Thomas James (Rusty) RICHARDS MC

RICHARDS, Thomas James

Service Number: 25
Enlisted: 26 August 1914
Last Rank: Lieutenant
Last Unit: Army Ordnance Corps AIF
Born: Emmaville, New South Wales, Australia, 29 April 1882
Home Town: Caulfield, Glen Eira, Victoria
Schooling: Not yet discovered
Occupation: Armourer (Defence Dept) Australian WALLABY & British Lion Rugby Player; Travelling salesman
Died: Tuberculosis, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, 25 September 1935, aged 53 years
Cemetery: Manly General Cemetery, NSW
Buried beside his brother
Memorials:
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World War 1 Service

26 Aug 1914: Enlisted AIF WW1, Private, 25, 1st Field Ambulance
20 Oct 1914: Embarked AIF WW1, Private, 25, 1st Field Ambulance, HMAT Euripides, Sydney
20 Oct 1914: Involvement AIF WW1, Private, 25, 1st Field Ambulance, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '22' embarkation_place: Sydney embarkation_ship: HMAT Euripides embarkation_ship_number: A14 public_note: ''
13 Jul 1915: Involvement Private, 1st Field Ambulance, Divisional Orders No 161: Special mention for gallantry and valuable service May-June 1915
24 Apr 1916: Promoted AIF WW1, Lance Corporal, 1st Field Ambulance
5 Aug 1916: Promoted AIF WW1, Corporal, 1st Field Ambulance
1 Dec 1916: Promoted AIF WW1, Second Lieutenant, 1st Infantry Battalion
1 Dec 1916: Transferred AIF WW1, Corporal, 1st Infantry Battalion
15 May 1917: Wounded AIF WW1, Second Lieutenant, 1st Infantry Battalion, GSW to back and shoulder due to accidental bomb explosion at 1st Div bombing school - Court of enquiry - no blame to Tom Richards
23 Jun 1917: Promoted AIF WW1, Lieutenant, 1st Infantry Battalion
17 Sep 1917: Wounded AIF WW1, Lieutenant, 1st Infantry Battalion, Third Ypres, SW right arm
20 Dec 1917: Honoured Military Cross, Bullecourt (Second), In May 1917, during the Battle of Arras near Bullecourt, he led a nineteen-man bombing party.
5 Jan 1918: Embarked AIF WW1, 25, Army Ordnance Corps AIF, HMAT Borda, Adelaide
5 Jan 1918: Involvement AIF WW1, 25, Army Ordnance Corps AIF, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '1' embarkation_place: Adelaide embarkation_ship: HMAT Borda embarkation_ship_number: A30 public_note: ''
3 Nov 1919: Discharged AIF WW1, Lieutenant, Army Ordnance Corps AIF, 2nd MD
Date unknown: Honoured Military Cross

Help us honour Thomas James Richards's service by contributing information, stories, and images so that they can be preserved for future generations.

Biography contributed by Evan Evans

Edited from Wikipedia - Legacy and accolades 

The Rugby Tom Richards Cup is the trophy that is played for between the British & Irish Lions and Australia. In 2005 he was honoured as one of the inaugural five inductees into the Australian Rugby Union Hall of Fame.

Upon his induction Australian Rugby Union President Paul McLean commented: " the late Tom Richards was an extraordinary character whom The Times described in 1908 as the first man to be picked for Earth if we were ever to play Mars!"

(from Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Richards_(rugby_union)
 
 

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Biography

Known as  Tom 'Rusty' Richards.

Australian rugby union legend, he was among the thousands of men who set sail from Albany on Western Australia's south in November 1914 to fight in WWI.

Described in a biography as "big, fast, versatile and opportunistic, with a natural brain for rugby" the handsome, six-foot player joined the army within a month of war being declared.

He joined so eagerly his service number was 25.

"The war news on the 9th August 1914 prevented me doing any business at all, so I went and enlisted for the front. The authorities seemed so slow that I went down to Sydney by 'Wollowaka', arriving after a rough, seasick passage. I set about volunteering for the Light Horse but after waiting four days found they were full up - so Fritz Schwarz and I signed on with the Army Medical Corps and went into camp in Queen's Park."

Private Richards had had a stellar career playing rugby for both the Wallabies and the British Lions and travelled the world playing the game before joining the 1st Field Ambulance.

For two months Richards trained in Sydney before he and his colleagues boarded the HMAT A14 Euripides to make his way to Albany for departure with the rest of the fleet.

He was a prolific diary writer, penning about 1,000 words every day. 

Writer Greg Growden presents some of the diary entries in his book about the rugby legend, Wallaby Warrior, giving us an insight into what that first convoy might have been like.

For example, the passage Richards wrote as he left Australia for the war was incredibly prophetic.

It was a mighty solemn procession. Thirty-five transports and a convoy all running in single file, and not a murmur, not a gunshot or whistle. No, not even a bugle call. (November 1, 1914)

The whole business seems almost unbelievable.  Thirty-five ships laden with men and weapons, some 30,000 in number, including some of the country's very best men and most valuable assets. (November 1, 1914)

There is something wrong with the world.  This is how we sailed out from Albany, in mournful procession, for a destination unknown, and enshrouded in mystery, making a course westerly. Church service was held at 11.30 when the Chaplain tried to justify the Allies' position and asked God for protection and deliverance. The irony of it all! What hypocrisy! Surely this great God, if he had the power to influence victory in any particular way, would also have the power to prevent it at the very first and before lives were sacrificed. (November 1, 1914)

He wrote frankly about life onboard the Euripides and described how the men were up early, their hammocks taken down and "odds and ends" tidied away by 6am.  The men were not allowed back below decks until 6pm and the lights were out at 9pm. The men paraded every morning and afternoon on the small deck, marching double time and running in single file circles for exercise.

Once the ships left King George Sound, Albany, it took the Euripides a month to reach Egypt, where it set anchor at Port Said.

Richards is known to have organised rugby matches among soldiers on the desert sands and stayed in Egypt for four months.

At 8pm last night I got order to be under way by 6am. Riding in Alexandria by motor 130 miles in four hours or a little less is very good going right enough, but there are no turns, curves or gradient along the track. Our boat the 'City of Benares' carries 600 men and some 300 horses, so we are in for a dirty, foul-smelling trip if they don't soon land us somewhere.  (April 3, 1915)

His next stop was Gallipoli on April 25, 1915.

"Tomorrow is the all-eventful day. We have our bully beef and biscuits with a full water bottle for two days or more. There is no water on the Gallipoli landing place at all. At 3.30am the first landing parties comprising battalions of the 1st Brigade will face the music, which will probably be poured out to them from the trenches only a few hundred yards from the open beach... At 8am the Engineers and the 1st Field Ambulance go ashore in small barges and rowing boats. Of course, our landing will be free from rifle fire but there are two huge forts 800ft high and back 2 1/2 miles with a clear range on to the landing place. The fleet which includes the 'Queen Elizabeth', 'London' and 'Prince of Wales' may hold these forts up and keep them busy. Let's hope!" (April 24, 1915)

"No bugle call to wake us this morning, but most of us were astir before the sun rose - a brilliant and pleasing red glow. It was just the same as sunset last night - a stage setting with the flashes and booming of the cannon to enliven matters."

"From just before daylight as we approached Gallipoli, there was a wholesale roaring and spitting of big guns, our warships being particularly aggressive. The roar of guns did not bother me much but as we were landing on the torpedo boat 'Scourge' at 8.30am a shell came just over No 13 transport and stirred up the water to a height of 60 feet, within 150 yards of us. This brought home to me the grim reality of war, but to my surprise I wasn't troubled and took seven photos before landing over our knees in water from the rowing boats into which we were transferred from the 'Scourge'. As we were landing, a shrapnel shell burst 150 yards away and threw a shower of bullets into the water - rather a pretty display. Twenty minutes on, with stretcher at the ready, we were climbing the steep, rough hills looking for wounded."  (April 25, 1915)

He had been promoted to Lieutenant in June 1917 and awarded the Military Cross after leading a bombing party near Bullecourt, in France.

Following injuries to his back and shoulders from bomb blasts, he eventually returned to Australia in 1919 where he continued with his passion for rugby, coaching a local side. He also wrote articles for The Sydney Mail.

In 1922 he married Lillian and had two children, but his long absences from home as a travelling salesman led to the breakdown of his marriage.

He was described as morose, serious and standoffish after his experiences in war and illness took over his life.

"I have no requests or regrets, and have well fortified myself so that I can still smile and play the whistle."
Tom 'Rusty' Richards

His back gave him ongoing problems and tests revealed he had tuberculosis, and had been affected by mustard gas.

"The gas I swallowed during the war is beating me down steadily," he wrote. 
He also contracted malaria while on a trip to New Guinea for the Sydney Mail.

He was given six months to live and doubled over and gasping for air, he begged his estranged wife Lillian to care for him in his final days.

The family moved to the Blue Mountains and later Queensland in the hope the locations would help him heal.

Even to his final day he wrote down his daily musings and feelings.

"Don't be sorry or sympathetic," he wrote.
"I have no requests or regrets and have well fortified myself so that I can still smile and play the whistle."

Tom died on 25/9/1935 surrounded by his family.

The British and Irish Lions rugby team now competes for the Tom Richards Cup every 12 years.

 

Sourced by Julianne T Ryan, with details from Rachel Pupazzoni (ABC).  19/2/2015.  Lest we forget.

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