LEE, John Robert
Service Number: | Officer |
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Enlisted: | 9 October 1915, Gilgandra, NSW |
Last Rank: | Second Lieutenant |
Last Unit: | 24th Infantry Battalion |
Born: | Hedley Hill, Lanchester, Durham, England, 19 October 1885 |
Home Town: | Gilgandra, Gilgandra, New South Wales |
Schooling: | Public School Leadgate, Durahm and Cliff College Sheffield |
Occupation: | Farmer |
Died: | Pymble, NSW, 2 November 1957, aged 72 years, cause of death not yet discovered |
Cemetery: | Not yet discovered |
Memorials: | Gilgandra Coo-ee March Gallery, Gilgandra District Roll of Honor, Gilgandra NSW 100th Anniversary of The Cooee March |
World War 1 Service
9 Oct 1915: | Enlisted AIF WW1, Second Lieutenant, Officer, 24th Infantry Battalion, Gilgandra, NSW | |
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31 Oct 1916: | Involvement 24th Infantry Battalion, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '14' embarkation_place: Sydney embarkation_ship: HMAT Argyllshire embarkation_ship_number: A8 public_note: '' | |
31 Oct 1916: | Embarked 24th Infantry Battalion, HMAT Argyllshire, Sydney |
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Add my storyBiography contributed by Daryl Jones
Son of late James Lee (coalminer) and Mrs Jessie Sanders fmly Lee nee Watson, Oliver Ford, Conrett, Durham, England
John enlisted in Gilgandra on October 9, 1915 and marched to Sydney with the Coo-ees. As a former Methodist minister, he acted as their chaplain and as a skilled orator, he gave many stirring speeches. He embarked from Sydney with the 24th Battalion on October 30, 1916 on the Argyllshire and disembarked at Devonport on January 10, 1917.
After further training In England he joined his unit in France on the Western Front on March 23, 1917. Early in April 1917 he was transferred to 21st Battalion where he was promoted to 2nd Lieutenant on May 17. He participated at Bullecourt and in the capture of Broodseinde Ridge. From October 1917 he was at General Headquarters Gun School then on leave until November 1917. A knee injury ended his time in France and he returned to Australia in May 1918. He remained in the Army as a Reserve Officer and worked with recruitment and training at Liverpool.
John Lee went on to have a long career in local and state government until his death in 1957. His wife survived him.
Educated at public school, Leadgate, Durham, and Cliff College in Sheffield; water works engineer with Weardale and Consett Water Company for ten years; became a Methodist minister; arrived in Australia in 1910, minister at Yanco and Gilgandra; grazier; took a prominent part in recruiting marches from Gilgandra and the North Coast; director of Ferrier and Dickinson; member of Protestant Federation.
Alderman at Drummoyne from 1934 until 1937, Mayor in 1936
John Robert (Jack) Lee (1885-1957), engineer and politician, was born on 19 October 1885 at Hedleyhope, Lanchester, Durham, England, son of James Lee, coalminer, and his wife Jessie, née Watson. Educated at Leadgate, Jack trained as a plumber and worked for the Weardale and Consett Water Co., Durham. In 1910-11 he studied for the Methodist ministry at Cliff College, Sheffield, and probably migrated to New South Wales late in 1912. He served as a probationary Methodist minister at Yanco and Gilgandra from 1913 to 1914 when he abandoned his vocation and took up wheat-farming.
A member of the Gilgandra Rifle Club, Lee enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force at Gilgandra on 9 October 1915 and was prominently associated with the 'Coo-ee', 'Wallabies' and 'North Coaster' recruiting marches. After training at the Royal Military College, Duntroon, he was commissioned on 25 July 1916. He embarked on 31 October and served with the 21st Battalion in France. Promoted lieutenant on 17 May 1917 he was injured on 14 November and returned to Australia in May next year. He worked in a recruiting depot until demobilized in September, but remained on the reserve of officers.
Lee set up as a waterworks and sanitary engineer in Sydney and on 28 February 1920 at St Andrew's Cathedral married Gladys Irene Dickinson; they were childless. Defeated as a Nationalist for the Federal seat of Hunter in 1919, he was elected next year to the Legislative Assembly for Botany which he represented until 1927 when he won Drummoyne. He was lively as Nationalist whip in 1922-27 and served as chairman of the select committee on the administration of the Housing Board in 1923-24.
From October 1927 to November 1930 Lee was minister of justice in (Sir) Thomas Bavin's government. He investigated the perennial problem of those gaoled for failure to pay maintenance and devised a scheme to employ them at the basic wage, building roads. However in February 1929 the plan caused a storm of protest from the Kuring-gai Chase Trust and the unions—Jack Bailey, president of the Australian Workers' Union, described it as 'a return to the convict system'. Lee doggedly continued with his scheme. He was also criticized for the early release of prisoners.
Defeated at the general election in November 1930, Lee regained Drummoyne in 1932 and held the seat until 1941. He was a State council-member of the National and United Australia parties in 1931-33 and 1934-37. Disgruntled at his exclusion from (Sir) Bertram Stevens's ministries, he joined other malcontents in the U.A.P. in constantly needling the government, and vigorously attacked (Sir) Michael Bruxner's metropolitan transport policy and the unpopular Gaming and Betting Act amendment bill. On 27 July 1939 Lee crossed the floor and voted for a Labor censure motion which Stevens narrowly survived. On 3 August Stevens was defeated when Lee and nine others voted for E. Spooner's motion recommending a new financial policy.
Later that year Lee chaired the select committee on the conduct and administration of trotting in New South Wales. Called up in July 1940, he assisted with recruiting and in 1941-43 served as a staff captain with the Citizen Military Forces.
Handsome, with regular features and wide-set eyes, Lee was a member of the Commercial Travellers' Club, and enjoyed golf, bowls and gardening. He was an alderman on Drummoyne Municipal Council in 1934-37 and mayor in 1936, a director of John Thompson & Co. Pty Ltd and Ferrier & Dickinson Ltd, and a member of the New South Wales Protestant Federation. In retirement he was 'a frequent visitor to the House, particularly during the luncheon adjournment'. Late in life he moved to Gordon. He died at Pymble on 2 November 1957 and was cremated with Anglican rites. His wife survived him. source - Australian Dictionary of Biography (adb.anu.edu.au)