Harry Arthur SMITH SG, MC

SMITH , Harry Arthur

Service Number: 6776
Enlisted: Not yet discovered
Last Rank: Lieutenant Colonel
Last Unit: Parachute Training School
Born: Hobart, Tasmania, 25 July 1933
Home Town: Hobart, Tasmania
Schooling: Hobart High School
Occupation: Army Officer
Died: Natural Causes, Buderim, Queensland, 20 August 2023, aged 90 years
Cemetery: Buderim Lawn Cemetery - Crematorium & Memorial Gardens
Memorials:
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Non Warlike Service

13 Dec 1952: Promoted Australian Army (Post WW2), Second Lieutenant

Malayan Emergency Service

1 Dec 1955: Involvement Australian Army (Post WW2), Second Lieutenant, 6776, 2nd Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment (2 RAR)

Vietnam War Service

8 Jun 1966: Involvement Australian Army (Post WW2), Major, 6776, 6th Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment (6RAR)
8 Jun 1966: Involvement Australian Army (Post WW2), Major, 6776
18 Aug 1966: Involvement Australian Army (Post WW2), Major, 6776, 6th Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment (6RAR), Long Tan

Non Warlike Service

1 Jan 1976: Discharged Australian Army (Post WW2), Lieutenant Colonel, 6776, Parachute Training School, Approximate date

Action at Long Tan as related to Andrew M Banks

In 1965 Smith, then a major, was serving with 6RAR which had been raised for service in South Vietnam. The following year, he assumed command of Delta Company.

The Company was warned to be ready for Vietnam by May 1966. Smith, whose experience of jungle warfare in Malaya was to prove of great value, put his men through the most rigorous training involving weapon handling, patrolling, tracking, navigation, map reading, bayonet fighting and mine drills. By the end of the course, they were jogging five miles a day over rough ground in boots and carrying heavy packs.

In early June, they boarded a Boeing 707 at Brisbane and headed for Vung Tau, South Vietnam, via Manila and Saigon. 6RAR, an infantry battalion, commanded by Lt Col Colin Townsend, was part of 1st Australian Task Force (1ATF). A week later, they were called forward to the ATF base at Nui Dat, Phuoc Tuy Province.

In the early hours of August 17, the base came under heavy shelling and mortaring. The artillery responded with a counter bombardment on suspected Viet Cong (VC) positions. Bravo Company 6RAR was deployed at first light. They located the enemy’s firing points but, finding no evidence of preparations for a major attack, most of the company returned to base, leaving only one platoon near the Long Tan rubber plantation.

During the previous days, higher command had received several indications that the VC might be preparing for a big attack on the base at Nui Dat but these were not passed on to 6RAR’s company commanders.

Delta Company moved out on August 18. Their orders were simply to relieve B Company’s platoon and take over the search for the enemy units responsible for the shelling. Moving through low scrub, swamps and paddy fields, at about 1300 hours they arrived in the area with a force of 105 men and a small party of New Zealand Artillery Forward Observers.

Smith’s men found mortar pits, stained clothing and abandoned equipment, evidence that the counter-battery fire had caused casualties and a rapid withdrawal.

Then, 11 Platoon ran into the forward troops of a large force, later estimated at 2,500 Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army troops. The platoon was pinned down by intense machine gun fire, their platoon commander, 2nd Lieutenant Gordon Sharp, was killed, and they were soon taking heavy losses.

At 1600, the rain fell in torrents, turning the ground to red mud. It was impossible to dig in, trenches filled with water and an electrical storm added to the bedlam of noise, causing problems with communications. Smith formed a defensive perimeter on a reverse slope and made repeated attempts to relieve 11 Platoon while driving off numerous attacks from both flanks on his own position.

The sheer weight of assaults from VC 275th Regiment supported by the local D445 Battalion meant Delta Company was in danger of being encircled and overrun. The weakened 11 Platoon, now under the command of Sergeant Buick and supported by the Direct Support Battery of the Royal New Zealand Artillery, had a desperate struggle to beat off one attack after another.

Smith called down a regimental fire mission of all 24 guns. The combined fire from Delta Company and the supporting batteries were devastating. He said afterwards that the VC advanced into withering fire in wave after wave like zombies, urged on by the sinister blaring of bugles signalling orders to assemble and then attack.

“Tracer filled the gathering darkness,” he said later. “It was like a million fireflies coming at us. We took cover behind the rubber trees while bullets ripped through the branches and white latex ran down the bark.”

He called for an airstrike with rockets, bombs and napalm across the front of 11 Platoon but US Air Force Phantom fighter jets could not identify Delta Company because of heavy rain, cloud and smoke from gunfire.

Sergeant Buick directed close artillery fire to give 11 Platoon’s survivors, many of whom were wounded, a chance to break out. Company Sergeant Major Jack Kirby, a big man, moved about in the open handing out ammunition and friendly advice, “If you don’t know him, son,” he would say, “shoot him.” He carried two wounded men to an aid post under fire and then went forward and killed the crew of a heavy enemy machine gun that was being set up on the edge of the perimeter.

At 1800, two RAAF Iroquois helicopters arrived in atrocious weather and, with the help of coloured smoke grenades, “dropped ammunition,” Smith said, “right into our lap.”

The arrival of Armoured Personnel Carriers equipped with machine guns turned the tide of the battle. Their additional mobility and firepower broke the Viet Cong’s will to fight. By 1915 hours it was dark and the enemy finally disengaged and withdrew, leaving behind more than 200 dead. Seventeen Australian soldiers were killed and 23 wounded; later one more died of his wounds. Delta Company returned to Nui Dat late on August 21.

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Biography contributed by Steve Larkins

Harry Arthur Smith, SG, MC (1933-2023)    

Obituary by Andrew M Banks

Harry Arthur Smith was born in Hobart, Tasmania, on July 25 1933. His father, Ron, served in the Australian Imperial Force in the Second World War. He worked for Cadbury’s for 48 years and was appointed OBE for his services to the community.

One of three children, young Harry attended Hobart High School where he was a member of the school’s cadets and earned a marksman’s badge for rifle shooting. After working as a laboratory assistant in an industrial company, in April 1952 he joined the Australian Regular Army at the recruiting office in Hobart.

In December, Smith was commissioned and, after attending the School of Infantry, he was posted to a National Service unit in Tasmania as a platoon commander. He gained his parachute “wings” in 1954.

In 1956, he was posted to 2RAR in command of a platoon. He joined the battalion in Malaya during the Emergency and took part in numerous operations; long-distance patrolling using Iban trackers and setting ambushes for the Communist Terrorists in Kedah and Perak. He acquired his nickname “Rat catcher” when he caught some of his men gambling and drinking after hours, and cried: “Gotcha! You rats!”

Smith returned to Australia with 2RAR in 1957 and, after qualifying as a commando, in 1962 he was posted to 2 Commando Company in Melbourne, Victoria.

In January 1967, at the Nui Dat base, Smith was invested with the Military Cross. The citation stated that, but for his determination and leadership, Delta Company might have been annihilated. In 2008, he was decorated with the Star of Gallantry, the Australian equivalent of the DSO. Commonwealth decorations were only made to 17 Australians and New Zealanders; the limited number later came in for considerable criticism.

In May 1967, Smith and Delta Company left South Vietnam and arrived by troop ship at Brisbane in mid-June. Two years after the battle, at a ceremony at Townsville, Queensland, the Australian Prime Minister, John Gorton, presented the United States Presidential Unit Citation to Delta Company for extraordinary gallantry.

After his Vietnam tour, Smith was posted back to Special Forces and commanded 1st Commando Company until December 1969. He attended Australian Staff College before being posted to HQ Western Command and then to England, America and Canada on joint warfare training and to study parachuting.

He was CO and Chief Instructor at the Australian Army Parachute Training School from 1973 to 1976. He was injured in a parachuting accident in 1975 and, after being medically downgraded, he resigned from the Army in the rank of lieutenant-colonel. He took an office job for two years selling marine safety equipment but his injuries forced him to retire in 1978.

For 20 years, he put up a relentless fight for recognition and justice for his men’s service and sacrifice at the Battle of Long Tan. He attended several government reviews and had some success in seeing a few awards upgraded but, in his opinion, this fell far short of what his men deserved.

He was a born leader. Indecision and procrastination were anathema to him and he spoke his mind without regard to whose feathers were ruffled. Sailing provided a much needed opportunity to relax and for more than 30 years he enjoyed cruising along the east coast.

Smith published The Battle of Long Tan: The Company Commanders’ Story (2015). In 2017, the original Long Tan Cross memorial was installed in the Australian War Memorial, Canberra.

Harry Smith married first, in 1954, Kathleen Burke. After the marriage ended, he married, in 1972, Anne Sheehan. She died of cancer and in 2003 he married Felicia Smith, who survives him with two daughters and a son of his first marriage.

Harry Smith, soldier, born July 25 1933, died August 20 2023

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