TREADGOLD, Charles Ashbourne
Service Number: | 528 |
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Enlisted: | 17 August 1914, Enlisted at Prahran, Victoria |
Last Rank: | Corporal |
Last Unit: | 5th Infantry Battalion |
Born: | Clifton Hill, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 1892 |
Home Town: | Elsternwick, Glen Eira, Victoria |
Schooling: | Not yet discovered |
Occupation: | Bank Clerk |
Died: | Died of wounds - wounds to the thigh and back, 1st Australian Casualty Clearing Station, Gallipoli, Gallipoli, Dardanelles, Turkey, 27 November 1915 |
Cemetery: |
Ari Burnu Cemetery, Gallipoli Row G, Grave 2 Headstone inscription reads: A life made beautiful by kindly deeds , Ari Burnu Cemetery, Gallipoli Peninsula, Canakkale Province, Turkey |
Memorials: | Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, MCC Roll of Honour 1914 - 1918 - Melbourne Cricket Club, Sydney Reserve Bank of Australia (Commonwealth Bank) Honor Roll WW1 |
World War 1 Service
17 Aug 1914: | Enlisted AIF WW1, Private, 528, Enlisted at Prahran, Victoria | |
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21 Oct 1914: | Involvement AIF WW1, Private, 528, 5th Infantry Battalion, ANZAC / Gallipoli, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '8' embarkation_place: Melbourne embarkation_ship: HMAT Orvieto embarkation_ship_number: A3 public_note: '' | |
21 Oct 1914: | Embarked AIF WW1, Private, 528, 5th Infantry Battalion, HMAT Orvieto, Melbourne | |
4 Sep 1915: | Promoted AIF WW1, Corporal, In the field | |
26 Nov 1915: | Wounded AIF WW1, Corporal, 528, ANZAC / Gallipoli, Bullet wounds to the thigh and back | |
27 Nov 1915: | Involvement AIF WW1, Corporal, 528, 5th Infantry Battalion, ANZAC / Gallipoli, --- :awm_ww1_roll_of_honour_import: awm_service_number: 528 awm_unit: 5 Battalion awm_rank: Corporal awm_died_date: 1915-11-27 |
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Add my storyBiography contributed by Carol Foster
Son of Charles Ashbourne Treadgold and Helen Maria Treadgold nee Warren of 37 Victoria Street, Elsternwick, Victoria. Brother of Newton Costello Treadgold who was killed in action on 14 April 1917 while serving with the 2nd Field Artillery Brigade
20 October 1915 - to hospital with Jaundice
Medals: 1914-15 Star, British War Medal, Victory Medal
Biography
Work in progress
Sourced and submitted by Julianne T Ryan. 5 September 2014. Lest we forget.
Biography contributed by Virtual Australia
Charles Ashbourne Treadgold, known as ‘Treaddy’, was a clerk with the Commonwealth Bank's Melbourne branch. Treadgold was the eldest son of Charles and Ellen Treadgold of Elsternwick, Victoria. At the age of 22 he lined up to enlist in the war, joining the 5th Battalion, one of the first infantry units raised for the Australian Imperial Force (AIF). Like the 6th, 7th and 8th Battalions, it was recruited from Victoria and together with these Battalions formed the 2nd Brigade.
Treadgold's battalion was among those that took part in the Anzac landing on 25 April 1915, acting as part of the second wave. The 2nd Brigade participated in the second battle of Krithia from 6–8 May 1915. This assault across open and relatively flat grassland was a failure and the enemy machine guns and artillery caused great losses in the British, French, New Zealand and Australian troops involved in the attack. Little ground was captured and the 2nd Brigade suffered 1,056 casualties in an hour, more than a third of its strength. The Brigade returned to the site of the Anzac landing to help defend the beachhead, participating in the battle of Lone Pine in August 1915.
The unit's war diary describes this experience: ‘Trenches in bad state as dead men all over the place and beginning to decompose, enemy bombing all night.’ Treadgold was promoted to Corporal in September 1915. Sadly, however, he died from a gunshot wound in the trenches in White Valley on 26 November, just a few weeks before the evacuation in December 1915. He left behind his widowed mother and his fiancée, Vera Kyd. Tragedy was to strike the Treadgold family a second time when his younger brother Newton was killed at the Battle of Bullecourt two years later, their mother Ellen losing both her sons in the Great War.
In 1919 staff at the Commonwealth Bank in Melbourne memorialised their dear friend and colleague Treaddy in the second edition of the staff magazine, Bank Notes:
He was an interesting and attractive personality – gay and happy, frank and engaging, vigorous and energetic, he was at once a favourite with all. As an old Wesley Collegian, he upheld the traditions of the school on the athletic side, and comradeship went hand in hand in his case. His death was greatly mourned by those who knew him, and he certainly was of the type that Australia could ill afford to lose.