Roy HARRISON

HARRISON, Roy

Service Numbers: Not yet discovered
Enlisted: Not yet discovered
Last Rank: Major
Last Unit: 54th Infantry Battalion
Born: Not yet discovered
Home Town: Not yet discovered
Schooling: Not yet discovered
Occupation: Not yet discovered
Died: Killed In Action, France, 20 July 1916, age not yet discovered
Cemetery: Rue-Petillon Military Cemetery, Fleurbaix, Bethune, Nord Pas de Calais
Memorials: Sydney Reserve Bank of Australia (Commonwealth Bank) Honor Roll WW1
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World War 1 Service

18 Oct 1914: Involvement 2nd Infantry Battalion, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '7' embarkation_place: Sydney embarkation_ship: HMAT Suffolk embarkation_ship_number: A23 public_note: ''
18 Oct 1914: Embarked 2nd Infantry Battalion, HMAT Suffolk, Sydney
20 Jul 1916: Involvement Major, 54th Infantry Battalion, --- :awm_ww1_roll_of_honour_import: awm_service_number: awm_unit: 54th Australian Infantry Battalion awm_rank: Major awm_died_date: 1916-07-20

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Biography contributed by Virtual Australia

Born in Yass in 1889 and educated at the Goulburn district school, Roy Harrison was employed at the Commonwealth Bank’s Head Office in Sydney. Although he had been at the Bank for only six months when he enlisted, he was described on his Bank staff card as a ‘first-class man, particularly reliable and competent in his role as an examiner with the Savings Bank Department’. He dropped rank to Second Lieutenant to join the 2nd Australian Infantry Battalion, having risen to the rank of Lieutenant in his previous military service with the Scottish Rifle and Woollahra Infantry Regiments from 1908 to 1914.

On 25 April 1915 he landed at Gallipoli and was the only original officer from the 2nd Battalion to stay for the whole of the campaign. Following the evacuation, he was promoted to Major. Roy wrote regularly to his fiancée, Emily Ellis, during the war and his last letter to her a few days before he, along with 5,532 other Australian soldiers were either killed, wounded or captured in a single night at Fromelles in France, was particularly poignant: ‘By the time this reaches you, the result will be known to you through the paper so failing any bad news, you may take it that all is well.’ Although previous correspondence to Emily from the heat of battle at Gallipoli did not have such a stoic tone, he appears to have an almost ethereal knowledge of what his fate in France would be, writing:

It is no use worrying as I am quite satisfied that what is to be, will be, and nothing can alter it for good or evil … The men don’t know yet what is before them, but some suspect that there is something in the wind. It is a most pitiful thing to see them all, going about, happy and ignorant of the fact, that a matter of hours will see many of them dead; but as the French say “Cest la guerre”.
Four days later, Roy was reported as missing. He was eventually listed as being killed in action, although his body was never found during the war. In 1921 the remains of an officer were discovered in a field in France and exhumed by the Imperial War Graves Commission. Within the pocket of the officer’s uniform was a small silver cigarette case bearing the inscription, To Lieut. Harrison from Jeff & Sum 16/9/1914.

https://museum.rba.gov.au/exhibitions/from-bank-to-battlefield/profiles/index.html#harrison-container (museum.rba.gov.au)

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