Archie John (Tarakan Jack) BAXTER

BAXTER, Archie John

Service Numbers: 22250, 25807
Enlisted: 4 July 1938
Last Rank: Sergeant
Last Unit: 1st Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment (1RAR)
Born: Camperdown, New South Wales, Australia, 30 August 1920
Home Town: Not yet discovered
Schooling: Kogarah Marist Brothers, New South Wales, Australia
Occupation: Engineer
Died: 26 August 2004, aged 83 years, cause of death not yet discovered, place of death not yet discovered
Cemetery: Not yet discovered
Memorials:
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World War 2 Service

4 Jul 1938: Enlisted Royal Australian Navy, Leading Seaman, 22250, HMAS Penguin (IV) 1939-1940/HMAS Brisbane 1940-1942/HMAS Moreton (I) 1942-1994 (Depot)
10 Oct 1950: Discharged Royal Australian Navy, Leading Seaman, 22250, HMAS Penguin (IV) 1939-1940/HMAS Brisbane 1940-1942/HMAS Moreton (I) 1942-1994 (Depot)

Korean War Service

3 Feb 1956: Involvement Australian Army (Post WW2), Sergeant, 25807
3 Feb 1956: Involvement Australian Army (Post WW2), Sergeant, 25807, 1st Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment (1RAR), Korean War.

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Biography contributed by Hamish Robson

Biography
Australian Rugby Union Representative

Wallaby #356 9 Caps
Province; NSW
Position; Tighthead Prop
Debut Club; Eastern Suburbs (Sydney)
Other Club; Kiwis (Melbourne), Navy (Melbourne)
Representative; NSW v QLD 1948, South Harbour and City 1949, NSW 1949
Debut Test Match; 1949 Wallabies v New Zealand Maori, 1st Test Sydney
Final Test Match; 1952 Wallabies v New Zealand, 2nd Test Wellington

‘Jack’ Baxter was a tough as teak front row forward who survived a near death experience to make a stunning return to Test match rugby.

Rugged and hard-nosed, Baxter was born in Sydney where he played rugby league during his time at Kogarah Marist Brothers College. Later, when at school in Melbourne, he played Australian Rules before a transition to rugby with the Kiwis club.

Baxter returned to Sydney, played Kentwell Cup with Bondi Surf Club and then, in 1938, joined the Royal Australian Navy. In 1948 Baxter joined Eastern Suburbs from where, as a virtual unknown was selected to debut for New South Wales against Queensland only then to be unavailable in rather extraordinary circumstances. Easts, as reigning premiers, had to defeat Drummoyne in the antepenultimate round in order to have a chance to qualify for the semi-finals. Officially, the club informed NSW selector Jack Ford that none of its three players - Baxter, Perc Newton and Murray Tate - were available for the Queensland tour. To describe Ford as unimpressed was a gross understatement. New South Wales split the two games and Easts made the finals.

The following year Baxter played for both South Harbour and City and on the back of those performances was considered an “excellent prospect” of visiting New Zealand with the national team. He went on to make an impressive debut for New South Wales from where he earned selection for the opening Test against the Maori. During the subsequent tour of New Zealand Baxter lost much blood from a cut over his left eye in the uncapped match against Canterbury. After three stitches were placed in the wound Baxter asked that the manager, Ron Walden, be told that only one stitch had been inserted so that it would appear his injury had brighter prospects of healing before the second Test that coming weekend.

Baxter’s life changed forever in January, 1950 following an explosion in the seamen's mess deck of the supply ship H.M.A.S. Tarakan on Sydney Harbour. The press of the day wrote: ‘The violent blast buckled the decks, lifted the stern of the 2,300-ton ship out of the water and entombed the men in a gas-filled, inferno-like messroom’. In endeavouring to escape from the flames Baxter pushed his head out a porthole and rescuers played hoses on him to relieve the intense heat until he was carried unconscious from the blazing hold with all the skin burnt from his legs and back. Unconscious for almost a week, Baxter lingered between life and death for 10 days. Not surprisingly doctors told him he would never play rugby again however Baxter declared he would not only play but also represent Australia. Though due to leave the Navy in August, Baxter was not released from hospital until October and he was still in plaster. An ankle, which could not be set because it had been too badly burnt, had to be rebroken.

In 1951 Baxter played rugby again. His reappearance with Eastern Suburbs in an early season trial game was said to be a triumph of stoicism and remarkably in June he ran out for Australia against New Zealand. In 1953 he joined the Army and three years later, as a sergeant with the 1st Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment, spent seven weeks in Korea with one of the last few Australian units in the country. ‘Tarakan Jack’ Baxter played nine Tests for Australia in a three-year international career.

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