For two young brothers from Queensland, it appears to be a great adventure.
Alec's letter to his mother 23 July 1916, describes the historic city of Naours - "There is an underground city here dug under a large hill. It is hundreds of years old & the people used to hide in it whenever France was invaded."
The Battalion was involved in heavy fighting at Pozières on the Western Front; Jim was again wounded on 9th August and evacuated. Alec to his mother - "I lost him in the charge. I was hit on the thigh with a piece of shrapnel but it did not make a big wound."
Three weeks later on the 27th August, Alec was killed during the battle of Mouquet Farm.
Corporal Roy Proctor who was with Alec when he died, wrote to Jim from France "when we were going up to relieve ... a shell fell in & knocked us about & Alick was killed instantaneously ... you have reason to be proud of him, only a boy in years & yet such splendid service to his country ... think of him only as a little hero".
Alec Patterson acted as Company Runner and ran messages day and night to Battalion HQ, even under the heaviest of fire. He was awarded the Military Medal for 'conspicuous bravery' in November 1916.
The other brothers who served with the AIF were:
Private Gordon Stanley Patterson, 31st Battalion; Private Raymond Mitchell Patterson, 1st Machine Gun Battalion and Private Alan McKenzie Patterson, 9th Battalion.
There are many other stories of Brothers-at-War to be gleaned from collections being prepared for digitization and exhibition for the Centenary of WWI by the State Library Queensland.
If you would like to share your story we’d love to hear from you at [email protected].
Marg Powell | QANZAC 100 Content Technician
Submitted 28 March 2019 by Evan Evans