Cyril Stanley WINDOW

WINDOW, Cyril Stanley

Service Number: PA2018
Enlisted: 28 January 1941, Port Adelaide
Last Rank: Able Seaman
Last Unit: HMAS Torrens (Depot) / HMAS Encounter (Shore)
Born: Gawler, South Australia, Australia, 11 February 1922
Home Town: Gawler, Gawler, South Australia
Schooling: Not yet discovered
Occupation: Not yet discovered
Died: 24 June 2010, aged 88 years, cause of death not yet discovered, place of death not yet discovered
Cemetery: Not yet discovered
Memorials: Gawler Council WW2 Honour Roll
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World War 2 Service

28 Jan 1941: Involvement Able Seaman, PA2018, HMAS Torrens (Depot) / HMAS Encounter (Shore)
28 Jan 1941: Enlisted Port Adelaide
28 Jan 1941: Enlisted Royal Australian Navy, Able Seaman, PA2018
9 Jan 1946: Discharged
Date unknown: Involvement

Eulogy – Sidney Louis Ey

Delivered at Sid’s Funeral on 3rd October 2019 by Brian Tscharke, celebrant.
Obtained from https://gawlerhistory.com/index.php/Ey_(Sid)_Sidney_Louis

Sidney Louis Ey was born at Gawler on the 31st May 1916, to Elsie and Louis Ey.

Sid as he was usually known, was the second of four siblings, an older brother William, and two sisters Kathleen and Muriel. They were raised in Gawler, initially living in Moore St before moving to a house on Light Square in Cowan Street. Sid attended the Gawler Primary and High Schools. While not a brilliant student, he was good at maths.

Music was a big part of family life and Sid would become an accomplished piano player and possessed a good singing voice.

Sid loved competitive sport, in particular tennis. There was a lawn tennis court in the back yard, and Sid also joined the Tod Street Tennis Club.

Sid’s father, Louis worked in the family owned chaff and flour mills at Cowan St, where the Coles supermarket is located today.

In 1932, Louis started a grain and commission agency business in Jacob Street, where the Green Corner Kitchen is now located. Shortly after, Sid left school to work with his father. The agency business included the Farmers Union agency for receival of grain at both Roseworthy and North Gawler. In those days, wagons loaded with wheat & barley and pulled by teams of six horses hauled the grain to the rail sidings where lumpers built enormous stacks, then unloaded the stacks into rail wagons.

In 1934 Sid commenced a wool classing course. For the next six years, he worked as a roustabout and wool classer at numerous sheep stations throughout the north, east and southeast of the state.Travelling to the sheep stations typically involved a train trip to the nearest rail head, then a ride over dusty, dirt roads sitting on top of a station truck loaded with supplies.

In 1940, Sid decided to join the army. After the war, Sid returned to working with his father.In 1940, the business acquired the government owned Commonwealth Oil Refineries fuel agency, which became a BP agency in the 1950’s.The business delivered stockfeed and fuel to a multitude of dairies, poultry farms, market gardens, cropping and grazing farms around the district. The work was physically demanding as there were no bulk facilities in those days. All the grain was in 3 bushel bags (nominally 80 kilos for wheat) and all the fuel was in 44 gallon drums. A strong back and correct technique for lumping were necessary. Wheeling drums around on their rims and offloading them onto the ground using old tyres as cushions were stock in trade skills. For stock feed supplies, the Gawler Flour Mill was first on the list every morning to pick-up one or more truckloads of bran and pollard which were by-products of the flour milling process. Grain in bags was delivered in goods wagons to North Gawler and rehandled to Jacob Street.

Sid first met Beryl Gregory, a nurse from Hawker during the war through his sister Muriel who worked with Beryl at Royal Adelaide Hospital. They married in August 1947 and moved into the family home at Willaston.

Both Sid & Beryl were heavily involved in tennis including building the obligatory lawn tennis court at home. They played for Tod Street and each year were busy with the annual Easter tournament. In those days the tennis courts were located around the town, often on church or school land. Around 1960, all Sid’s spare time was consumed in helping build a new lawn tennis centre at Essex Park on Thomas Terrace. The courts, fencing and clubhouse were built almost entirely with volunteer labour.

Beryl & Sid had two children, Ross & John. Family life revolved around home-based activities, there being plenty of land around the family home. The tennis court was well used including for football and cricket. Saturday nights were often card nights, where Sid and Beryl would teach the boys to play Contract Bridge. There was no television in the house until the mid-1960’s, when replays of the football started. Through the 1950s to the 1970s, Sid was a dedicated member of the Gawler & Barossa Oratorio Choir, which performed locally, in Adelaide, in the Riverland. At times their performances were broadcast on the radio. Monday nights were always reserved for choir practice.

Running the family business limited Sid’s opportunity to take extended family holidays, although he always joined the family on the weekends during their annual Christmas holiday at the beach. Having travelled during the war, Sid was not interested in further overseas travel. However, he enjoyed travel within Australia and in 1972, a Kombi camper was purchased for this purpose. In later years however it was more often used for local deliveries than for travel.

Sid and Beryl retired from playing competitive tennis in the early 1960s and took up lawn bowls, joining the Gawler Bowling Club. Both played competitively and socially for over forty years. Sid was a very good bowler, winning the various club singles, pairs or mixed doubles championship many times in the period 1969 to 1985. Sid was club president for three years, and also served for a number of years on the club committee, as a selector including chairman, and for a time as greens manager. Beryl and Sid also regularly travelled to play in other towns on Sundays or long weekends.

At dinner time after Sid’s Saturday pennants and after Beryl’s Thursday pennants, the dining table invariably became a makeshift bowling green, as each game turning point was re-enacted using cups, salt & pepper shakers, serviette holders and the like.

The development of bulk handling, transport and storage for both grain and fuel in the 1960’s changed the face of stockfeed handling and in fuel distribution. The business needed to adapt to survive.

In 1979, when most couples would be looking forward to retirement. Sid, then 63, together with Beryl started a new “adventure” which would continue for 26 years. They bought the BP service station at Willaston, transferring their existing stock feed and fuel agency business to Willaston at the same time. The move allowed the business to expand its customer base and better serve hobby farm owners and retail fuel customers. Their lives now revolved around the demands of a seven day a week business. Apart from time committed to sport, bowls practice and yard maintenance at home, Sid could always be found at the service station. Both Sid and Beryl loved the service station life filled with customer and supplier interaction. Over the years they met untold new people and their families.

Through this period, Ross and John each married and raised families. Today there are five grandchildren and one great grandchild, and most of the family members worked in the business at some stage.

In 1999 at the age of 83 and with the imminent introduction of the GST, Sid took a step back and handed over running the business to Ross and wife Barbara.

In 2005, when the business was eventually sold, it had been operating for 73 years and the association with BP had continued for 65 years. To this day, the family still meet people from all walks of life who recall the days of “the old couple at the Willaston BP”.

Sid maintained a strong bond with his army mates from his field ambulance unit, each year attending the annual reunion and Anzac Day march in Adelaide. In later years, there were monthly lunches until Sid was the only one left. In the meantime, Friday nights, later changed to Wednesday afternoons spent at the Gawler RSL became a ritual. In his own humble opinion, Sid reckoned he was quite a handy pool player. In retirement, Sid also joined the Probus club, played bowls, helped Ross at the service station, made sure there was a plentiful supply of chopped wood in winter, water for the fruit trees in summer, and the weeds were kept at bay. For many years, Sid and Beryl travelled to Hawker for the annual Easter bowls tournament and in May for the annual race meeting followed by the iconic family creek party at Cradock. Each January, they would also travel to Melbourne for the Australian Open Tennis.

After the war, Sid had packaged up his war experiences and archived them. He seldom spoke about the war apart from general events, and never in any detail. He eschewed an entitlement to a war pension for a knee injury, and got on with work and life instead.

The focal points in his life were pretty simple – wanting the best for his family, conducting a reputable business, supporting his community, and playing and watching sport. Sid possessed an immense inner strength and calmness, and was usually unflappable in the face of a challenge. In any company, he could make an impromptu speech, without notes.Sid was a fiercely independent person, relying on his own resourcefulness and ingenuity, rather than others. He was also intensely private, keeping his own council on political, religious, and society issues. Rarely would he be drawn into a discussion on such subjects or anything controversial. He dealt with everyone honestly and fairly and expected the same in return. In that sense he would patiently but doggedly pursue customers who didn’t pay their bills. On one driving holiday to Western Australia, he made a detour to a small country town in the south west to confront an unsuspecting but surprised debtor who have moved from Gawler to the west. Sid got his money.

He could also pick a shyster or con artist from a distance. They invariably got short shrift. While Sid took personal pride in the results of his work and contribution to the community, he was embarrassed and humbled at any recognition. Sid never needed a credit card, computer, mobile phone and the like. He conducted all his financial transactions with a cheque or cash, did all mathematical sums and calculations in his head or on paper, and communicated face to face or via a land-line phone. When asked to nominate the most significant changes he had witnessed during his life, he nominated the development of the motor vehicle and the aeroplane.

Sid had a favourite saying of “everything in moderation”, and certainly reaped the rewards from a lifestyle reflecting the saying. He also had the benefit of good genes. His father lived to 96 and his auntie to 108.

After recovering from an aortic aneurysm at 88, he enjoyed ongoing good health and was able to live at home independently until 6 weeks ago. Beryl & Sid celebrated their 70th wedding anniversary shortly before Beryl passed away in 2017. When interviewed for an article in the Bunyip in 1996 at 80 years of age, Sid proclaimed “Grandfather Ey and Grandfather Dawkins both were in business late in life, and I think if you are going to retire, you may as well make an appointment with Taylor & Forgie”.

I think we would all agree, at 103 years of age, Sid did well to put off that appointment until now.



Military Eulogy delivered at the Funeral Service of SX6653 Sergeant Sidney Louis Ey By Bill Denny AM, BM

On behalf of the ex-service community, especially Sid’s mates in the Gawler RSL, I would like to offer my condolences to Ross, John and Sid’s extended family. Sid was much loved by you, and in a very real way he was much loved by all of us. There is no doubt he was treasured, and I know that the affection and respect in which he was held was evident to him in his latter years.

As his family stated in his death notice, Sid led a life “devoted to his family, his town and his country”. You have heard from Ross about his devotion to his family and to the town of Gawler. I would like to talk about Sid’s devotion to his country because, simply put, it was quite exceptional.

Sid was a part of that marvellous World War II generation to whom we owe so much. He was a member of the 2/8th Field Ambulance which was a unit of the 9th Australian Division. A Field Ambulance is a medical unit. Its members are not expected to fight, but are trained to and at times called upon to do so. Delivering first aid and comfort to the injured and dying in the field, sometimes under fire, is one of the most noble and courageous callings I can imagine. Sid served as a stretcher bearer and nurse at Tobruk, El Alamein, Syria, Lebanon, New Guinea and Borneo. Sid’s service life was one of true altruism - of putting “Others before self.”

The Siege of Tobruk and the Battle of El Alamein were defining battles of the North Africa Campaign against the Germans and the Italians, and they are indelibly marked on the psyche of every Australian. Later in the war the South West Pacific Campaign was fought very much closer to home. With the Japanese invasion of New Guinea in early 1942, that campaign has special relevance to every Australian. Sid served in all those campaigns on both sides of the world for over five years. Such service is not unique, but it is extraordinarily special.

In later years Sid was generous in sharing his war experiences with the Gawler RSL, and the Gawler Community Broadcasting Association. Through that initiative he has gifted us some marvellous reminiscences that help us flesh out his service. They are a wonderful gift that survive beyond the grave and will ensure that Sid is never forgotten.

Sid enlisted into the Army on 24 Jun 1940 at Wayville, just nine months after World War II had been declared. During basic training at Wayville he ran into a Major Hutton who he had met before the war. It was Major Hutton that suggested Sid join 2/8 Fd Amb, a unit that was being raised at the time. In Sid’s words the Major’s suggestion “sounded as good as anything,” so the 2/8 Fd Amb it was – for the entire war!

After basic training at Woodside, the 2/8th sailed via Colombo, Is ma lea on the Suez Canal, then by rail to Gaza. Not long after arrival the 2/8th found itself at the very front line in the West of North Africa. The unit had made extraordinarily rapid progress and all seemed well until the Rommel’s Afrika Corps with its tanks landed in Tripoli in mid-1941. The rapid German advance forced a confused Australian withdrawal. Sid referred to it as the “Benghazi Handicap.” The loss of 41 of his comrades in a German ambush during the withdrawal had a telling effect on Sid. It placed a particularly heavy load on the remaining members of the 2/8th when they got back to Tobruk.

Having reached Tobruk and now under siege, Sid and his mates were bombed continuously. Sid said that when air defence arrived they had some respite – they were only bombed at night! Sid related one particular night bombing raid when he was caring for a patient with a broken leg. The injury prevented the patient getting into the air raid shelter. Sid had to stay with him throughout the bombing while, all the time, the patient was struggling to get into the air raid shelter, broken leg and all! Sid commented that this was “pretty nerve racking”. I suggest that might be a bit of an understatement! The Tobruk Siege was particularly tough - lasted 241 days. In the conditions Sid seems to have remained remarkably resilient. He said the food was reasonable and mail came in about once a month. Water was rationed but Sid noted “we were still required to shave every day.”

Australians are proud of their fighting men. We are particularly proud of the “Rats of Tobruk”. The term “Rats” was coined by the German propaganda machine and was intended as an insulting reference to the Australians spending a considerable amount of time in bunkers underground Sid understood this and said he thought the nickname “Rats of Tobruk” very appropriate. As it turned out, the nickname became a Badge of Honour and remains so today. It stands for courage, resilience, discipline and perseverance, in the face of extreme hardship.

After time in Palestine the 2/8th proceeded to Syria employed as garrison troops. While there they received the order to deploy to Alamein. Recalling the importance of the allied victory at the Battle of El Alamein, the British Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill said “Before Alamein we never had a victory. After Alamein we never had a defeat.”

After Alamein it was time to go home. The return to Australia was sweet. It was aboard the luxury liner the Queen Mary. I sense the comfort of the trip might have been compromised somewhat with Sid recalling they were billeted 9 to a cabin. The 2/8th disembarked in Sydney on 23 February 1943. Sid had been overseas for over three years.

After a rail trip via Melbourne, Sid arrived at the North Gawler railway station. It was only a couple of hundred yards to home so he just “walked there.” He said of his family “They didn’t know I was coming. I surprised them a bit.” Another masterly understatement!

After leave, the 2/8th trained in Qld before deploying into the South West Pacific theatre to stem the Japanese advance. Training at Milne Bay was followed by a landing unopposed at Lae. Sid commented that this was a very different war to that of the Middle East. After the capture of Lae, the 2/8th was involved in the Battle of Finschhafen which raged for over a month. In Oct 1944 Sid and his unit returned to Australia. He had served in New Guinea for fifteen months. You could be forgiven for thinking Sid’s war must be nearly over.

After the Middle East and New Guinea, and having been away for three and a half years, you would reckon he had done his bit. It was not to be and in Apr1945 with World War II in its final days, Sid was sent to Morotai and from there to Brunei Bay on the West Coast of Borneo. It was a good period for Sid. He commented that “We didn’t see a Jap for the whole time.” In late 1945 Sid’s was finally over. He was discharged on 5 December. He served for five and a half years – the vast majority of that conflict. Of that time he was overseas for nearly four years.


After the war Sid joined his father in the business. He retained his links with his comrades through his membership of the Gawler RSL. This was shared with his wife Beryl who was a veteran of World War II in her own right. Current Club President Paul Little, together with Past President Wayne Clarke regard Sid as the father figure of their club. I know that all club members were especially fond of Sid and thoroughly enjoyed their regular interaction with him through his weekly games of 8 Ball. They were legendary.

I was pleased to note that Sid able to attend the Gawler RSL Centenary Dinner in November last year where our State Governor, His Excellency the Honourable Hieu van Le, made a special effort to track Sid down and introduce himself. Some months before, His Excellency had invited Sid to a private morning tea at Government House. I know Sid appreciated the gesture, but he politely declined the offer as he did a subsequent invitation to attend a Remembrance Day Breakfast at Government House. When His Excellency introduced himself to Sid at the RSL Centenary dinner I think it was a clear case of Muhammed coming to the mountain because it was clear that the mountain (Sid) was not going to Muhammed! I know that His Excellency much enjoyed meeting Sid and respected his independence.

We were all privileged to know Sid. We were lucky to walk the earth at the same time as this extraordinary man. His devotion to his family, his town and his country has been an example to us all and has made our world a better place. If subsequent generations can “see further” and “do better” then to quote a 12th Century saying, it is simply because we “mere mortals” here today have been lifted onto the “shoulders of giants”. Giants like Sid.

Sid has helped us see more – he has inspired us. He was a man of wisdom and humility. In every sense he was a truly great Australian. He is a paragon of a passing generation and will never be forgotten.

Lest we forget.

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Biography contributed by April Rolfe

Parents: Eliza Charlotte Henrietta DAWE. Walter Joseph WINDOW.

Cyril had 6 brothers and 3 sisters: Ivy May Window (1904–1983) Reginald Arthur Window (1906–1974) David Ernest Window (1907–1961) Hedley Noel Window (1908–1993) Gladys Olive Window (1911–1975) Dorothy Thelma Window (1914-2012) Allan Walter Window (1917–2004) Clarence Elliott Window (1920–1980) Leslie Bruce Window (1924–1996)

Cyril Window played for the Willaston Football Club in the 1940s. The Mayor of Gawler (Mr. Louis Ey) introduced by Association President Mr W.R. Harniman presented the Mail Medal to Cyril Window (Willaston) (The Bunyip - 9 September 1949).

Cyril also played for the Riverside Cricket Club.

Cyril Served as a Seam in World War II.

Fred Brooks has kindly provided the following recollections to his daughter Maxine, who has kindly forwarded it to us....."Cyril Window - his married life was on Burrow ? Street, the first or second street up from the Willaston Church. Cyril was Captain of the A Grade Willaston Football Team when dad was Vice Captain and I assume he would be in the team photo which dad had of I think the 1948 Premiership team. I'm not sure whether you have a copy of that photo or not, but if not we could track it down. Dad thinks he might have worked for Hogben's grocery store near the Willaston Hotel. He was in the 122nd Transport Unit. His parents lived in Willaston going out towards Two Wells on the right hand side. He thinks they trained horses."

 

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