Pelham Steane JACKSON

JACKSON, Pelham Steane

Service Number: 164
Enlisted: 16 January 1915, Winton, Queensland
Last Rank: Trooper
Last Unit: 11th Light Horse Regiment
Born: Grace Park, Hawthorn, Victoria, 26 November 1889
Home Town: Deniliquin, Deniliquin, New South Wales
Schooling: Scotch College, Melbourne
Occupation: Clerk
Died: Gun shot wounds to thigh & fractures, Gaza, Palestine, 19 April 1917, aged 27 years
Cemetery: No known grave - "Known Unto God"
Initially buried El Mendur Right hand corner of the buildings End of Bluff
Memorials: Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, Jerusalem Memorial, McKinlay War Memorial, Wanganella & District War Memorial
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World War 1 Service

16 Jan 1915: Enlisted AIF WW1, Private, 164, 11th Light Horse Regiment, Winton, Queensland
2 Jun 1915: Involvement Private, 164, 11th Light Horse Regiment, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '3' embarkation_place: Brisbane embarkation_ship: HMAT Medic embarkation_ship_number: A7 public_note: ''
2 Jun 1915: Embarked Private, 164, 11th Light Horse Regiment, HMAT Medic, Brisbane
29 Aug 1915: Transferred AIF WW1, Private, 2nd Light Horse Regiment
22 Feb 1916: Transferred AIF WW1, Lance Corporal, 11th Light Horse Regiment
22 Feb 1916: Promoted AIF WW1, Lance Corporal, 11th Light Horse Regiment
15 Mar 1916: Involvement AIF WW1, Trooper, 164, 11th Light Horse Regiment, Reverts from Lane Corporal back to Private/Trooper
7 Aug 1916: Wounded AIF WW1, Trooper, 164, 11th Light Horse Regiment
19 Apr 1917: Involvement Trooper, 164, 11th Light Horse Regiment, --- :awm_ww1_roll_of_honour_import: awm_service_number: 164 awm_unit: 11 Light Horse Regiment awm_rank: Trooper awm_died_date: 1917-04-19

Story about Pelham from Scotch College archives

Pelham Steane JACKSON

https://www.scotch.vic.edu.au/ww1/first/jacksonPS.ht


Pelham Jackson was born on 26 November 1889 in Hawthorn, Victoria. His parents were John and Elizabeth Lockey (née Steane) Jackson. He attended Scotch from 1902 to 1904. He was in Cadets.

Pelham had been a storekeeper and a bookkeeper before he enlisted on 16 January 1915 at Winton, Queensland. He served in the 2nd Light Horse Regiment and 11th Light Horse Regiment with the rank of Trooper. His Regimental Number was 164.

Pelham died on 19 April 1917 at Gaza, Palestine. He was 27 years of age.
Pelham was allotted to the newly formed 11th Light Horse Regiment soon after enlistment. He sailed from Brisbane for the Middle East on 2 June 1915. Pelham left Alexandria for Gallipoli on 25 August 1915 and on arriving, transferred to the 2nd Light Horse Regiment on 29 August. He stayed with that unit until the end of the campaign. The Scotch Collegian reported in late 1915 that in a letter from the Gallipoli trenches he had written that he had come across ‘a good many old Scotch boys’ in various units. In February 1916, in Egypt, he transferred back to the 11th LH Regiment, where he was made a Lance Corporal. However, in March he reverted to Trooper.

On 7 August 1916 he was wounded in action, at El Ferdan, but remained on duty. On 19 April he was wounded again, this time with shellfire. His injury was officially described as ‘gunshot wound to the thigh and fractures.’ He was transferred to the 3rd Light Horse Field Ambulance and then the 6th Mounted Brigade Field Ambulance, where he died that day.

His Red Cross Wounded and Missing file contains several eyewitness accounts of his last hours. Robert Jones said he saw ‘Jackson get caught by a shell through the thigh and arm.’ The account continued that Jackson ‘was so badly injured it was rather hard to recognise him’ but Jones knew it was him. Jones and another soldier, Leslie Mackrell, carried Jackson about a mile towards a dressing station, where they put him on a limber (gun carriage), on which he was taken to a clearing station. Mackrell said ‘Myself with two other men carried our unfortunate comrade who was seriously wounded’. He said they put Jackson on a cart and that Mackrell took him back two miles to a dressing station. Another eyewitness remembered someone using a rifle as a splint on Jackson’s shattered leg. All eyewitnesses agree that Jackson died later that day, probably at night. His body was buried, but its location was lost.

Pelham Jackson has no known grave, but is commemorated at the Jerusalem Memorial, Israel.
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Biography contributed by Sharyn Roberts

Pelham Steane JACKSON was born on 26th November, 1889 at "Brezeel" Grace Park, Hawthorn

His parents were John JACKSON and Elizabeth Lockey STEANE who married in 1885 in Victoria - they had 6 known children

Pelham was living in Deniliquin & then enlisted in Winton, Queensland on 16th January, 1915 - he embarked with the 11th Light Horse Regiment on 2nd June, 1915 on HMAT Medic

He died of gun shot wounds to the thigh & fractures on 19th April, 1917 in Gaza, Palestine and was buried on 20th April, 1917 at El Mendur, right hand corner of the buildings, end of Bluff, but his grave has never been found

His name is memorialised on the Australian War Memorial & the Jerusalem War Cemetery Memorial to the missing.

He was awarded the 1914-15 Star, British War Medal & the Victory Medal.

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His brother Basil John JACKSON (SN5037) also served in WW1 and returned to Australia in 1917. 

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OBITUARY

JACKSON - Trooper Pelham Steane, 11th Light Horse Regiment, who fell in Gaza, Palestine on April 19, aged 27 years, dearly loved & loving son of Bessie and the late John Jackson

"Sleep on, beloved"  "God required the sacrifice of the very best"

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