John James SUTHERLAND

SUTHERLAND, John James

Service Number: 3474
Enlisted: 31 July 1915
Last Rank: Private
Last Unit: 8th Infantry Battalion
Born: Thologolong Station, Victoria, Australia, 1888
Home Town: Tallangatta, Towong, Victoria
Schooling: Beechworth College, Victoria, Australia
Occupation: Grazier
Died: Died of wounds, France, 11 August 1918
Cemetery: Vignacourt British Cemetery, Picardie
Plot VI, Row B, Grave No. 12
Memorials: Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, Granya War Memorial
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World War 1 Service

31 Jul 1915: Enlisted AIF WW1, Private, 3474, 8th Infantry Battalion
11 Oct 1915: Involvement Private, 3474, 8th Infantry Battalion, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '9' embarkation_place: Adelaide embarkation_ship: HMAT Nestor embarkation_ship_number: A71 public_note: ''
11 Oct 1915: Embarked Private, 3474, 8th Infantry Battalion, HMAT Nestor, Adelaide

Help us honour John James Sutherland's service by contributing information, stories, and images so that they can be preserved for future generations.

Biography contributed by Stephen Brooks

John James Sutherland enlisted the same day as his brother Lisle Ben Sutherland in the 8th Battalion. Lisle transferred to machine guns in Egypt and was killed in action at the Battle of Fromelles, 3475A Pte. Lisle Ben Sutherland, 15th Machine Gun Company, killed in action 19 July 1916, aged 21.

John served and survived at Pozieres, and the next year was wounded in action on the 22 April 1917, a gunshot wound to the shoulder which resulted in being evacuated to England. He rejoined his unit in France during late November 1917. He was gassed during April 1918 and was three months recovering. He was wounded a third occasion, this time mortally on 9 August 1918. John James Sutherland died from shrapnel wounds to his abdomen and legs two days later.

He has the same inscription on his headstone as his younger brother, ‘Gone but not forgotten by his loved ones at Thologolong, Victoria’

His death was reported in the Mitta Herald during August 1918,

‘Much sorrow was caused in Tallangatta yesterday when it became known that Private Jack Sutherland, son of Cr. Peter Sutherland of Thologolong, numbered with the dead. The young soldier died on 11th inst., from gunshot wounds in the abdomen. The duty of breaking the sad news to the bereaved family was entrusted to the Rev. W. Ingram. Private Jack Sutherland was a fine type of a young Australian, and was a general favorite with all who knew him. He was 29 years of age and was attached to the Eighth Battalion. This is the second soldier in the Sutherland family to make the supreme sacrifice, a younger brother, Ben, having been killed a little over two years ago. The whole district will heartily condole with this patriotic family in their double bereavement.’

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Biography contributed by Stephen Learmonth

Jack was born in 1888 at Thologolong Station in Victoria. He was the eldest of eleven children to Peter Alexander and Thomasina (Ina) Mary Eliza (née Carter) Sutherland.

On the 10th of July, 1915, members of the Granya local community attended a recruitment meeting. Prior to the meeting, Jack, Arnold and Ben, the eldest sons of the Sutherland family, drew lots to see who would enlist. Jack and Ben ‘won’, although, as Ben was under the age of twenty-one, he needed his parents to give their consent to enlist. A cousin of Ina’s, Jack Anderson, also enlisted with the two Sutherland boys.

Both Jack and Ben were prolific writers and they received many letters and parcels from their relatives back at home. In one of Jack's letters, dated May 1916, he described the conditions in one of his letters home.

The rats are pretty thick in some of the houses we have been billeted in - they are running over us all night. The people here take things very cooly. They are putting their crops in right up to the trenches and the women and kids walk about as if nothing was up, although four kiddies were killed by a shell the other day about a mile from where we are billed.

A month later, back in the trenches, Jack wrote home again.

Expect to be out again for a spell soon. A German raiding party came over the other night but we gave them what they were looking for. We did not have any casualties but they left about a dozen dead in front of our barbed wire. Three of our chaps went out and brought one of them in - he was a Bavarian and was tangled up in the wire and as full of holes as a sieve. He was a fine stamp of a man.

On ANZAC Day 1917, Jack was wounded during an attempt to capture one of the Channel sports of Le Havre, Calais and Boulogne. He wrote to his parents in late April:

Just a few lines to let you know that I am doing well and that the wound is very slight - a bullet through the flesh front of the left shoulder. It did not hurt as much as having a tooth pulled, so don’t worry about me, Mum, as I am alright and having a good spell. Give my love to the Girls, Maud and Arn and the kiddies, and remember me to the Collins and Hores. We are having fine weather over her lately, a bit of a change from the rain. Please excuse this scrawl, dears, but this is a very bad pencil.

Four days later he wrote:

I am getting on splendidly and expect to be going to Blighty [England] in a few days. I am walking about and the wound is healing up fine … Don’t worry about me, as I am all right - it is only a flesh wound. I suppose I got too careless. I was sniping Fritz and forgot that he might try sniping  as well, anyhow I had some fine shooting first and the knock he gave me would not have killed a sparrow.

On May the 3rd, after arriving in England, he was transferred to the Lewisham Military Hospital, followed by another transfer, this time to Weymouth Military Hospital. Jack wrote to his family explaining that he would not be going to France for a while as his shoulder was too stiff to carry a pack. What Jack had been describing to his family in Australia as a “flesh wound” the Australian Army in France classified it as “a severe gunshot wound to the shoulder”. Clearly Jack was trying not to worry his family too much.

On the 30th of November he rejoined his battalion at the front. In 1918, on the 16th of April, he was gassed and wounded again four days later. He rejoined his battalion on the 27th of June.

On the 8th of August the 8th Battalion participated in the Allies offensive which was launched near Amiens. The advance by British and empire forces was the greatest success in a single day on the Western front. German General Erich Ludendorff described it as “the black day of the German Army in the war.” Jack was once again wounded, this time very seriously, with shrapnel wounds to the abdomen, right leg and left thigh. On the 11th of August he died as a result of those wounds.

Jack was buried in Vignacourt British Cemetery, Picardie, France with the service being conducted by the Rev. G. Boycott who was attached to the 61st Casualty Clearing Station. He is also remembered on the Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, and the Towong Shire Boer War and WW1 Roll of Honour. For his service during the war he was awarded the 1914/15 Star, the British War Medal, and the Victory Medal.

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