JOHN CARROLL
- VICTORIA CROSS WINNER -
G'day folks,
John Carroll, VC was an Australian recipient of the
Victoria Cross, the highest award for gallantry in the face of the enemy
awarded to British and Commonwealth forces.
John Carroll
(1891-1971), soldier, labourer and railway employee, was born on 16 August 1891
in Brisbane, son of John Carroll, labourer, and his wife Catherine, née
Wallace, both Irish-born. When he was 2 the family moved to Donnybrook, Western
Australia, and then to Yarloop. About 1905 they settled at Kurrawang where John
and his father joined the Goldfields Firewood Supply Co. as labourers. Tall and
well built, John was a good athlete and a prominent member of the local
football club; he was working as a railway guard on the Kurrawang line when he
enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force as a private on 27 April 1916.
Carroll
embarked for England in August with reinforcements for the 44th Battalion, then
on 14 November was transferred to the 33rd Battalion. He went into the line at
Armentières, France, and served there until April 1917 when his unit moved into
position for the Messines offensive. On 7 June, in the battle of Messines
Ridge, he rushed an enemy trench and bayoneted four men, then rescued a comrade
who was in difficulties.
Later in the
advance he attacked a machine-gun crew, killing three men and capturing the
gun, and, in spite of heavy shelling and machine-gun fire, dug out two of his
mates who had been buried by a shell explosion. During the battle his battalion
was in the line for ninety-six hours and Carroll 'displayed most wonderful
courage and fearlessness' throughout.
He was awarded
the Victoria Cross and in September was promoted lance corporal. On 12 October,
in the second battle of Passchendaele, he was severely wounded and did not
rejoin his unit until June 1918; next month he was transferred to A.I.F.
headquarters, London, and in August returned to Australia.
After
demobilization Carroll resumed work as a guard on the Kurrawang line. He
married Mary Brown in the Catholic Cathedral, Perth, on 23 April 1923; they had
no children. In the mid-1920s he moved to the Yarloop district and in November
1927, when he was working as a railway truck examiner at Hoffman's Mill, he
slipped while boarding a train during shunting operations and crushed his right
foot; it was amputated but he continued working for many years as a labourer
and railway employee. In 1956 he went to London for the Victoria Cross
centenary celebrations, then retired to the Perth suburb of Bedford. He died in
the Repatriation General Hospital, Hollywood, on 4 October 1971 and was buried
in Karrakatta cemetery with full military honours. His wife had predeceased
him.
Carroll, who was
known among his A.I.F. comrades as 'the wild Irishman', was casual and
happy-go-lucky by nature. He missed three dates for his investiture with the
V.C. and had to be sent for on the fourth occasion; after the ceremony he
amused himself by exercising the Victoria Cross winners' right to turn out the
Buckingham Palace Guard. He was also known as 'Referendum Carroll' because he
rarely said anything but yes or no. Two of his brothers served as privates in
the A.I.F.
Clancy's comment: Man, such courage under fire. They should have made him our Prime Minister, or at least the captain of our cricket team.
I'm ...
No comments:
Post a Comment