Robert Shetliffe (Bob) COATS

COATS, Robert Shetliffe

Service Number: SX5556
Enlisted: 17 June 1940, Adelaide, SA
Last Rank: Private
Last Unit: 2nd/43rd Infantry Battalion
Born: Walkerie, SA, 19 February 1920
Home Town: Waikerie, Loxton Waikerie, South Australia
Schooling: WAIKERIE School
Occupation: Orchadist
Died: Killed in Action, Tobruk, Libya, 3 August 1941, aged 21 years
Cemetery: Tobruk War Cemetery, Tobruk, Libya
Tobruk War Cemetery, Tobruk, Libya
Memorials: Adelaide WW2 Wall of Remembrance, Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, Waikerie Primary School Old Scholars Roll of Honor, Waikerie War Memorial
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World War 2 Service

17 Jun 1940: Involvement Private, SX5556, 2nd/43rd Infantry Battalion
17 Jun 1940: Enlisted Adelaide, SA
17 Jun 1940: Enlisted Australian Military Forces (WW2) , Private, SX5556, 2nd/43rd Infantry Battalion

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Biography

2/43rd

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 Robert Shetliffe COATS was born on 19th February 1920 at Waikerie to Frederick William John and Lucy Gertrude Coats, of Waikerie. Robert was the loving brother of Adele, Rex, Pauline, Mariel and Judith.

Bob schooled at Waikerie, and later assisted his father who was a local orchardist. He was a keen horseman and active member of the Waikerie Riding Club, at which meetings he always figured prominently, carrying off numerous events.

Bob Coats enlisted in April 1940, completed training and was taken on strength for the 2/43rd battalion. On 22-8-40 Coats and other “Waikerie Men” came home on pre embarkation leave.

The 2/43rd Infantry Battalion left South Australia at the end of December and moved to Melbourne, where it joined the convoy taking the brigade to the Middle East.  The battalion arrived at Egypt late January 1941. The 2/43rd went into camp at Khassa, north of Gaza.

In March the 9th Division was brought to Libya, to garrison the area east of Tobruk. The division did not have enough vehicles to bring all its units forward towards Benghazi. Consequently, the 24th Brigade (comprising the 2/43rd, 2/28th, and 2/32nd Battalions) remained in Tobruk.  The situation quickly changed in April. The German Afrika Korps, counter-attacked, pushed the British back to Tobruk. The division and the 18th Brigade defended the "fortress" for the next six months. The 2/43rd participated in the usual pattern of defensive duties, manning parts of the Red Line, working on the Blue Line, and aggressively patrolling no man's land. The Red Line was a series of concrete pillboxes forming a semi-circle around Tobruk. It was the town's outer line of defence, while the Blue Line was the second line.

Bob Coats was killed in action at Tobruk on 3-8-1941. Just one month later the majority of the Australian force (including the 2/43rd in the early hours of 17 October 1941) evacuated Tobruk by sea.

Robert COATS is interred in the Tobruk War Cemetery and is commemorated on the Australian War Memorial on the Roll of Honour. 

Bob is also commemorated with a tree and plaque in the WAIKERIE War Memorial Gardens.

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