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2/43rd Battalion (Australia)

The 2/43rd Battalion was an infantry battalion of the Australian Army. Raised in July 1940 in South Australia as part of the 24th Brigade, the battalion was initially part of the 8th Division, until the 24th Brigade was re-allocated to the 9th Division in late 1940. It was with this formation that the 2/43rd saw service in the Middle East in 1941–1942, taking part in the fighting at Tobruk and in the First and Second Battles of El Alamein. It also undertook garrison duties in Syria, before returning to Australia early in 1943 to fight against the Japanese in the Pacific.

2/43rd Battalion
Soldiers from the 2/43rd Battalion patrolling on Labuan, June 1945
Active1940–1946
CountryAustralia
BranchAustralian Army
TypeInfantry
Size~ 800–900 personnel[Note 1]
Part of24th Brigade, 9th Division
Motto(s)Nil desperandum[2]
EngagementsWorld War II
Insignia
Unit colour patch
(1940–1942)
(1942–1946)

In 1943–1944, after re-organisation and training to prepare for jungle warfare, the 2/43rd fought in New Guinea, as part of operations to capture Lae and secure the Huon Peninsula. After returning to Australia in early 1944, a long period of training followed on the Atherton Tablelands in Queensland, before the battalion undertook its final campaign of the war, taking part in Allied operations to re-take Borneo from the Japanese in June 1945. Following the end of the war, the battalion was disbanded in February 1946. One member of the battalion, Private Tom Starcevich, was awarded the Victoria Cross.

History

Formation and training

The 2/43rd Battalion[Note 2] was raised at Woodside, South Australia, on 17 July 1940 from Second Australian Imperial Force (2nd AIF) volunteers. It was one of three infantry battalions assigned to the 24th Brigade[4] – the other two being the 2/25th and 2/28th Battalions – which was initially assigned to the 8th Division.[5] Like other Australian infantry battalions of the time, the 2/43rd had an authorised strength of around 900 personnel,[6] and was organised into four rifle companies – designated 'A' through to 'D' – each consisting of three platoons; these were supported by a battalion headquarters and a headquarters company with six specialist platoons: signals, pioneer, anti-aircraft, transport, carriers and mortars.[7][8]

Upon formation, the 2/15th was placed under the command of Lieutenant Colonel William Crellin, an Australian Staff Corps officer and Duntroon graduate of the Permanent Military Forces who arrived on promotion from major,[4] having previously served in World War I with the 14th Battalion.[9] The colours initially chosen for the battalion's unit colour patch (UCP) were chocolate and dark blue in an oval shape, inside a circle of grey.[10] These were the same as those of the 43rd Battalion, a South Australian unit that was part of the First Australian Imperial Force during World War I. That unit had been re-raised in South Australia in 1921 as a Militia formation, eventually adopting the designation of the Hindmarsh Regiment.[11] The 2/43rd's unit colour patch was later changed, following the unit's involvement in the fighting at Tobruk, when it adopted a 'T'-shaped UCP consisting of red and white.[12][13]

The battalion's personnel during the early stages of its existence were volunteers who enlisted within the 4th Military District, which encompassed South Australia and Broken Hill, New South Wales. Many of the commissioned officers and some of the non-commissioned officers had previous military experience in the Militia, while the bulk of the enlisted personnel had no prior military service. Rudimentary individual soldier training was conducted along with sports meets throughout August, followed by skill-at-arms training and range shoots in September, while key appointment holders were sent away on various promotion and other specialist training courses. In early October, the battalion was presented with its battle flag by veterans who had served in the 43rd Battalion during World War I, and a short time later it was announced that the 24th Brigade would be transferred to join the 9th Division in the Middle East. More intense training, including company and battalion-level field training was conducted in the weeks that followed. In late November, the 2/43rd received their Unit colour patches in preparation for deployment and the battalion marched through the centre of Adelaide. Finally, on 28 December 1940, the men entrained at Oakbank, and were transported by rail to Melbourne, where they embarked on the transport Mauretania.[14]

North Africa and the Middle East

Escorted by the cruiser HMAS Canberra, the Mauretania proceeded along the southern Australian coast as part of a convoy of four other troopships. Reaching Fremantle, Western Australia, on 3 January 1941, a brief shore leave was granted before the convoy set sail across the Indian Ocean. From there, the convoy berthed at Colombo in Ceylon, where further shore leave was granted while arrangements were made to transfer the battalion to another ship, the Nevasa, for the remainder of the journey to Port Tewfik in Egypt, where it disembarked on 2 February 1941. From there, the battalion moved by rail to Palestine, where the 9th Division was attempting to make good its equipment and training deficiencies while the more experienced divisions – the 6th and 7th Divisions – led the Australian Army's efforts in Libya and later Greece.[15] The 2/43rd subsequently moved into camp at Khasa, linking up with another South Australian battalion, the 2/27th, which had prepared the camp for their arrival.[16]

 
2/43rd Bren carriers on manoeuvre in Syria, June 1942

In early February, acclimatisation training was conducted until the battalion's heavy equipment arrived in camp, including Bren carriers and trucks, when section level and platoon tactical training began. This increased in complexity and progressed to company-level exercises, culminating in battalion offensive manoeuvres. Leave was granted for the soldiers to visit Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. This ceased mid-March, when the battalion was ordered to cross the Suez Canal and take up positions west of the port of Tobruk to complete training prior to relieving the 6th Division in the desert.[17] As British troops advanced west, pushing the Italians back through Libya during Operation Compass, plans were made for the 9th Division to move forward. In the end, only part of the division advanced past Tobruk and, due to lack of transport, the 24th Brigade garrisoned the port itself. In early April the advance turned into a withdrawal as Axis forces, bolstered by the arrival of the Afrika Korps, which had landed around Tripoli, launched a determined counter-attack. The 9th Division, along with the Australian 18th Brigade, from the 7th Division, withdrew intact to Tobruk, and within a week the advancing Axis forces had placed the strategic port under siege. The 2/43rd would remain there, manning defences, mounting patrols and conducting raids, for the next six months.[5][18]

The battalion's most significant action around Tobruk came on 3 August, when 'A' and 'B' Companies attacked a German outpost on the right flank of the "Salient", designated "R7" by the Allied operational staff. The attack was part of an attempt to reduce the German-held Salient, which had developed in the line south-west of Bianca. In conjunction with the 2/43rd's attack, the 2/28th Battalion attacked the left flank around posts "S6" and "S7" from the north.[19] Heavy fighting around R7 resulted in 100 Australian casualties, the majority being borne by 'B' Company, and the fighting ended in the Australian assault being repulsed followed by a temporary truce for both sides to collect casualties. During the truce, German sappers led the Australian stretcher bearers through the German-laid minefields.[20] Finally, in October, the decision was made to withdraw the Australian garrison from Tobruk by sea. By this time, the 2/43rd was holding the Bardia Road sector, and after two successful raids on Italian positions, which resulted in around 75 Italian casualties, the battalion was withdrawn.[21] As part of the evacuation, the 2/43rd was taken aboard the Australian destroyer HMAS Nizam and the Royal Navy's HMS Latona on 17 October 1941. The Australians were replaced by British troops from the 70th Division,[5][22] with the 2/43rd handing over to troops from the Durham Light Infantry.[23] Casualties for the battalion during the siege of Tobruk amounted to 38 killed in action, 13 died of wounds, 156 wounded, and four captured.[24][25]

Following its evacuation from Tobruk, the 2/43rd was landed in Alexandria, after which it moved by buses to Amiriya and then by train, crossing the Suez at Kantara, and arriving in camp at Kilo 89 in Palestine on 20 October. There, the battalion was rested, and received several drafts of reinforcements, mainly consisting of volunteers from Western Australia. In mid-December, after the battalion had moved to Khassa, Crellin handed over command of the battalion to Lieutenant Colonel William Wain, a former Militia officer who had served with the 7th Battalion during World War I, and who came on promotion from the 2/16th Battalion, where he had served as battalion second-in-command. After a bitterly cold Christmas in Palestine, early in the new year, the 9th Division was ordered to move to Syria,[26] where it was to join the Allied garrison that had been established there following the brief Syria–Lebanon campaign to counter a possible Axis attack on the Allied flank through the Caucasus Mountains.[27] The 9th Division was assigned to guard the Tripoli area, in the northern sector of the Allied defence system. Under this plan, the 2/43rd was assigned winter quarters at Arbe,[28] and it spent four months in the Lebanese mountains near Jebel Tourbol, before moving to Bechmezzine in May. Guard duties included manning checkpoints at the mouth of the Chekka Tunnel, while brigade-level exercises were conducted in the Syrian desert around Forgloss in early June. At the end of the month, the 9th Division received orders to move back to Egypt as the situation in North Africa became critical for the Allies, as the Afrika Korps advancing steadily in the Western Desert.[29]

 
A mortar crew from the 2/43rd during the fighting around El Alamein

Committed to the fighting around El Alamein in early July, the 24th Brigade, having recently completed desert training, moved to Ruweisat Ridge,[30] over 5 miles (8.0 km) south of El Alamein, situated on the coast. For the next four months, the 2/43rd formed part of the northern sector of Allied defences within what came to be known as the "Alamein box". Tasked with harassing Axis forces, the 2/43rd's first action came on the night of 7/8 July, when 'D' Company launched a very successful raid, which caught the German forces in the area by surprise and resulted in the destruction of many vehicles and artillery pieces, as well as the re-capture of a British Bren carrier that was driven away from German lines.[31][32] On 17 July, the 2/43rd was involved in actions around Ruin Ridge, in conjunction with the 2/32nd Battalion's attack on a position known as Trig 22 on Makh Khad Ridge. Advancing astride the Qattara track, during the action the 2/43rd captured over 1,000 Italian prisoners,[33] for the loss of 81 casualties, before withdrawing from Ruin Ridge. The 24th Brigade launched a follow-up attack on 22 July on Makh Khad Ridge and Ruin Ridge, in conjunction with an attack by the 26th Brigade on Tel Eisa;[34] this attack saw the 2/43rd, having detached one company to support the 2/32nd,[35] heavily committed once again. A further thrust was put in on 26/27 July, with the 2/43rd being tasked with a follow-up role, which was cancelled after attacks by the 2/28th and the British 69th Infantry Brigade failed;[36] instead the battalion only played a supporting role during the attack, bringing up ammunition under fire with its carriers, and providing supporting fire to the 2/28th Battalion.[37] In August and September, during a lull in the fighting, the battalion undertook patrols into no-man's land.[38] Casualties during the first phase of the battalion's involvement in the fighting around El Alamein between early July and mid-October amounted to 36 killed in action, 12 died of wounds, two accidentally killed, 28 wounded and four captured.[39]

Later, after the British forces were reinforced, the Allies launched a counter-offensive, the Second Battle of El Alamein, in late October and early November. During the initial phase of the fighting, the 9th Division was tasked with drawing Axis forces into the northern sector, to allow other elements to prepare for the breakout attempt, codenamed Operation Supercharge.[40] The 2/43rd Battalion formed part of the divisional reserve during the initial stages of the attack, before the 24th Brigade relieved the depleted 26th Brigade,[41] adopting positions around the railway barracks (dubbed the "Blockhouse") on 31 October. The fighting was so intense that it suffered 108 casualties in a single night on 1 November 1942, including 43 killed and seven missing, after being partially overrun.[42][43] By early November, the tide of the fighting turned and the offensive ultimately wrested control of the fighting in North Africa back towards the Allies. Shortly afterwards the 9th Division was withdrawn from battle for redeployment to the Pacific to fight against the Japanese.[5] The battalion's casualties in the second phase, between 23 October to 5 November 1942, amounted to 45 killed in action, 11 died of wounds, 96 wounded and 27 captured.[39] Those captured ultimately spent the rest of the war in camps in Italy, Austria and Germany, before being repatriated at war's end.[44][45]

New Guinea and Borneo

The 2/43rd was withdrawn to Khassa in Palestine in December and took part in a divisional parade that month in Gaza, before embarking aboard the Queen Mary, bound for Australia, in January 1943.[5][18] The Queen Mary formed part of a large convoy established under Operation Pamphlet to transport the 9th Division back to Australia to fight the Japanese in the Pacific. After around a month at sea, the division arrived at Fremantle on 18 February and, after the Western Australian members disembarked, it continued eastwards, reaching Sydney on 27 February. From there, the battalion entrained from Pyrmont, and by 1 March 1943 had arrived in Adelaide, after which members were granted three weeks leave.[46] A welcome-home parade through the city streets was held that month, watched by a crowd of over 200,000, after which the battalion concentrated at Springbank in Adelaide. They entrained for the Atherton Tablelands on 29 March 1943, reaching Kairi, on 6 April 1943. They would remain there for the next four months, training in preparation for jungle warfare against the Japanese in New Guinea. During this time, the battalion was converted to the jungle divisional establishment, which saw the reduction of its authorised strength to about 800 personnel.[1] The number of vehicles allocated to the battalion was also reduced with heavy vehicles being replaced by jeeps. The carrier and anti-aircraft platoons were removed from the battalion's establishment, while a Vickers machine-gun platoon was raised and the number of mortars allocated for organic indirect fire support was increased. A batch of 338 reinforcements arrived to make up for earlier losses and transfers;[47] many of these men came from states other than South Australia, resulting in a more diverse demographic within the battalion.[48]

 
Troops from the 2/43rd Battalion embark at Cairns, 8 August 1943, bound for New Guinea

Training teams arrived from the 2/3rd Battalion, which had already fought the Japanese in New Guinea, and a program of jungle warfare training began, progressing from individual fieldcraft to large-scale exercises. In June, amphibious training was carried with the Australians working with the US 532nd Engineer Boat and Shore Regiment around Trinity Beach. The following month, a new commanding officer, Lieutenant Colonel Robert Joshua, arrived. In early August, the battalion moved by road to Cairns. On 8 August 1943, the 2/43rd embarked upon HMAS Manoora, bound for Milne Bay in New Guinea.[49] There, the battalion undertook further training in preparation for its debut in the Pacific. In mid-August, it moved by landing craft to Buna. It continued training there until 5 September, when the 24th Brigade embarked in landing craft for beaches near Lae, arriving the day after the main landing as part of follow-on forces behind the 20th and 26th Brigades.[50] For 11 days, the battalion advanced west as part of a two-pronged advance on Lae, the 7th Division advancing overland from Nadzab while the 9th Division moved along the coast. Initially, there was only limited opposition from the Japanese as the battalion advanced through the villages of Buso and Apo, and the Singaua Plantation.[51] The Burep River was crossed, but the Australian advance west was slowed by numerous water obstacles and eventually torrential rain which flooded the Busu River. At this point, Japanese resistance stiffened and after the 24th Brigade forced its way across the Busu, the 2/43rd advanced slowly along the coast, reaching Wagan to the south of Malahang airfield. On 16 September, the 7th Division entered Lae, with the 2/43rd situated around the Butibum River.[5][52][53] The advance on Lae cost the battalion 18 killed and 25 wounded.[54]

Later in September, the Australians undertook an opposed amphibious landing at Scarlet Beach, on the Huon Peninsula. The 20th Brigade led the 9th Division ashore on 22 September, and the 2/43rd Battalion arrived on 30 September as part of reinforcements that were sent when it became clear that the Japanese in the area were stronger than first believed. As Japanese opposition to the lodgement increased, the 2/43rd relieved the beleaguered 2/17th around Jivevaneng,[55] 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) east of Sattelberg.[56] While the 2/17th joined the Australian advance south, the 2/43rd established a blocking position around Jivevaneng to guard the western flank and in early October fought off a strong attack by a battalion from the Japanese 80th Infantry Regiment amidst a strong Japanese counterattack around the Finschhafen area.[57] Later, the battalion pushed north of Scarlet Beach over the Song River to reconnoitre the area around North Hill, Pino Hill and Pabu in preparation for an advance towards Bonga and Guisika,[58] during which it located several key tracks and junctions.[59][60] In late November, it fended off an attack around North Hill before taking part in the advance towards Wareo, relieving the 2/32nd around Pabu, during which Japanese artillery and mortar attacks caused heavy casualties.[61] The battalion then advanced towards the Kalueng Lakes and later into the Christmas Hills, severing the Bonga–Wareo track, which the Japanese had been using for resupply. In one ambush, 37 Japanese were killed around a position the Australians called "Horace the Horse".[62] By early December, having suffered many casualties from disease, the battalion returned to the North Hill area to assume defensive positions, and a lull followed before it was withdrawn back to Finschhafen for Christmas. On 23 January 1944, the 2/43rd embarked upon the Thomas B. Corwin, reaching Townsville on 31 January. Casualties during operations around Finschhafen resulted in 56 killed and 86 wounded.[5][63]

 
Troops from the 2/43rd advance with Matilda tank support on Labuan, June 1945

After its return to Australia, the battalion was granted a 24-day leave period before re-grouping in March at Ravenshoe, Queensland, to begin preparations for the next phase of the war. The battalion experienced a high turnover of personnel, and by the time it went into combat again in mid-1945, only 141 personnel who had deployed to the Middle East in 1940 remained. A new commanding officer, Lieutenant Colonel Noel Simpson, arrived in May 1944, along with a large batch of other reinforcements, replacing many men still suffering malaria from the previous campaign.[64] A long training period ensued, as there was a degree of uncertainty about the Australian Army's role in future operations in the Pacific after the US military assumed primary responsibility for combat operations in the theatre.[65] Nevertheless, in the final months of the war the 2/43rd took part in efforts to recapture Labuan and North Borneo as part of Operation Oboe Six.[5]

Embarking in April 1945 on board the General H.W. Butner from Townsville, the 2/43rd staged out of Morotai Island. Now under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Mervyn Jeanes, who had taken over from Simpson following his elevation to command the 29th Brigade on Bougainville, the 2/43rd spent six weeks on Morotai Island preparing for the Labuan operation. Finally, in June, the battalion embarked on the Manoora and two US Landing Ship Tank vessels, LST 640 and LST 585,[66] and made the seven-day voyage to the island of Labuan, where it came ashore unopposed in three waves, landing on Brown Beach on the southern tip of the eastern headland to Victoria Harbour. Supported by tanks and artillery, the 2/43rd pushed inland and, after some brief skirmishes,[67] advanced along the southern coast on the right of the 2/28th Battalion, and then north to secure Labuan airfield, which was taken by the end of the first day for the loss of four casualties.[67] The battalion then cleared the eastern coast towards the Kerupang River and exploited west across on the island along the axis of Hamilton Road towards Timbalai airfield. Mopping up as they went, the troops fought several actions as Japanese opposition stiffened around MacArthur's Road, while mines and booby traps also caused several casualties. The battalion's total losses during the 11-day campaign amounted to one killed and 12 wounded.[68]

By 17 June, Allied planes began operating from Labuan airfield and the 2/43rd Battalion was transferred across Brunei Bay to the mainland, landing at Menumbok and Mempakul, after an amphibious reconnaissance,[69] along with the 2/11th Commando Squadron.[5] Two companies and the battalion headquarters landed at Mempakul on 19 June, and the 2/43rd subsequently advanced up the Klias River, using barges and landing craft,[70] while the 2/32nd Battalion advanced along the Padas River. By late June, the two battalions converged on Beaufort, linking up to the west of Kandu,[71] and between 26 and 29 June 1945, the town was the scene of heavy fighting during which the 2/43rd lost 13 men killed and 30 wounded. The 2/43rd was tasked with taking the high ground to the north of the town around the Woodford Estate and Mount Lawley, and carrying out a flanking attack to the east.[71] For his actions in destroying four Japanese machine-gun positions, Private Tom Starcevich was awarded the Victoria Cross.[72][73] After the capture of Beaufort, the fighting continued in the area as the 2/28th Battalion kept up the pressure on the withdrawing Japanese; for the 2/43rd, though, Beaufort proved to be the last significant action of the war, as hostilities ended in mid-August, following the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.[74][75] The battalion's final campaign of the war cost it 56 casualties, including those killed or wounded on Labuan.[76]

Disbandment

Following the conclusion of hostilities, the 2/43rd Battalion remained on Borneo, around Beaufort, processing Japanese prisoners of war, conducting civic engagement programs, and undertaking vocational education courses in preparation for discharge.[77] The demobilisation process began with personnel being prioritised based on length of service and other factors. A number of drafts were repatriated to Australia over several months. Just before Christmas, the remnants of the battalion, now down to a strength of about 250 personnel, moved to Mempakul, where they relieved the 2/15th Battalion.[78] In January 1946, the battalion's remaining cadre returned to Australia aboard the motor vessel Reynella, reaching Brisbane on 17 January 1946. At Chermside, the battalion's equipment and weapons were accounted for, before the unit was disbanded on 20 February 1946 at Puckapunyal, Victoria.[5]

During the conflict a total of 2,711 men served with the battalion. Its casualties amounted to 186 killed in action, 57 died from wounds, 12 died from other causes, 556 wounded, and 36 captured. Decorations awarded included one Victoria Cross, two Distinguished Service Orders, 13 Military Crosses, three Distinguished Conduct Medals, 24 Military Medals including one Bar, one British Empire Medal, and 45 Mentions in Despatches. In addition, one member of the battalion was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire.[79][80]

Battle honours

The 2/43rd received the following battle honours:[5]

  • Beaufort, Borneo, Busu River, Defence of Alamein Line, Defence of Scarlet Beach, Defence of Tobruk, El Alamein, Finschhafen, Labuan, Pabu, and Tell el Makh Khad.

These honours were subsequently entrusted to the 43rd Battalion in 1961.[11] This unit was re-raised in 1966 as a national service battalion,[81] and through this link the honours are maintained by the Royal South Australia Regiment.[82]

Commanding officers

The following officers commanded the 2/43rd during the war:[5][83]

  • Lieutenant Colonel William Crellin (1940–1941)
  • Lieutenant Colonel William Wain (1941–1943)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Robert Joshua (1943–1944)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Noel Simpson (1944–1945)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Mervyn Jeanes (1945)

Notes

Footnotes
  1. ^ By the start of World War II, the authorised strength of an Australian infantry battalion was 910 men all ranks; later in the war it fell to 803.[1]
  2. ^ The numerical designation of 2nd AIF units was prefixed by "2/", which was used to set them apart from Militia units with corresponding numerical designations which had no prefix.[3]
Citations
  1. ^ a b Palazzo 2004, p. 94.
  2. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, p. 94.
  3. ^ Long 1952, p. 51.
  4. ^ a b Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, p. 1.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l . Second World War, 1939–1945 units. Australian War Memorial. Archived from the original on 15 March 2011. Retrieved 19 January 2011.
  6. ^ Long 1952, p. 52.
  7. ^ Kuring 2004, p. 494.
  8. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, p. 3.
  9. ^ "Crellin, William Wauchope". ACT Memorial. Retrieved 2 July 2016.
  10. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, p. 12.
  11. ^ a b Festberg 1972, p. 101.
  12. ^ Long 1952, pp. 321–323.
  13. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, p. 136.
  14. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 3–15.
  15. ^ Thompson 2010, p. 112.
  16. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 15–20.
  17. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 21–25.
  18. ^ a b Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, p. 286.
  19. ^ Wilmot 1993, p. 198.
  20. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 59–68 & 286.
  21. ^ Wilmot 1993, p. 239.
  22. ^ Wilmot 1993, pp. 281–289.
  23. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, p. 75.
  24. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, p. 245.
  25. ^ Johnston 2002, p. 248.
  26. ^ Converse 2011, p. 101.
  27. ^ Long 1953, p. 531.
  28. ^ Maughan 1966, p. 521.
  29. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 79–92.
  30. ^ Maughan 1966, pp. 552–553.
  31. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 95–98.
  32. ^ Maughan 1966, p. 556.
  33. ^ Maughan 1966, p. 573.
  34. ^ Johnston 2002, p. 87.
  35. ^ Maughan 1966, p. 585.
  36. ^ Coulthard-Clark 1998, pp. 221–222.
  37. ^ Maughan 1966, pp. 592–593.
  38. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 102–111.
  39. ^ a b Johnston 2002, pp. 248–249.
  40. ^ Maughan 1966, p. 728.
  41. ^ Coulthard-Clark 1998, p. 231.
  42. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 128–129 & 286.
  43. ^ Maughan 1966, pp. 726–728.
  44. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, p. 134.
  45. ^ Field 1966, pp. 768–769.
  46. ^ Johnston 2002, p. 140.
  47. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 135–141.
  48. ^ Converse 2011, pp. 148 & 187.
  49. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 140–149.
  50. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 149–152.
  51. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, p. 153.
  52. ^ Dexter 1961, pp. 369–379.
  53. ^ Keogh 1965, pp. 310–311.
  54. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, p. 159.
  55. ^ Johnston 2005, p. 5.
  56. ^ Coates 1999, p. 182.
  57. ^ Tanaka 1980, p. 190.
  58. ^ Maitland 1999, p. 82.
  59. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, p. 175.
  60. ^ Coates 1999, p. 195.
  61. ^ Maitland 1999, p. 87.
  62. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 180–184.
  63. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 184–187.
  64. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 188–190 & 199.
  65. ^ Johnston 2005, p. 14.
  66. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 199–208.
  67. ^ a b Long 1963, p. 467.
  68. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 208–217.
  69. ^ Long 1963, p. 475.
  70. ^ Long 1963, p. 477.
  71. ^ a b Long 1963, p. 479.
  72. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 217–235.
  73. ^ Long 1963, p. 481.
  74. ^ Grey 2008, p. 191.
  75. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 235–239.
  76. ^ Long 1963, p. 501.
  77. ^ Long 1963, pp. 500–501.
  78. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 239–242.
  79. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, pp. 240–245.
  80. ^ Johnston 2002, pp. 247–253.
  81. ^ Combe, Ligertwood & Gilchrist 1992, p. 282.
  82. ^ Festberg 1972, p. 31.
  83. ^ Pratten 2009, p. 328.

References

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  • Combe, Gordon; Ligertwood, Frank; Gilchrist, Tom (1992) [1972]. The Second 43rd Australian Infantry Battalion 1940–1946. Swanbourne, Western Australia: John Burridge Military Antiques. ISBN 978-0-9599506-0-1.
  • Converse, Allan (2011). Armies of Empire: The 9th Australian and 50th British Divisions in Battle 1939–1945. Port Melbourne, Victoria: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-19480-8.
  • Coulthard-Clark, Chris (1998). Where Australians Fought: The Encyclopaedia of Australia's Battles. St Leonards, New South Wales: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-86448-611-2.
  • Dexter, David (1961). The New Guinea Offensives. Australia in the War of 1939–1945. Series 1 – Army. Vol. VI. Canberra, Australian Capital Territory: Australian War Memorial. OCLC 2028994.
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  • Field, A.E. (1966). "Appendix 1: Prisoners of the Germans and Italians" (PDF). In Maughan, Barton (ed.). Tobruk and El Alamein. Australia in the War of 1939–1945. Series 1 – Army. Vol. III. Canberra: Australian War Memorial. pp. 755–822. OCLC 954993.
  • Grey, Jeffrey (2008). A Military History of Australia (3rd ed.). Melbourne, Victoria: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-69791-0.
  • Johnston, Mark (2002). That Magnificent 9th: An Illustrated History of the 9th Australian Division 1940–46. Sydney, New South Wales: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-86508-654-1.
  • Johnston, Mark (2005). The Huon Peninsula 1943–1944. Australians in the Pacific War. Canberra, Australian Capital Territory: Department of Veterans' Affairs. ISBN 1-920720-55-3.
  • Keogh, Eustace (1965). South West Pacific 1941–45. Melbourne, Victoria: Grayflower Publications. OCLC 7185705.
  • Kuring, Ian (2004). Redcoats to Cams: A History of Australian Infantry 1788–2001. Loftus, New South Wales: Australian Military History Publications. ISBN 1-876439-99-8.
  • Long, Gavin (1952). To Benghazi. Australia in the War of 1939–1945. Series 1 – Army. Vol. I (1st ed.). Canberra, Australian Capital Territory: Australian War Memorial. OCLC 18400892.
  • Long, Gavin (1953). Greece, Crete and Syria. Australia in the War of 1939–1945. Series 1 – Army. Vol. II. Canberra, Australian Capital Territory: Australian War Memorial. OCLC 3134080.
  • Long, Gavin (1963). The Final Campaigns. Australia in the War of 1939–1945. Series 1 – Army. Vol. VII. Canberra, Australian Capital Territory: Australian War Memorial. OCLC 1297619.
  • Maitland, Gordon (1999). The Second World War and its Australian Army Battle Honours. East Roseville, New South Wales: Kangaroo Press. ISBN 0-86417-975-8.
  • Maughan, Barton (1966). Tobruk and El Alamein. Australia in the War of 1939–1945. Series 1 – Army. Vol. III. Canberra: Australian War Memorial. OCLC 954993.
  • Palazzo, Albert (2004). "Organising for Jungle Warfare". In Dennis, Peter; Grey, Jeffrey (eds.). . Canberra, Australian Capital Territory: Army History Unit. pp. 86–101. ISBN 978-0-646-43590-9. Archived from the original on 9 March 2016.
  • Pratten, Garth (2009). Australian Battalion Commanders in the Second World War. Port Melbourne, Victoria: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-76345-5.
  • Tanaka, Kengoro (1980). Operations of the Imperial Japanese Armed Forces in the Papua New Guinea Theater During World War II. Tokyo, Japan: Japan Papua New Guinea Goodwill Society. OCLC 9206229.
  • Thompson, Peter (2010). Anzac Fury: The Bloody Battle of Crete 1941. North Sydney, New South Wales: William Heinemann. ISBN 978-1-86471-131-8.
  • Wilmot, Chester (1993) [1944]. Tobruk 1941. Ringwood, Victoria: Penguin Books Australia. ISBN 0-14-017584-9.

Further reading

  • Johnston, Mark (2018). An Australian Band of Brothers: Don Company, Second 43rd Battalion, 9th Division. Sydney: NewSouth. ISBN 9781742235721.

43rd, battalion, australia, other, uses, 43rd, battalion, australia, 43rd, battalion, infantry, battalion, australian, army, raised, july, 1940, south, australia, part, 24th, brigade, battalion, initially, part, division, until, 24th, brigade, allocated, divis. For other uses see 43rd Battalion Australia The 2 43rd Battalion was an infantry battalion of the Australian Army Raised in July 1940 in South Australia as part of the 24th Brigade the battalion was initially part of the 8th Division until the 24th Brigade was re allocated to the 9th Division in late 1940 It was with this formation that the 2 43rd saw service in the Middle East in 1941 1942 taking part in the fighting at Tobruk and in the First and Second Battles of El Alamein It also undertook garrison duties in Syria before returning to Australia early in 1943 to fight against the Japanese in the Pacific 2 43rd BattalionSoldiers from the 2 43rd Battalion patrolling on Labuan June 1945Active1940 1946CountryAustraliaBranchAustralian ArmyTypeInfantrySize 800 900 personnel Note 1 Part of24th Brigade 9th DivisionMotto s Nil desperandum 2 EngagementsWorld War II Siege of Tobruk Second Battle of El Alamein Huon Peninsula campaign Borneo campaignInsigniaUnit colour patch 1940 1942 1942 1946 In 1943 1944 after re organisation and training to prepare for jungle warfare the 2 43rd fought in New Guinea as part of operations to capture Lae and secure the Huon Peninsula After returning to Australia in early 1944 a long period of training followed on the Atherton Tablelands in Queensland before the battalion undertook its final campaign of the war taking part in Allied operations to re take Borneo from the Japanese in June 1945 Following the end of the war the battalion was disbanded in February 1946 One member of the battalion Private Tom Starcevich was awarded the Victoria Cross Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation and training 1 2 North Africa and the Middle East 1 3 New Guinea and Borneo 1 4 Disbandment 2 Battle honours 3 Commanding officers 4 Notes 5 References 6 Further readingHistory EditFormation and training Edit The 2 43rd Battalion Note 2 was raised at Woodside South Australia on 17 July 1940 from Second Australian Imperial Force 2nd AIF volunteers It was one of three infantry battalions assigned to the 24th Brigade 4 the other two being the 2 25th and 2 28th Battalions which was initially assigned to the 8th Division 5 Like other Australian infantry battalions of the time the 2 43rd had an authorised strength of around 900 personnel 6 and was organised into four rifle companies designated A through to D each consisting of three platoons these were supported by a battalion headquarters and a headquarters company with six specialist platoons signals pioneer anti aircraft transport carriers and mortars 7 8 Upon formation the 2 15th was placed under the command of Lieutenant Colonel William Crellin an Australian Staff Corps officer and Duntroon graduate of the Permanent Military Forces who arrived on promotion from major 4 having previously served in World War I with the 14th Battalion 9 The colours initially chosen for the battalion s unit colour patch UCP were chocolate and dark blue in an oval shape inside a circle of grey 10 These were the same as those of the 43rd Battalion a South Australian unit that was part of the First Australian Imperial Force during World War I That unit had been re raised in South Australia in 1921 as a Militia formation eventually adopting the designation of the Hindmarsh Regiment 11 The 2 43rd s unit colour patch was later changed following the unit s involvement in the fighting at Tobruk when it adopted a T shaped UCP consisting of red and white 12 13 The battalion s personnel during the early stages of its existence were volunteers who enlisted within the 4th Military District which encompassed South Australia and Broken Hill New South Wales Many of the commissioned officers and some of the non commissioned officers had previous military experience in the Militia while the bulk of the enlisted personnel had no prior military service Rudimentary individual soldier training was conducted along with sports meets throughout August followed by skill at arms training and range shoots in September while key appointment holders were sent away on various promotion and other specialist training courses In early October the battalion was presented with its battle flag by veterans who had served in the 43rd Battalion during World War I and a short time later it was announced that the 24th Brigade would be transferred to join the 9th Division in the Middle East More intense training including company and battalion level field training was conducted in the weeks that followed In late November the 2 43rd received their Unit colour patches in preparation for deployment and the battalion marched through the centre of Adelaide Finally on 28 December 1940 the men entrained at Oakbank and were transported by rail to Melbourne where they embarked on the transport Mauretania 14 North Africa and the Middle East Edit Escorted by the cruiser HMAS Canberra the Mauretania proceeded along the southern Australian coast as part of a convoy of four other troopships Reaching Fremantle Western Australia on 3 January 1941 a brief shore leave was granted before the convoy set sail across the Indian Ocean From there the convoy berthed at Colombo in Ceylon where further shore leave was granted while arrangements were made to transfer the battalion to another ship the Nevasa for the remainder of the journey to Port Tewfik in Egypt where it disembarked on 2 February 1941 From there the battalion moved by rail to Palestine where the 9th Division was attempting to make good its equipment and training deficiencies while the more experienced divisions the 6th and 7th Divisions led the Australian Army s efforts in Libya and later Greece 15 The 2 43rd subsequently moved into camp at Khasa linking up with another South Australian battalion the 2 27th which had prepared the camp for their arrival 16 2 43rd Bren carriers on manoeuvre in Syria June 1942 In early February acclimatisation training was conducted until the battalion s heavy equipment arrived in camp including Bren carriers and trucks when section level and platoon tactical training began This increased in complexity and progressed to company level exercises culminating in battalion offensive manoeuvres Leave was granted for the soldiers to visit Jerusalem and Tel Aviv This ceased mid March when the battalion was ordered to cross the Suez Canal and take up positions west of the port of Tobruk to complete training prior to relieving the 6th Division in the desert 17 As British troops advanced west pushing the Italians back through Libya during Operation Compass plans were made for the 9th Division to move forward In the end only part of the division advanced past Tobruk and due to lack of transport the 24th Brigade garrisoned the port itself In early April the advance turned into a withdrawal as Axis forces bolstered by the arrival of the Afrika Korps which had landed around Tripoli launched a determined counter attack The 9th Division along with the Australian 18th Brigade from the 7th Division withdrew intact to Tobruk and within a week the advancing Axis forces had placed the strategic port under siege The 2 43rd would remain there manning defences mounting patrols and conducting raids for the next six months 5 18 The battalion s most significant action around Tobruk came on 3 August when A and B Companies attacked a German outpost on the right flank of the Salient designated R7 by the Allied operational staff The attack was part of an attempt to reduce the German held Salient which had developed in the line south west of Bianca In conjunction with the 2 43rd s attack the 2 28th Battalion attacked the left flank around posts S6 and S7 from the north 19 Heavy fighting around R7 resulted in 100 Australian casualties the majority being borne by B Company and the fighting ended in the Australian assault being repulsed followed by a temporary truce for both sides to collect casualties During the truce German sappers led the Australian stretcher bearers through the German laid minefields 20 Finally in October the decision was made to withdraw the Australian garrison from Tobruk by sea By this time the 2 43rd was holding the Bardia Road sector and after two successful raids on Italian positions which resulted in around 75 Italian casualties the battalion was withdrawn 21 As part of the evacuation the 2 43rd was taken aboard the Australian destroyer HMAS Nizam and the Royal Navy s HMS Latona on 17 October 1941 The Australians were replaced by British troops from the 70th Division 5 22 with the 2 43rd handing over to troops from the Durham Light Infantry 23 Casualties for the battalion during the siege of Tobruk amounted to 38 killed in action 13 died of wounds 156 wounded and four captured 24 25 Following its evacuation from Tobruk the 2 43rd was landed in Alexandria after which it moved by buses to Amiriya and then by train crossing the Suez at Kantara and arriving in camp at Kilo 89 in Palestine on 20 October There the battalion was rested and received several drafts of reinforcements mainly consisting of volunteers from Western Australia In mid December after the battalion had moved to Khassa Crellin handed over command of the battalion to Lieutenant Colonel William Wain a former Militia officer who had served with the 7th Battalion during World War I and who came on promotion from the 2 16th Battalion where he had served as battalion second in command After a bitterly cold Christmas in Palestine early in the new year the 9th Division was ordered to move to Syria 26 where it was to join the Allied garrison that had been established there following the brief Syria Lebanon campaign to counter a possible Axis attack on the Allied flank through the Caucasus Mountains 27 The 9th Division was assigned to guard the Tripoli area in the northern sector of the Allied defence system Under this plan the 2 43rd was assigned winter quarters at Arbe 28 and it spent four months in the Lebanese mountains near Jebel Tourbol before moving to Bechmezzine in May Guard duties included manning checkpoints at the mouth of the Chekka Tunnel while brigade level exercises were conducted in the Syrian desert around Forgloss in early June At the end of the month the 9th Division received orders to move back to Egypt as the situation in North Africa became critical for the Allies as the Afrika Korps advancing steadily in the Western Desert 29 A mortar crew from the 2 43rd during the fighting around El Alamein Committed to the fighting around El Alamein in early July the 24th Brigade having recently completed desert training moved to Ruweisat Ridge 30 over 5 miles 8 0 km south of El Alamein situated on the coast For the next four months the 2 43rd formed part of the northern sector of Allied defences within what came to be known as the Alamein box Tasked with harassing Axis forces the 2 43rd s first action came on the night of 7 8 July when D Company launched a very successful raid which caught the German forces in the area by surprise and resulted in the destruction of many vehicles and artillery pieces as well as the re capture of a British Bren carrier that was driven away from German lines 31 32 On 17 July the 2 43rd was involved in actions around Ruin Ridge in conjunction with the 2 32nd Battalion s attack on a position known as Trig 22 on Makh Khad Ridge Advancing astride the Qattara track during the action the 2 43rd captured over 1 000 Italian prisoners 33 for the loss of 81 casualties before withdrawing from Ruin Ridge The 24th Brigade launched a follow up attack on 22 July on Makh Khad Ridge and Ruin Ridge in conjunction with an attack by the 26th Brigade on Tel Eisa 34 this attack saw the 2 43rd having detached one company to support the 2 32nd 35 heavily committed once again A further thrust was put in on 26 27 July with the 2 43rd being tasked with a follow up role which was cancelled after attacks by the 2 28th and the British 69th Infantry Brigade failed 36 instead the battalion only played a supporting role during the attack bringing up ammunition under fire with its carriers and providing supporting fire to the 2 28th Battalion 37 In August and September during a lull in the fighting the battalion undertook patrols into no man s land 38 Casualties during the first phase of the battalion s involvement in the fighting around El Alamein between early July and mid October amounted to 36 killed in action 12 died of wounds two accidentally killed 28 wounded and four captured 39 Later after the British forces were reinforced the Allies launched a counter offensive the Second Battle of El Alamein in late October and early November During the initial phase of the fighting the 9th Division was tasked with drawing Axis forces into the northern sector to allow other elements to prepare for the breakout attempt codenamed Operation Supercharge 40 The 2 43rd Battalion formed part of the divisional reserve during the initial stages of the attack before the 24th Brigade relieved the depleted 26th Brigade 41 adopting positions around the railway barracks dubbed the Blockhouse on 31 October The fighting was so intense that it suffered 108 casualties in a single night on 1 November 1942 including 43 killed and seven missing after being partially overrun 42 43 By early November the tide of the fighting turned and the offensive ultimately wrested control of the fighting in North Africa back towards the Allies Shortly afterwards the 9th Division was withdrawn from battle for redeployment to the Pacific to fight against the Japanese 5 The battalion s casualties in the second phase between 23 October to 5 November 1942 amounted to 45 killed in action 11 died of wounds 96 wounded and 27 captured 39 Those captured ultimately spent the rest of the war in camps in Italy Austria and Germany before being repatriated at war s end 44 45 New Guinea and Borneo Edit The 2 43rd was withdrawn to Khassa in Palestine in December and took part in a divisional parade that month in Gaza before embarking aboard the Queen Mary bound for Australia in January 1943 5 18 The Queen Mary formed part of a large convoy established under Operation Pamphlet to transport the 9th Division back to Australia to fight the Japanese in the Pacific After around a month at sea the division arrived at Fremantle on 18 February and after the Western Australian members disembarked it continued eastwards reaching Sydney on 27 February From there the battalion entrained from Pyrmont and by 1 March 1943 had arrived in Adelaide after which members were granted three weeks leave 46 A welcome home parade through the city streets was held that month watched by a crowd of over 200 000 after which the battalion concentrated at Springbank in Adelaide They entrained for the Atherton Tablelands on 29 March 1943 reaching Kairi on 6 April 1943 They would remain there for the next four months training in preparation for jungle warfare against the Japanese in New Guinea During this time the battalion was converted to the jungle divisional establishment which saw the reduction of its authorised strength to about 800 personnel 1 The number of vehicles allocated to the battalion was also reduced with heavy vehicles being replaced by jeeps The carrier and anti aircraft platoons were removed from the battalion s establishment while a Vickers machine gun platoon was raised and the number of mortars allocated for organic indirect fire support was increased A batch of 338 reinforcements arrived to make up for earlier losses and transfers 47 many of these men came from states other than South Australia resulting in a more diverse demographic within the battalion 48 Troops from the 2 43rd Battalion embark at Cairns 8 August 1943 bound for New Guinea Training teams arrived from the 2 3rd Battalion which had already fought the Japanese in New Guinea and a program of jungle warfare training began progressing from individual fieldcraft to large scale exercises In June amphibious training was carried with the Australians working with the US 532nd Engineer Boat and Shore Regiment around Trinity Beach The following month a new commanding officer Lieutenant Colonel Robert Joshua arrived In early August the battalion moved by road to Cairns On 8 August 1943 the 2 43rd embarked upon HMAS Manoora bound for Milne Bay in New Guinea 49 There the battalion undertook further training in preparation for its debut in the Pacific In mid August it moved by landing craft to Buna It continued training there until 5 September when the 24th Brigade embarked in landing craft for beaches near Lae arriving the day after the main landing as part of follow on forces behind the 20th and 26th Brigades 50 For 11 days the battalion advanced west as part of a two pronged advance on Lae the 7th Division advancing overland from Nadzab while the 9th Division moved along the coast Initially there was only limited opposition from the Japanese as the battalion advanced through the villages of Buso and Apo and the Singaua Plantation 51 The Burep River was crossed but the Australian advance west was slowed by numerous water obstacles and eventually torrential rain which flooded the Busu River At this point Japanese resistance stiffened and after the 24th Brigade forced its way across the Busu the 2 43rd advanced slowly along the coast reaching Wagan to the south of Malahang airfield On 16 September the 7th Division entered Lae with the 2 43rd situated around the Butibum River 5 52 53 The advance on Lae cost the battalion 18 killed and 25 wounded 54 Later in September the Australians undertook an opposed amphibious landing at Scarlet Beach on the Huon Peninsula The 20th Brigade led the 9th Division ashore on 22 September and the 2 43rd Battalion arrived on 30 September as part of reinforcements that were sent when it became clear that the Japanese in the area were stronger than first believed As Japanese opposition to the lodgement increased the 2 43rd relieved the beleaguered 2 17th around Jivevaneng 55 5 kilometres 3 1 mi east of Sattelberg 56 While the 2 17th joined the Australian advance south the 2 43rd established a blocking position around Jivevaneng to guard the western flank and in early October fought off a strong attack by a battalion from the Japanese 80th Infantry Regiment amidst a strong Japanese counterattack around the Finschhafen area 57 Later the battalion pushed north of Scarlet Beach over the Song River to reconnoitre the area around North Hill Pino Hill and Pabu in preparation for an advance towards Bonga and Guisika 58 during which it located several key tracks and junctions 59 60 In late November it fended off an attack around North Hill before taking part in the advance towards Wareo relieving the 2 32nd around Pabu during which Japanese artillery and mortar attacks caused heavy casualties 61 The battalion then advanced towards the Kalueng Lakes and later into the Christmas Hills severing the Bonga Wareo track which the Japanese had been using for resupply In one ambush 37 Japanese were killed around a position the Australians called Horace the Horse 62 By early December having suffered many casualties from disease the battalion returned to the North Hill area to assume defensive positions and a lull followed before it was withdrawn back to Finschhafen for Christmas On 23 January 1944 the 2 43rd embarked upon the Thomas B Corwin reaching Townsville on 31 January Casualties during operations around Finschhafen resulted in 56 killed and 86 wounded 5 63 Troops from the 2 43rd advance with Matilda tank support on Labuan June 1945 After its return to Australia the battalion was granted a 24 day leave period before re grouping in March at Ravenshoe Queensland to begin preparations for the next phase of the war The battalion experienced a high turnover of personnel and by the time it went into combat again in mid 1945 only 141 personnel who had deployed to the Middle East in 1940 remained A new commanding officer Lieutenant Colonel Noel Simpson arrived in May 1944 along with a large batch of other reinforcements replacing many men still suffering malaria from the previous campaign 64 A long training period ensued as there was a degree of uncertainty about the Australian Army s role in future operations in the Pacific after the US military assumed primary responsibility for combat operations in the theatre 65 Nevertheless in the final months of the war the 2 43rd took part in efforts to recapture Labuan and North Borneo as part of Operation Oboe Six 5 Embarking in April 1945 on board the General H W Butner from Townsville the 2 43rd staged out of Morotai Island Now under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Mervyn Jeanes who had taken over from Simpson following his elevation to command the 29th Brigade on Bougainville the 2 43rd spent six weeks on Morotai Island preparing for the Labuan operation Finally in June the battalion embarked on the Manoora and two US Landing Ship Tank vessels LST 640 and LST 585 66 and made the seven day voyage to the island of Labuan where it came ashore unopposed in three waves landing on Brown Beach on the southern tip of the eastern headland to Victoria Harbour Supported by tanks and artillery the 2 43rd pushed inland and after some brief skirmishes 67 advanced along the southern coast on the right of the 2 28th Battalion and then north to secure Labuan airfield which was taken by the end of the first day for the loss of four casualties 67 The battalion then cleared the eastern coast towards the Kerupang River and exploited west across on the island along the axis of Hamilton Road towards Timbalai airfield Mopping up as they went the troops fought several actions as Japanese opposition stiffened around MacArthur s Road while mines and booby traps also caused several casualties The battalion s total losses during the 11 day campaign amounted to one killed and 12 wounded 68 By 17 June Allied planes began operating from Labuan airfield and the 2 43rd Battalion was transferred across Brunei Bay to the mainland landing at Menumbok and Mempakul after an amphibious reconnaissance 69 along with the 2 11th Commando Squadron 5 Two companies and the battalion headquarters landed at Mempakul on 19 June and the 2 43rd subsequently advanced up the Klias River using barges and landing craft 70 while the 2 32nd Battalion advanced along the Padas River By late June the two battalions converged on Beaufort linking up to the west of Kandu 71 and between 26 and 29 June 1945 the town was the scene of heavy fighting during which the 2 43rd lost 13 men killed and 30 wounded The 2 43rd was tasked with taking the high ground to the north of the town around the Woodford Estate and Mount Lawley and carrying out a flanking attack to the east 71 For his actions in destroying four Japanese machine gun positions Private Tom Starcevich was awarded the Victoria Cross 72 73 After the capture of Beaufort the fighting continued in the area as the 2 28th Battalion kept up the pressure on the withdrawing Japanese for the 2 43rd though Beaufort proved to be the last significant action of the war as hostilities ended in mid August following the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki 74 75 The battalion s final campaign of the war cost it 56 casualties including those killed or wounded on Labuan 76 Disbandment Edit Following the conclusion of hostilities the 2 43rd Battalion remained on Borneo around Beaufort processing Japanese prisoners of war conducting civic engagement programs and undertaking vocational education courses in preparation for discharge 77 The demobilisation process began with personnel being prioritised based on length of service and other factors A number of drafts were repatriated to Australia over several months Just before Christmas the remnants of the battalion now down to a strength of about 250 personnel moved to Mempakul where they relieved the 2 15th Battalion 78 In January 1946 the battalion s remaining cadre returned to Australia aboard the motor vessel Reynella reaching Brisbane on 17 January 1946 At Chermside the battalion s equipment and weapons were accounted for before the unit was disbanded on 20 February 1946 at Puckapunyal Victoria 5 During the conflict a total of 2 711 men served with the battalion Its casualties amounted to 186 killed in action 57 died from wounds 12 died from other causes 556 wounded and 36 captured Decorations awarded included one Victoria Cross two Distinguished Service Orders 13 Military Crosses three Distinguished Conduct Medals 24 Military Medals including one Bar one British Empire Medal and 45 Mentions in Despatches In addition one member of the battalion was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire 79 80 Battle honours EditThe 2 43rd received the following battle honours 5 Beaufort Borneo Busu River Defence of Alamein Line Defence of Scarlet Beach Defence of Tobruk El Alamein Finschhafen Labuan Pabu and Tell el Makh Khad These honours were subsequently entrusted to the 43rd Battalion in 1961 11 This unit was re raised in 1966 as a national service battalion 81 and through this link the honours are maintained by the Royal South Australia Regiment 82 Commanding officers EditThe following officers commanded the 2 43rd during the war 5 83 Lieutenant Colonel William Crellin 1940 1941 Lieutenant Colonel William Wain 1941 1943 Lieutenant Colonel Robert Joshua 1943 1944 Lieutenant Colonel Noel Simpson 1944 1945 Lieutenant Colonel Mervyn Jeanes 1945 Notes EditFootnotes By the start of World War II the authorised strength of an Australian infantry battalion was 910 men all ranks later in the war it fell to 803 1 The numerical designation of 2nd AIF units was prefixed by 2 which was used to set them apart from Militia units with corresponding numerical designations which had no prefix 3 Citations a b Palazzo 2004 p 94 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 p 94 Long 1952 p 51 a b Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 p 1 a b c d e f g h i j k l 2 43rd Battalion Second World War 1939 1945 units Australian War Memorial Archived from the original on 15 March 2011 Retrieved 19 January 2011 Long 1952 p 52 Kuring 2004 p 494 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 p 3 Crellin William Wauchope ACT Memorial Retrieved 2 July 2016 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 p 12 a b Festberg 1972 p 101 Long 1952 pp 321 323 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 p 136 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 3 15 Thompson 2010 p 112 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 15 20 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 21 25 a b Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 p 286 Wilmot 1993 p 198 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 59 68 amp 286 Wilmot 1993 p 239 Wilmot 1993 pp 281 289 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 p 75 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 p 245 Johnston 2002 p 248 Converse 2011 p 101 Long 1953 p 531 Maughan 1966 p 521 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 79 92 Maughan 1966 pp 552 553 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 95 98 Maughan 1966 p 556 Maughan 1966 p 573 Johnston 2002 p 87 Maughan 1966 p 585 Coulthard Clark 1998 pp 221 222 Maughan 1966 pp 592 593 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 102 111 a b Johnston 2002 pp 248 249 Maughan 1966 p 728 Coulthard Clark 1998 p 231 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 128 129 amp 286 Maughan 1966 pp 726 728 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 p 134 Field 1966 pp 768 769 Johnston 2002 p 140 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 135 141 Converse 2011 pp 148 amp 187 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 140 149 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 149 152 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 p 153 Dexter 1961 pp 369 379 Keogh 1965 pp 310 311 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 p 159 Johnston 2005 p 5 Coates 1999 p 182 Tanaka 1980 p 190 Maitland 1999 p 82 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 p 175 Coates 1999 p 195 Maitland 1999 p 87 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 180 184 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 184 187 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 188 190 amp 199 Johnston 2005 p 14 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 199 208 a b Long 1963 p 467 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 208 217 Long 1963 p 475 Long 1963 p 477 a b Long 1963 p 479 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 217 235 Long 1963 p 481 Grey 2008 p 191 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 235 239 Long 1963 p 501 Long 1963 pp 500 501 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 239 242 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 pp 240 245 Johnston 2002 pp 247 253 Combe Ligertwood amp Gilchrist 1992 p 282 Festberg 1972 p 31 Pratten 2009 p 328 References EditCoates John 1999 Bravery Above Blunder The 9th Australian Division at Finschhafen Sattelberg and Sio South Melbourne Victoria Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 550837 8 Combe Gordon Ligertwood Frank Gilchrist Tom 1992 1972 The Second 43rd Australian Infantry Battalion 1940 1946 Swanbourne Western Australia John Burridge Military Antiques ISBN 978 0 9599506 0 1 Converse Allan 2011 Armies of Empire The 9th Australian and 50th British Divisions in Battle 1939 1945 Port Melbourne Victoria Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 19480 8 Coulthard Clark Chris 1998 Where Australians Fought The Encyclopaedia of Australia s Battles St Leonards New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 1 86448 611 2 Dexter David 1961 The New Guinea Offensives Australia in the War of 1939 1945 Series 1 Army Vol VI Canberra Australian Capital Territory Australian War Memorial OCLC 2028994 Festberg Alfred 1972 The Lineage of the Australian Army Melbourne Victoria Allara Publishing ISBN 978 0 85887 024 6 Field A E 1966 Appendix 1 Prisoners of the Germans and Italians PDF In Maughan Barton ed Tobruk and El Alamein Australia in the War of 1939 1945 Series 1 Army Vol III Canberra Australian War Memorial pp 755 822 OCLC 954993 Grey Jeffrey 2008 A Military History of Australia 3rd ed Melbourne Victoria Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 69791 0 Johnston Mark 2002 That Magnificent 9th An Illustrated History of the 9th Australian Division 1940 46 Sydney New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 1 86508 654 1 Johnston Mark 2005 The Huon Peninsula 1943 1944 Australians in the Pacific War Canberra Australian Capital Territory Department of Veterans Affairs ISBN 1 920720 55 3 Keogh Eustace 1965 South West Pacific 1941 45 Melbourne Victoria Grayflower Publications OCLC 7185705 Kuring Ian 2004 Redcoats to Cams A History of Australian Infantry 1788 2001 Loftus New South Wales Australian Military History Publications ISBN 1 876439 99 8 Long Gavin 1952 To Benghazi Australia in the War of 1939 1945 Series 1 Army Vol I 1st ed Canberra Australian Capital Territory Australian War Memorial OCLC 18400892 Long Gavin 1953 Greece Crete and Syria Australia in the War of 1939 1945 Series 1 Army Vol II Canberra Australian Capital Territory Australian War Memorial OCLC 3134080 Long Gavin 1963 The Final Campaigns Australia in the War of 1939 1945 Series 1 Army Vol VII Canberra Australian Capital Territory Australian War Memorial OCLC 1297619 Maitland Gordon 1999 The Second World War and its Australian Army Battle Honours East Roseville New South Wales Kangaroo Press ISBN 0 86417 975 8 Maughan Barton 1966 Tobruk and El Alamein Australia in the War of 1939 1945 Series 1 Army Vol III Canberra Australian War Memorial OCLC 954993 Palazzo Albert 2004 Organising for Jungle Warfare In Dennis Peter Grey Jeffrey eds The Foundations of Victory The Pacific War 1943 1944 Canberra Australian Capital Territory Army History Unit pp 86 101 ISBN 978 0 646 43590 9 Archived from the original on 9 March 2016 Pratten Garth 2009 Australian Battalion Commanders in the Second World War Port Melbourne Victoria Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 76345 5 Tanaka Kengoro 1980 Operations of the Imperial Japanese Armed Forces in the Papua New Guinea Theater During World War II Tokyo Japan Japan Papua New Guinea Goodwill Society OCLC 9206229 Thompson Peter 2010 Anzac Fury The Bloody Battle of Crete 1941 North Sydney New South Wales William Heinemann ISBN 978 1 86471 131 8 Wilmot Chester 1993 1944 Tobruk 1941 Ringwood Victoria Penguin Books Australia ISBN 0 14 017584 9 Further reading EditJohnston Mark 2018 An Australian Band of Brothers Don Company Second 43rd Battalion 9th Division Sydney NewSouth ISBN 9781742235721 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2 43rd Battalion Australia amp oldid 1115452559, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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