EVANS, John Barnes
Service Number: | 5332 |
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Enlisted: | Not yet discovered |
Last Rank: | Private |
Last Unit: | 20th Infantry Battalion |
Born: | Corryong, Victoria, Australia, date not yet discovered |
Home Town: | Arncliffe, Rockdale, New South Wales |
Schooling: | Not yet discovered |
Occupation: | Fitter |
Died: | Killed in Action, France, 15 April 1917, age not yet discovered |
Cemetery: |
No known grave - "Known Unto God" Villers-Bretonneux Memorial, Villers-Bretonneux, Picardie, France |
Memorials: | Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, Corryong State School No 1309 Honor Roll, Corryong War Memorial, Villers-Bretonneux Memorial (Australian National Memorial - France) |
World War 1 Service
22 Aug 1916: | Involvement Private, 5332, 20th Infantry Battalion, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '13' embarkation_place: Sydney embarkation_ship: HMAT Wiltshire embarkation_ship_number: A18 public_note: '' | |
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22 Aug 1916: | Embarked Private, 5332, 20th Infantry Battalion, HMAT Wiltshire, Sydney |
James Evans
James Evans is another student whose name appears on the Corryong Consolidated Roll of Honour and yet is not indicated as having died during the Great War. James’ service records clearly indicate that he died due to disease and of wounds obtained in battle at Norfolk Hospital in Norwich, England on the 23rd of August 1916.
James was a 22-year-old labourer and apprentice dairy farmer for E. Good of Kangaroo Valley in the Illawarra region of New South Wales when he decided to enlist in the 1st AIF (Australian Imperial Forces) on the 31st of August 1914. At the time of his enlistment in Sydney, James was described as being 5 foot 51/2 inches tall, weighing 133 lbs, with a dark complexion and dark brown eyes. He had indicated that his religious denomination was the Church of England. The examining medical officer who signed James’ medical examination certificate was Captain Jack Bean, the younger brother of Charles Bean, the Official Australian correspondent for the war and author of the official history of Australia in the First World War.
After training at Randwick near Sydney, James and the rest of the 3rd Battalion embarked on HMAT A14 Euripides on the 20th of October 1914. After a sea voyage that lasted over six weeks, the Euripides passed through the Suez Canal before docking at Alexandria in Egypt. The Battalion took little time to make its way to Mena Camp, the main AIF camp in Egypt. The training was a regime of route marches, battle tactics and physical fitness that took place during the relative coolness of the mornings and evenings. For recreation, the soldiers of the 1st AIF spent time visiting historical venues such as the Pyramids as well as the bars and cafes in Cairo. On the 5th of April James was admitted to the 15th General Hospital in Abbassia suffering from gonorrhoea. By the end of the war, over 60000 Australian soldiers had been treated for venereal diseases.
After almost a week in a hospital, James found himself discharged to duty and finally, on the 7th of May, taken on strength with the 3rd Battalion at Anzac Cove. During the August Offensive James was fighting at Lone Pine when on the 17th of August he was wounded by a gunshot wound to the chest. Two days later he was admitted to the 1st Casualty Clearing Station with pyrexia, an abnormal rise in body temperature and fever. That day he was embarked onto the HT Calendonia and shipped off to England. After two weeks on the hospital ship, James was admitted to the City of London Military Hospital in Clapton, UK. After three months in the hospital recuperating from wounds and fever James was aboard the HT Oriane heading back to Egypt and rejoining the 3rd Battalion following the withdraw of Anzac forces from Gallipoli.
February 1916 was not a good month for James as his service records show a series of misdemeanours, which resulted in a number of penalties. On February the 12th he was forfeited 2 days pay and awarded 3 days field punishment No. 2 for breaking camp and remaining absent without leave from reveille on the 2/2/1916 to tattoo on the following day. Field Punishment Number 2 saw the convicted man being shackled in irons but not fixed to anything (as it was for Field Punishment No. 1) and was, therefore, able to move around. A week and a half later on the 26th of February, James received a further 7 days field punishment No. 2 for misconduct in the ranks and insubordination. This would not be the last time James encountered the military justice system.
On the 22nd of March 1916, the 3rd Battalion embarked on the HT Grampian to join the BEF (British Expeditionary Force) in France. It was a relatively short six days travel before disembarking at the French Mediterranean port of Marseille.
The 3rd Battalion was taken to the Petillon sector of France where James once again found himself at a loss with military protocol. He was forfeited one day pay for being absent from his billet at 1900 hours on the 1st of April, while 22 days later he was awarded 7 days field punishment No. 2 for once again being absent from roll call.
In June of that year, the 3rd Battalion was posted to the Fleurbaix sector in France and during the fighting, James was once again wounded however this time with a gunshot wound to the left leg. Two days later, on the 30th of June, he was admitted to No. 2 Canadian Stationary Hospital in Boulogne before embarking on the HS St. Denis on the 2nd of July 1916. Upon arrival in England on the same day he was transferred to the Norfolk War Hospital in Norwich UK. James never recovered from his wounds dying of heart failure due to disease (bronchial pneumonia) and wounds on the 23rd of August 1916. He was buried that same day in the Norwich Cemetery in section 24, grave number 109.
Submitted 29 September 2021 by Stephen Learmonth
Biography contributed by Stephen Learmonth
John Barnes Evans was born at Thougla Station in the Upper Murray on the 27th of September 1883. He was one of eight children of David and Phillipa Anne (née Eade) Evans. David's parents, Joseph and Alice, were amongst the earliest white settlers in the Upper Murray, arriving during the early 1850s.
In 1906, John married Audrey Valetta Grace Supple. A year after their marriage, their first child, Ivor John Horace, was born in Cudgewa on the 11th of August. The family then moved to the Campbelltown region in NSW. Here their next two children, David John in 1907 and Ellen Valetta in 1911, were born. It’s unclear where the family was living at the time of the birth of their third son, Victor Henry in 1915.
On the 7th of March 1916, John enlisted at Victoria Barracks in Sydney, being allocated the Regimental Number 5332. At the time the family lived in Connelly St in Penhurst, Sydney. John was 32 years old and gave his profession as a fitter. Although it doesn’t state whether he was an electrical or mechanical fitter, his position as a signaller in the Army suggests the former. John would have thought long and hard about his enlistment, especially with a young family. Perhaps he had decided that it was time to “do his bit”.
John and Audrey must have decided that whilst he was away, the family would go to live with John’s family at Berringama, in the Upper Murray, as this was noted as a change-of-address in his enlistment papers.
On the 23rd of March that year, John joined C Company of a training battalion at the Dubbo Showground in central NSW. John remained here for about one month, training in the basics of being a soldier and becoming used to Army routine. In mid April he was transferred to A Company of the 14th Reinforcements for the 20th Battalion. John was part of Number 21 Tent while in camp. In the photograph he is standing in the middle, back row. For the next six months he would undertake more training at the Liverpool Army Base just outside of Sydney.
Private John Evans, and the rest of the 14th Reinforcements, embarked on HMAT A18 Wiltshire at Sydney on the 22nd of August 1916. In a little under 2 months he disembarked at Plymouth, England, and marched into No. 3 Command Depot at Woolwich in the UK. Over the next three months John would between a number of training battalions, learning and practising the specific skills that he would need at the front in France.
On the 16th of January 1917 John proceeded overseas to France on HMT Princess Clementine. Although a Belgium cross channel paddle steamer, the Princess Clementine was lent to the British Government after the German occupation of much of Belgium in May 1915. The once luxurious staterooms and cabins were fitted out for transporting troops and later, for use as a hospital ship.
Having arrived in France, John marched into the 2nd Australian Division Base Depot at Etaples. It is noted in John’s file that he was initially sent to the Segregation Camp at Etaples. This was situated in the far north-east of the camp, well away from the remaining buildings. It is not noted in John’s file the reason he was sent here, although it is known that soldiers were quarantined in this camp if they had, or were believed to have, an infectious disease.
It was not until the 12th of March that John was released from the Segregation Camp and joined the remainder of his unit. Five days later, on the 17th of March, he was taken on strength with the 20th Battalion of the 2nd Australian Division. At the time the battalion was stationed in the Bapaume region of France.
From February 1917, German forces facing the Australians began withdrawing to the Hindenburg Line. (The Germans had been constructing heavy defensive positions along this line during the winter of 1916-1917.) The Australians pursued them and there was heavy fighting around a network of small villages. As John was joining his unit, Australian troops had reached the outskirts of Bapaume. The Allied forces believed that they had the Germans on the run. Unfortunately, the Germans were staging a voluntary withdrawal to much stronger and better prepared positions. It was against these solid defences at a point near Bullecourt that four Australian Divisions, one after the other, were thrown during April and May of 1917. The following battles would see approximately 17000 British, Canadian and Australian troops being sacrificed to capture the village and nearby trenches with 4124 of those soldiers being killed and listed as missing with no known grave. John would be amongst that number.
In John’s Australian Red Cross Society Wounded and Missing Enquiry Bureau file, there is an account of what happened to John from a number of sources that were near him when he was killed. Stretcher Bearer Alan Grant (5344) of Hobart, Tasmania provides us with the most detailed account.
“He was a signaller. I knew him well. He came from N.S.W. He was about 5ft.6” in height and well built, a well educated and smart man. He was killed in a Sunken Road running parallel with a village called Lagnicourt on the 15th of April. The Germans broke through two battalions of the 1st Division. He was in a dugout and a shell fell on it and killed him and 5 other signallers. I saw it happen and he was blown up and killed instantly. I went up and looked at the six men. I was able to identify Evans without doubt, though he was much disfigured. He was a particular pal of mine and I could tell by the way his putties were done up and a little signallers badge that he used to wear on his shoulder. I also saw his disc and paybook taken off by the C.S.Major [Company Sergeant Major]. He and the other 5 signallers were buried by the Padre the same afternoon, who held a little service and afterwards a cross was erected with their names on it, but I did not see the cross as we evacuated soon after.”
John is remembered on the Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, the Corryong War Memorial and the Villers-Bretonneux Memorial (Australian National Memorial). For his service, he was awarded the British War Medal and the Victory Medal.
On the 31st of October that year, a brown paper package arrived at Berringama where Audrey and the children were living. It contained the following items; wristlet watch and strap, money belt, purse, 2 pencil cases (metal), steel mirror, diary, leather match box, key, testament, notebook, letter, 2 badges, pair of scissors, 50 centimes note (damaged), religious medallion, bullet, 3 coins and a souvenir coin. All the worldly possessions of Private John Barnes Evans.
In 1923, Audrey married David McCall, a cartage contractor from Sunshine, on the outskirts of Melbourne. Audrey and David would add two more daughters to the family, Alice in 1924 and Audrey Francis in 1925. Audrey would pass away in Bright in 1978.