Ian Allister Mcgregor (Dick) CAMERON

CAMERON, Ian Allister Mcgregor

Service Number: SX1964
Enlisted: 9 March 1940, Adelaide, SA
Last Rank: Sergeant
Last Unit: 2nd/31st Infantry Battalion
Born: Hyde Park, SA, 1 November 1907
Home Town: Bradbury, Adelaide Hills, South Australia
Schooling: Unley and Goodwood Schools
Occupation: Labourer employed at the Adelaide Silicate Company
Died: Killed in Action, Jezzine, Syria, 18 June 1941, aged 33 years
Cemetery: Beirut War Cemetery
Plot 2, Row C, Grave 2 Roll of Honour: *-Bradbury, South Australia *-Waikerie, South Australia *-ADELAIDE National War Memorial, Beirut War Cemetery, Beirut, Lebanon
Memorials: Adelaide WW2 Wall of Remembrance, Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, Mylor War Memorial, Waikerie War Memorial
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World War 2 Service

9 Mar 1940: Involvement Sergeant, SX1964
9 Mar 1940: Enlisted Adelaide, SA
9 Mar 1940: Enlisted Australian Military Forces (WW2) , Sergeant, SX1964, 2nd/31st Infantry Battalion
Date unknown: Involvement

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Biography

2/31 Battalion

Rank - Sergeant

Son of Donald and Annie Cameron; husband of Violet Cameron, of Bradbury, South Australia.

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Ian Allister McGregor CAMERON was born on 1st November 1907, the youngest son of Donald and Annie Cameron at Hyde Park, South Australia. He was educated at schools in Unley and Goodwood with his brothers and sisters.

Ian was known as “Dick” to all his friends and family. Dick played football, playing very well as a ruckman. He was a well admired player in the leagues and clubs he played at including Goodwood, the Hills and the Waikerie Football Club.

He was married to Violet Cameron and they had three children, Heather, Jim and Jennifer.  They had moved to Bradbury and Dick was employed at the Adelaide Silicate Company when he enlisted in the 2nd Australian Infantry Force, attesting on 9th March 1940.

Dick completed his training and, as part of the 70th Battalion (and later the 2/31st battalion) he was given pre embarkation leave from 11th June 1940, leaving his wife and children for the last time on 19th June, 1940. One week earlier he had been made a Temporary Sergeant.

On 22nd June 1940 Dick embarked on the “SS Strathmore”.. It left Britain on 4 January 1941 and disembarked in Egypt on 9 March. On 11 April, they moved to Egypt to bolster the defences along the Libyan frontier against an expected German attack. In late May 1941, the 2/31st returned to Palestine to take part in the 25th Brigade's first offensive operation - the invasion of Syria and Lebanon. The 2/31st's first major engagement in eastern Lebanon was around Khirbe between 8 and 11 June.

It was subsequently ordered to capture the town of Jezzine, which controlled routes to the coast. Jezzine fell to the 2/31st on 14 June but was heavily counter-attacked by the Vichy French on the 16th. The terrain around Jezzine was steep and rugged and the fighting exhausting; it was still in progress when the armistice was declared on 12 July.  Unfortunately Dick was killed in action on 18th June 1941, almost a year to the day he had last seen his family.

Ian “Dick” CAMERON is interred in the Beirut War Cemetery and is commemorated on the Australian War Memorial on the Roll of Honour, and the Bradbury War Memorial.  

 

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

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