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Illustrations below reduced in
size from those on the ebook




43rd Battalion
The 3rd Division was raised in Australia early in 1916. The 43rd Battalion was
South Australia's contribution to the strength of the division. Along with the
41st, 42nd, and 44th Battalions, plus support troops, it formed the 11th
Brigade.
The battalion embarked in June 1916 and, after landing briefly in Egypt, went
on to Britain for further training. The battalion arrived on the Western Front
in late December. The 43rd Battalion spent 1917 bogged in bloody trench
warfare in Flanders. In June the battalion took part in the battle of Messines
and in October the Third Battle of Ypres.
The battalion spent much of 1918 fighting in the Somme valley. In April they
helped stop the German Spring offensive at Villers-Bretonneux. In July the
battalion was part of General Monash's attack at Hamel. In August and
September the battalion helped drive the Germans back to the Hindenburg Line.
The 43rd joined the advance that followed the 2nd Division's victory at Mont
St Quentin and it was during this operation that Temporary Corporal Lawrence
Weathers earned the battalion's only Victoria Cross. Weathers was mortally
wounded in the battalion's next battle. The battalion commander, Lieutenant
Colonel John Farrell wrote "..he died at the Regimental Aid Post, and lies
buried on the battlefield. The same shell killed his uncle, who bore the name
of Lance-Corporal J.J. Weathers."
At 11 am on 11 November 1918, the guns fell silent on the Western Front. The
November Armistice was followed by the Treaty of Versailles signed on 28 June
1919. Through 1919 the men of the 43rd Battalion returned to Australia in
drafts for demobilisation and discharge.
(cited from Australian War Memorial)
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