Francis Walter BELT DSO, Order of St Anne, Order of St Stanislaus

BELT, Francis Walter

Service Number: Officer
Enlisted: 22 December 1914, Royal Naval Volunteer Service, England
Last Rank: Lieutenant
Last Unit: Unspecified British Units
Born: Walkerville, South Australia, 30 April 1862
Home Town: Adelaide, South Australia
Schooling: Collegiate School of St Peter
Occupation: Lawyer, Expeditionist Soldier & Naval Commander
Died: Montreux, Switzerland, 21 August 1938, aged 76 years, cause of death not yet discovered
Cemetery: Not yet discovered
Memorials: Adelaide Members of the Legal Profession & Students at Law WW1 Honour Board, Hackney St Peter's College Honour Board, The Adelaide Club Great War Roll of Honour
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Boer War Service

26 Jan 1900: Embarked Trooper, 2nd South Australian Contingent Mounted Rifles, Transport Surrey, Adelaide
29 Mar 1901: Embarked Trooper, 2nd South Australian Contingent Mounted Rifles, Transport Tongariro, Cape Town - South Africa
15 May 1901: Discharged Trooper, 2nd South Australian Contingent Mounted Rifles, Adelaide, South Australia

World War 1 Service

22 Dec 1914: Enlisted Lieutenant, Officer, Unspecified British Units, Royal Naval Volunteer Service, England
27 Nov 1917: Honoured Companion of the Distinguished Service Order

Distinguished Service Order Citation

Lieut.-Cdr. (now Act. Cdr.) Francis Walter Belt, R.N.V.R. In recognition of his services with a Naval Armoured Car Squadron throughout the war. He conducted an expedition into Persia in trying circumstances with conspicuous success. He was later 2nd in command of the squadron during the Dobrudja and Roumanian operations, where he was wounded. He has since done admirable work in Galicia. On all occasions he has shown himself to be a loyal and most reliable officer.

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Biography

A full account of Francis Walter Belt's life can be found in the Australian Dictionary of Biography (adb.anu.edu.au).

An account of his war service can be found below:

Francis Walter Belt had just returned from a big game hunting trip in South Africa when the Second Boer War broke out. Francis Belt, who was in Adelaide enlisted as soon as he could and was allocated to the 2nd (South Australian Mounted Rifles) Contingent as a Trooper. He embarked the transport vessel 'Surrey' at Adelaide on 26 January 1900. The unit arrived at Cape Town and disembarked on 25 February 1900. They participated in the relief of Prieska in March and then later that month they also fought at Karee-Brandfort.

The South Australian Mounted Rifles later participated in the taking of Johannesburg and Pretoria and were present at the battle of Diamond Hill in June 1900. Afterwards they returned to Pretoria in October 1900 and camped outside the city for a month. In November they returned to further service in east and north-east Transvaal until March 1901 when they returned to Cape Town. Here they embarked on 29 March 1901 and reached Sydney on 1 May. From here Trooper Francis Belt proceed overland to Adelaide arriving on 12 May 1901. He was discharged and the 2nd South Australian Mounted Rifles were disbanded on 15th May 1901.

Between the Boer War and World War One Francis Belt largely practised law at his father's firm in Adelaide, but he still remained an avid traveller and game hunter. For the past year and a half before World War One was declared he was travelling the world on a big game hunt and when war broke out Belt was in London.

Being a member of the Royal Naval Reserve, he offered his services on 22 December 1914, and was sent to France and Belgium with a squadron of Naval Armoured Cars. He held the rank of Lieutenant. In 1915 he went with 600 officers and men, 30 armoured cars and 65 transport cars to Russia on 'a secret mission' to help fight with the Russian Army. He was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant Commander in July 1915 and took up the post of second in command of the Naval Armoured Car Squadron. Owing to the ice they could not land at Archangel and thus were held up for three months without seeing the sun in the Kola Inlet, in the Arctic Circle. Finally, in May 1916 they were able to get into Archangel and were sent to the Caucasus under the orders of the Grand Duke Nicholas. 

After clearing out the Turks and Kurds from Lake Van, in Armenia, Commander Belt and his party continued into North-west Persia, fighting all the time. They also succeeded in clearing the Turks and Kurds from that area too, however, after a period of time. The roads were very bad, though and operations were most difficult. Then Romania entered the war.

In a lecture given to crowd of Adelaide citizens after the war in May 1919 on his war service Belt recalled the following:

"At first we fought with the Russian Army in the Dobrudia until the enemy turned us out. We spent the winter of 1916-17 in Galatz, on the Danube, fighting against the Bulgarians, Turks, and Germans. When the last big effort of the Russians took place in 1916-17 in Galicia, we led the attack of the armoured cars against the enemy on the Lemberg road.

"Everything went well for about a week. Then the Russians refused to fight, became panic-stricken, and fled back towards the frontier. Our cars for a week or more covered their retreat, which we were able to do owing to the enemy having sent back most of his artillery, thinking that he was going to be overwhelmed. The enemy stopped at the frontier, thinking that the Russian armies would dissolve more quickly if left alone. Their prediction was fulfilled.

"The Russians went to pieces. Our cars were ordered back south of Moscow early in 1918. Lenin and Trotsky, who were then in power, took over the cars and all supplies, and allowed us to leave the country with only our packs and rifles.

"The Russian people were indifferent regarding the war. They were neither friendly nor unfriendly to us. The army to which we were attached had 700,000 men. The only sections of the army that could be trusted at that time were the 'Battalions of Death.' There was great competition for the services of British troops, among whom were a number of Australians, owing to the moral they gave to the army.

"At the beginning of 1918 I returned to England and was then sent to America on a naval mission for six months. While there I met the late Colonel Roosevelt."

During the war Commander Belt also met the Grand Duke Nicholas—a man, he said, who was feared by officers and men. Several Australians were in Commander Belt's party and included Lieutenant Galwey (son of the Governor of South Australia), Lieutenant Lefroy (son of the Premier of Western Australia), and Lieutenant Walford Sholl, of Western Australia.

After the war, Francis Belt returned to Adelaide where he tied up his law firm and moved back to England. He had married Violet Mary Selina Lucas-Shadwellon on 3 July 1915 during the war and they lived happily in England. She had being a nurse during World War One. He would later remarried 1930 and he died in Montreux, Switzerland at the age of 76.

 

The above account of his war service is based on a newspaper article written in 1919 about a Lecture Francis Belt gave to interested Adelaide citizens. Link in the side-bar.  

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Biography contributed by Faithe Jones

Francis Walter Belt (30 April 1862 – 21 August 1938) was an Australian naval commander, lawyer, explorer, and big game hunter. Born in Adelaide, he attended the Collegiate School of St Peter and clerked in the offices of his father, a barrister, and was admitted barrister and solicitor in 1884. He took part in the 1894 Horn Scientific Expedition to Central Australia, financed by his brother-in-law William A. Horn. He served two wars: first as a trooper in the South African War from 1900 to 1901, and later during World War I, where he served first as a lieutenant Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve in England, then lieutenant-commander and finally commander in the Royal Naval Division. He was wounded during the war and received the Distinguished Service Order from the United kingdom as well as the Russian Order of Saint Anna and Order of Saint Stanislaus. He died in Montreux, Switzerland, at the age of 76. - Wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org)

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