John Dunne KENNEDY

KENNEDY, John Dunne

Service Number: 814
Enlisted: Not yet discovered
Last Rank: Sergeant
Last Unit: A Battery, Royal Australian Artillery
Born: Geelong, Victoria, 1857
Home Town: Sydney, City of Sydney, New South Wales
Schooling: Not yet discovered
Occupation: Groom
Memorials:
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Sudan (1885) Service

1 Mar 1885: Involvement Australian and Colonial Military Forces - Boer War Contingents, Bombardier, New South Wales Contingent - Sudan

Boer War Service

1 Oct 1899: Involvement Australian and Colonial Military Forces - Boer War Contingents, Sergeant, 814, A Battery, Royal Australian Artillery

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Biography contributed by John Edwards

"...John Dunn(e) Kennedy was born at Geelong, Victoria in 1857. On enlistment in the NSW Artillery on 24 October 1881, he stated that he was a groom, aged 23 years 10 months, 5 feet 7.5 inches tall, with brown eyes, light brown hair, fresh complexion and his religion was Church of England. Kennedy was an acting bombardier in the Sudan Contingent. He was promoted bombardier in 1885, corporal in 1886, sergeant in 1889 and battery quartermaster in 1892.

As a corporal in the NSW Artillery, he married Annie Madden on 24 April, 1888, at the Registrar General's Office, Elizabeth Street, Sydney. He also served during the Boer War as a sergeant in 'A' Battery, Royal Australian Artillery and received the Queen's South Africa Medal. He was invalided back to Australia on 13 December 1900. Kennedy transferred to the Royal Australian Artillery in Queensland on 1 July 1903.

The Egypt Medal with the bar 'Suakin 1885' was granted to all troops who took part in the Sudan operations between 1 March to 14 May, 1885 and was the first occasion on which Australian units were sent overseas to serve with Imperial troops. 205 medals were awarded to the NSW Artillery. This medal is part of a collection assembled by the late Hon. Sir Thomas Hughes, Member of the Legislative Council of New South Wales. It was presented to the Memorial in memory of his son, Captain Roger Forrest Hughes, Australian Army Medical Corps, who died of wounds in France on 11 December 1916, and of his grandson, Flying Officer Peter Roger Forrest Hughes, 12 Squadron, Royal Australian Air Force, who was killed on active service while flying in the Northern Territory on 3 October 1942." - SOURCE (www.awm.gov.au)

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