Thomas Edward (Ted) KIRBY

KIRBY, Thomas Edward

Service Number: 1854
Enlisted: 25 May 1916, Adelaide, South Australia
Last Rank: Private
Last Unit: 36th Infantry Battalion
Born: Broken Hill, New South Wales, December 1890
Home Town: Waikerie, Loxton Waikerie, South Australia
Schooling: Scotts Creek State Scool and Waikerie Public School
Occupation: Paddle Steamer Engineer/Orchardist
Died: Killed in Action, Ypres, Belgium, 21 July 1917
Cemetery: No known grave - "Known Unto God"
Menin Gate Memorial, Ypres, Flanders, Belgium
Memorials: Adelaide National War Memorial, Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, Menin Gate Memorial (Commonwealth Memorial to the Missing of the Ypres Salient), Waikerie War Memorial, Willunga Cheer Up Society Pictorial Honour Board, Willunga War Memorial
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World War 1 Service

25 May 1916: Enlisted AIF WW1, Private, 1854, Adelaide, South Australia
12 Aug 1916: Involvement AIF WW1, Private, 1854, 43rd Infantry Battalion, Enlistment/Embarkation WW1, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '18' embarkation_place: Adelaide embarkation_ship: HMAT Ballarat embarkation_ship_number: A70 public_note: ''
12 Aug 1916: Embarked AIF WW1, Private, 1854, 43rd Infantry Battalion, HMAT Ballarat, Adelaide
21 Jul 1917: Involvement AIF WW1, Private, 1854, 36th Infantry Battalion, --- :awm_ww1_roll_of_honour_import: awm_service_number: 1854 awm_unit: 36th Australian Infantry Battalion awm_rank: Private awm_died_date: 1917-07-21

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Biography

Thomas Edward KIRBY was born at Broken Hill in about December 1890, the son of Thomas Edward and Eliza Ann Kirby, the family moved to Waikerie whilst he was young but he did most of his schooling at the Scotts Creek State School. Thomas’ sister, Dorothy married Sid RAINEY also living in WAIKERIE.  Thomas was known to one and all as Ted.  Ted was an engineer on the Paddle Steamers travelling the river in the employ of Captain Arnold.  He left that work when he bought an irrigation orchard at Waikerie.

 

Ted enlisted into the Australian Infantry Forces on May 25th, 1916 at Murray Bridge and attested at ADELAIDE. On the 12th August 1916, Ted embarked from Adelaide aboard “HMAT BALLARAT” with the 43rd Battalion. They went to Britain for further training. On 17th November 1916, Ted and a number of others were transferred voluntarily to the 36th Battalion, and on the 22nd of November 1916 preceded with the Battalion to France and the front line.

 

Ted moved into the trenches of the Western Front for the first time on 4 December, just in time for the onset of the terrible winter of 1916-17. The battalion was in the Ypres Sector of Belgium in mid-1917; this was where the battle of Messines was launched on 7th June.

 

On the night of 21st July 1917, Ted and 84 others moved forward to attack and take a German strongpoint in front of their position at Messines.  They were unsuccessful, discovered during the raid, they were hit by heavy gunfire and bombardment. A large number of those on the raid were killed or reported missing. Ted was one of those reported missing in action.

 

Two nights later,  other Australians made their way across the front and reported that they had located a body they believed was Teds in a crater in “No Mans Land”.  It was reported that Ted appeared to have been killed during the earlier raid and no dog tag was recovered from his body. 

 

Teds body was never recovered, nor was his death confirmed at that time. His parents and siblings received word that Ted was “Missing In Action” by telegram on 2nd August 1917. On 19th March 1918, a 36th Battalion Court of Enquiry deemed that Private Thomas Edward KIRBY, identification number 1854, was “Killed in Action on 21st July 1917, In the field, BELGIUM”. The Red Cross began making enquiries into Teds fate, interviewing fellow soldiers and his brother who, as an officer on the raid, had seen Ted early in the raid when he was still alright.

 

Teds family in Australia were notified that he was officially Killed in Action in June, 1918. None of Teds property could be located and so nothing was returned to the family. Teds family were invited to Montieth Institute Hall in July 1919. There, flanked by returned servicemen, Mrs KIRBY was brought forward and presented a brooch as a memoriam and in appreciation from the community for her family’s sacrifice.

 

Thomas KIRBY was never found and has no known grave. He is commemorated on the MENIN GATE at YPRES.  This gate was one of only two entries into the medieval fortified city. It was through this gate that allied soldiers, including Ted and the Australians, marched to the battlefields of the Ypres salient between 1914 and 1918. After the war, the MENIN GATE was chosen as the site for a memorial to the thousands of allied soldiers who were killed in the area but had no known grave. Opened in 1927, the memorial consists of an imposing archway surmounted by a recumbent lion and it is inscribed with the names of 54,389 dead from Britain and Commonwealth countries.

 

Every evening since 1927 the Last Post has been sounded under the memorial’s great arch by the local Fire Brigade “Last Post Association” buglers. This was stopped under the Nazi regime in WW2 but immediately recommenced on the very evening they were driven out and has continued unmissed daily ever since.

 

Thomas Edward KIRBY is also commemorated on the Australian War Memorial on the Roll of Honour and with a tree and plaque in the WAIKERIE War Memorial Gardens.

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