John Samuel GANT MM

GANT, John Samuel

Service Number: 5574
Enlisted: 25 March 1916
Last Rank: Private
Last Unit: 17th Infantry Battalion
Born: Hintlesham, Ipswich, Suffolk, England , 1887
Home Town: Canowindra, Cabonne, New South Wales
Schooling: Hintlesham School, Suffolk, England
Occupation: Labourer
Died: Illness (Pneumonia), France, New Zealand, 20 November 1918
Cemetery: Ste. Marie Cemetery, Le Havre
Plot: Div. 62. IV. C. 3., Ste Marie Cemetery, Le Havre, Haute-Normandie, France, Waikumete Cemetery, Glen Eden, Auckland, Auckland, North Island, New Zealand, Abbeville Communal Cemetery Extension, Abbeville, Picardie, France
Memorials: Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, Canowindra Soldiers Memorial Hospital and Honour Roll
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World War 1 Service

25 Mar 1916: Enlisted AIF WW1, Private, 5574, 17th Infantry Battalion
9 Sep 1916: Embarked Private, 5574, 17th Infantry Battalion, HMAT Euripides, Sydney
2 Mar 1917: Wounded AIF WW1, Private, 5574, 17th Infantry Battalion, Gunshot wound in left thigh
3 Oct 1918: Wounded AIF WW1, Private, 5574, 17th Infantry Battalion, Gunshot wound in head
10 Oct 1919: Honoured Military Medal, Mont St Quentin / Peronne, "During the attack on MONT ST. QUENTIN, near PERONNE, on 31st August 1918, this man was a company runner. The successful communication of the company with flanks and battalion Headquarters was absolutely dependent on runner, as owing to enemy pressure it was impossible to lay telephone wires. He worked incessantly for 18 hours, through heavy and continuous artillery and Machine Gun fire, and never once failed to deliver his message to the front line, although time and again, sniped at by the enemy, who overlooked the position from 100 yards distance."

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Biography contributed by Ned Young

This biography is an extract of a homepage story posted on 1/2/2022

Private John Samuel Gant

John (better known as Jack) Samuel Gant was a company runner for the 17th Infantry Battalion. He was born in Hintlesham, a small town in Suffolk, England to parents John and Laura.[i] On 31 July 1912, Jack emigrated to Australia, travelling on The Norseman from London to Sydney.[ii] He began work on a sheep and wheat farm in the small New South Wales town of Canowindra where he remained until enlisting in the AIF on 25 March 1916 as part of the 15th reinforcements of the 17th Infantry Battalion.[iii] Jack sailed for England aboard the HMAT Euripides on 9 September 1916, disembarking in Plymouth on 26 October. From there, the reinforcements proceeded to France aboard the HMT Golden Eagle, marching into Estaples and joining the rest of the battalion on 18 December 1916.[iv]

Jack served on the Western Front in France during the early months of 1917.[v] On 2 March, he was injured by bomb shrapnel in his left thigh,[vi] presumably while on a company running mission. He was forced to sail to England on board the HS Gloucester Castle where he was admitted to 3rd London General Hospital in Wandsworth.[vii] After three months of recuperation, Jack re-joined the 17th Battalion in France on 10 July 1917.[viii]

Jack’s biggest challenge of the war was still to come. The Battle of Amiens on 8 August 1918 launched the Allied Hundred Days Offensive, which saw the Allies gain significant ground on the Somme front, pushing the German Army back to Mont Saint-Quentin. More a knoll than a mountain (the Mont was only 100 meters high), Mont Saint-Quentin still provided the Germans a key observation post, and marked the last defensive position between the Hindenburg line.[ix] The 2nd Australian Division were tasked with capturing the Mont for the Allies. This meant crossing the elbow of the River Somme and engaging in, quite literally, an uphill battle to breach the Mont and attack the German trenches behind. The battle began at midnight 31 August 1918 and continued until the night of 3 September. In this time, the Australians managed to capture the nearby towns of Péronne and Flamicourt, and forced a German retreat to the Hindenburg line.[x] Over 2,600 German prisoners were captured, but at the heavy cost of 3,000 Allied casualties.[xi]

In a battle that was described as “the greatest military achievement of the war”, Jack Samuel Gant was himself great. Given the sheer size of the battle, which involved battalions from every Australian state,[xii] communication between companies and flanks was especially crucial to the success of the Allies. Jack was awarded the Military Medal for the work he did delivering messages between Battalion Headquarters and the troops on the ground. He “worked incessantly for 18 hours, through heavy and continuous artillery and machine gun fire, and never once failed to deliver his message to the front line, although time and again, sniped at by the enemy, who overlooked the position from 100 yards distance”.[xiii] One cannot help but conjure scenes from 1917 when reading the details of Jack’s Military Medal recommendation. Perhaps Jack stalked his way through the streets of Péronne, just as Lance Corporal Schofield did the deserted French town. Indeed, given the language used in the recommendation, it is likely Jack put himself in just as much danger as the characters in the film.

A few months after his heroics at Mont Saint-Quentin, on 3 October 1918, Jack was wounded again.[xiv] This injury was more serious – a gunshot wound to the head and shoulder.[xv] Jack was treated at the 2nd General Hospital in Le Havre where he contracted pneumonia.[xvi] Over the course of 6 weeks, his condition deteriorated. Jack Samuel Gant died on 19 November 1918, just eight days after the Armistice.[xvii] He is buried at Saint Marie Cemetery in Le Havre.[xviii] Jack’s brother, Thomas J Gant, was also a casualty of the Somme,[xix] only adding to the suffering of the remaining Gant family who had not seen their son or brother since he set sail for Australia six years prior.

[i] Main, G 2022, Hintlesham War Memorial – The Great War, Hintlesham & Chattisham War Memorial, viewed 30 January 2021, <http://hintleshamwarmemorial.com/hintlesham-ww1/>.
[ii] Ibid.
[iii] Service Record.
[iv] Ibid.
[v] Ibid.
[vi] Ibid.
[vii] Ibid.
[viii] Ibid.
[ix] Sir John Monash Centre 2018, Mont St. Quentin, Sir John Monash Centre Australian National Memorial France, viewed 30 January 2021, <https://sjmc.gov.au/mont-st-quentin/>.
[x] Australian War Memorial 2020, Mont St Quentin and Péronne: Australian Victories, Australian War Memorial, viewed 30 January 2021,  <https://www.awm.gov.au/visit/exhibitions/1918/battles/mtstquentin>.
[xi] Ibid.
[xii] Ibid.
[xiii] Military Medal Recommendation.
[xiv] Service Record.
[xv] Ibid.
[xvi] Ibid.
[xvii] Ibid.
[xviii] Ibid.
[xix] Main, G 2022, Hintlesham War Memorial – The Great War, Hintlesham & Chattisham War Memorial, viewed 30 January 2021, <http://hintleshamwarmemorial.com/hintlesham-ww1/>.

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