KITSON, Henry, Private, 12th Battalion

Rank: Private

Regimental Number: 4227

Place of Birth: Perth Western Australia

Address: Rocklands, Goomalling, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Sister, Mrs Edith Sumpton

Enlistment Date: 7 October 1915

Unit Name: 12th Battalion, 13th Reinforcement

Age embarkation: 28

Marital Status: Single

Occupation: Saddler

Date of Death: -

Place of Burial: -

Links: -


KIRTON, Gervase Roland, Private, Australian Stationary Hospital 2

Rank: Private

Regimental Number: 1240

Place of Birth: Ipswich, England

Address: 88 High Street, Fremantle, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Wife, Mrs Elizabeth Whittaker Ann Kirton

Enlistment Date: 11 September 1914

Unit Name: Australian Stationary Hospital 2, Reinforcement 1

Age embarkation: 33

Marital Status: Married

Occupation: Chemist


History

There are three Kirtons on the East Fremantle Roll of Honour: Alec, his brother Gervase (known as Roland), and their sister Dora, the only woman on the Roll of Honour.

They were the children of chemist and former brickmaker, Richard Gervase Kirton and his wife Mary Anne nee Mann. Gervase and Dora were born in England before the family came to Western Australia in the late 1880s. The family initially lived in Glen Iris, near Bunbury, where Alec was born in 1893 and where Richard established The Kirton Patent Pottery Co in 1902. In 1904 they moved up to Belmont where Richard became a town councillor and opened his pottery on a new site on Grandstand Road, near the river, in July 1904. 

Though it was the first pottery in Perth and Richard made a diverse range of roofing tiles, terracotta horticultural pots and agricultural pipes, the pottery quietly went into liquidation in February 1906. Another pottery took it over and, in the 1930s, became Brisbane & Wunderlich. Today the kilns and chimneys, dating from Kirton Patent Pottery Co’s time, are heritage-listed; a significant feature of Belmont’s history.

After the failure of his pottery Richard turned his hand back to chemistry, took up premises in Central Chambers, High Street, Fremantle, and moved his family to East Fremantle. 

Alec (20) was a bank clerk and still living at home when he enlisted at the outbreak of war in August 1914. Assigned to the 11th Battalion, Alec survived the landing at Gallipoli but a dilated heart saw him evacuated to the 1st Australian Stationary Hospital in Mudros on Lemnos Island, Greece, on 1 June 1915, and on to Alexandria where he was admitted to hospital on 6 June. In August 1915, instead of being sent back to Gallipoli, he was sent for training at the Imperial School of Instruction (for Officers) in Zeitoun, Egypt. He did very well and, on 9 January 1916, was promoted to regimental quartermaster sergeant. 

Six weeks later though, on 18 February, Alec was fatally injured in a bomb blast at the school, and died shortly afterwards, aged just 21.

Roland (33), an assistant chemist, enlisted a few weeks after Alec, in September 1914. He, his wife Elizabeth, and their two small children Roma and Gervase, lived in Menzies, but he enlisted in Perth in September 1914. He was assigned to the Australian Army Medical Corps and arrived in Egypt in late December 1915, a few weeks after Alec. He served with the 2nd Australian Stationary Hospital (2ASH) at Mena Camp outside Cairo, where Alec was also camped. They would have seen each other around camp and made their farewells in March 1915, when the 11th Battalion was sent to wait in Mudros Harbour at Lemnos for the Gallipoli campaign to begin. 

Back home, on 18 April, Roland’s tiny daughter Roma (3) died in Menzies Hospital. He would have received the news shortly thereafter, but there was no time to mourn her loss for, on 19 April, Gervase and the 2ASH packed up and moved to Mudros, arriving just as the troops were leaving Lemnos for Gallipoli. There, he dealt with the influx of sick and wounded from Gallipoli while his wife, Elizabeth, and son, Gervase (2), moved down to 121 George Street, East Fremantle, to be near the rest of his family. In May, some comfort would have come from seeing Alec for the few days he was at 1AGH, nearby.

After the Gallipoli campaign dragged to a close Roland was sent to Tel-el-Kebir, Egypt, where he heard his brother Alec had been killed in the bomb blast at Zeitoun. He became ill and was seriously depressed; his nerves had been shattered and he was unable to stop fretting about his family. After he was diagnosed with debility, another name for shell shock, a line was drawn under his war service. He was assigned nursing and mess duties on the Runic and returned to Australia in May 1916. He was discharged on 4 July. 

Dora (31) enlisted in July 1915. She had trained for three and a half years at Fremantle Public Hospital, qualifying in 1911 with her Medical and Surgical Certificates, and subsequently worked as matron at a private hospital.

She initially nursed on Hospital Transport Ships, nursing the sick and wounded returning to Australia from the front. Later, she served in hospitals in Egypt, convalescent homes in England and in tent hospitals and casualty clearing stations in on the Western Front. She fell ill with influenza in December 1916 in England, but swiftly recovered and resumed duty.

In France on 9 July 1918 she suffered burns to her face and hair when a small (methylated) spirit stove exploded as she lit it. She recovered, and resumed duty on 6 August. Three weeks later she was posted to the 57th Casualty Clearing Station, and returned to the 25AGH on 22 September where she was soon after promoted to sister.

In late-November 1918, in France, Dora was hospitalised with a second bout of influenza at Wimereux, where she was also subsequently diagnosed with debility. With the Armistice having been signed and the war over, she was sent to the newly-opened nurses’ convalescent home, the superb Villa Casa del Mare, Cabbe Roquebrune, for Christmas 1918. After this well-earned rest, Dora rejoined her unit on 6 January 1919.

Dora spent the majority of 1919 nursing in England, but took the opportunity to attend a cooking course at the British School of Cookery in Regent Street, London, between 1 April and 23 June, and enjoyed another month’s leave in England from mid-August. She returned to Australia on the Benalla in November 1919, choosing to be demobilized in Victoria, where she was finally discharged on 21 June 1920.

The next year, in NSW, Dora married wool classer Cecil Alcorn, from Jerrys Plain’s, NSW. Seven years her junior, Cecil had served with the 30th Battalion, and studied to become a commissioned lieutenant. He lost his right leg after being wounded in action in October 1918, and was awarded a Belgian Croix de Guerre for conspicuous services in the field. Cecil became the head teacher in the Technical Education Branch’s Sheep and Wool Department and, for most of the rest of Cecil’s life, they lived in a gracious Federation home in Summer Hill, just outside of Sydney. 

Dora never returned to live in Western Australia. Cecil retired in 1953 and died in Summer Hill in 1957, aged 66. Dora survived Cecil by seven years and died in Artarmon, NSW, in 1965, aged 81. 

Roland never returned to live in Western Australia either. After his return in 1916 he donned khakis again in January 1918, and worked as a recruiting organiser but, after the war, he and his wife Elizabeth, son Gervase, and their baby daughter Loma, born in June 1918, moved to Townsville, Queensland, where he died in 1976, aged 95. 

Researched and written by Shannon Lovelady for www.streetsofeastfreo


KIRTON, Alexander, Lance Sergeant, 11th Battalion

Rank: Lance Sergeant

Regimental Number: 450

Place of Birth: Bunbury, Western Australia

Address: Hill Street, East Fremantle, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Father, Richard G Kirton

Enlistment Date: 14 August 1914

Unit Name: 11th Battalion, D Company

Age embarkation: 20

Marital Status: Single

Occupation: Bank clerk

Date of Death: 18 February 1916

Place of Burial: Cairo War Memorial Cemetery (Row D, Grave No. 321), Egypt


History


There are three Kirtons on the East Fremantle Roll of Honour: Alec, his brother Gervase (known as Roland), and their sister Dora, the only woman on the Roll of Honour.

They were the children of chemist and former brickmaker, Richard Gervase Kirton and his wife Mary Anne nee Mann. Gervase and Dora were born in England before the family came to Western Australia in the late 1880s. The family initially lived in Glen Iris, near Bunbury, where Alec was born in 1893 and where Richard established The Kirton Patent Pottery Co in 1902. In 1904 they moved up to Belmont where Richard became a town councillor and opened his pottery on a new site on Grandstand Road, near the river, in July 1904. 

Though it was the first pottery in Perth and Richard made a diverse range of roofing tiles, terracotta horticultural pots and agricultural pipes, the pottery quietly went into liquidation in February 1906. Another pottery took it over and, in the 1930s, became Brisbane & Wunderlich. Today the kilns and chimneys, dating from Kirton Patent Pottery Co’s time, are heritage-listed; a significant feature of Belmont’s history.

After the failure of his pottery Richard turned his hand back to chemistry, took up premises in Central Chambers, High Street, Fremantle, and moved his family to East Fremantle. 

Alec (20) was a bank clerk and still living at home when he enlisted at the outbreak of war in August 1914. Assigned to the 11th Battalion, Alec survived the landing at Gallipoli but a dilated heart saw him evacuated to the 1st Australian Stationary Hospital in Mudros on Lemnos Island, Greece, on 1 June 1915, and on to Alexandria where he was admitted to hospital on 6 June. In August 1915, instead of being sent back to Gallipoli, he was sent for training at the Imperial School of Instruction (for Officers) in Zeitoun, Egypt. He did very well and, on 9 January 1916, was promoted to regimental quartermaster sergeant. 

Six weeks later though, on 18 February, Alec was fatally injured in a bomb blast at the school, and died shortly afterwards, aged just 21.

Roland (33), an assistant chemist, enlisted a few weeks after Alec, in September 1914. He, his wife Elizabeth, and their two small children Roma and Gervase, lived in Menzies, but he enlisted in Perth in September 1914. He was assigned to the Australian Army Medical Corps and arrived in Egypt in late December 1915, a few weeks after Alec. He served with the 2nd Australian Stationary Hospital (2ASH) at Mena Camp outside Cairo, where Alec was also camped. They would have seen each other around camp and made their farewells in March 1915, when the 11th Battalion was sent to wait in Mudros Harbour at Lemnos for the Gallipoli campaign to begin. 

Back home, on 18 April, Roland’s tiny daughter Roma (3) died in Menzies Hospital. He would have received the news shortly thereafter, but there was no time to mourn her loss for, on 19 April, Gervase and the 2ASH packed up and moved to Mudros, arriving just as the troops were leaving Lemnos for Gallipoli. There, he dealt with the influx of sick and wounded from Gallipoli while his wife, Elizabeth, and son, Gervase (2), moved down to 121 George Street, East Fremantle, to be near the rest of his family. In May, some comfort would have come from seeing Alec for the few days he was at 1AGH, nearby.

After the Gallipoli campaign dragged to a close Roland was sent to Tel-el-Kebir, Egypt, where he heard his brother Alec had been killed in the bomb blast at Zeitoun. He became ill and was seriously depressed; his nerves had been shattered and he was unable to stop fretting about his family. After he was diagnosed with debility, another name for shell shock, a line was drawn under his war service. He was assigned nursing and mess duties on the Runic and returned to Australia in May 1916. He was discharged on 4 July. 

Dora (31) enlisted in July 1915. She had trained for three and a half years at Fremantle Public Hospital, qualifying in 1911 with her Medical and Surgical Certificates, and subsequently worked as matron at a private hospital.

She initially nursed on Hospital Transport Ships, nursing the sick and wounded returning to Australia from the front. Later, she served in hospitals in Egypt, convalescent homes in England and in tent hospitals and casualty clearing stations in on the Western Front. She fell ill with influenza in December 1916 in England, but swiftly recovered and resumed duty.

In France on 9 July 1918 she suffered burns to her face and hair when a small (methylated) spirit stove exploded as she lit it. She recovered, and resumed duty on 6 August. Three weeks later she was posted to the 57th Casualty Clearing Station, and returned to the 25AGH on 22 September where she was soon after promoted to sister.

In late-November 1918, in France, Dora was hospitalised with a second bout of influenza at Wimereux, where she was also subsequently diagnosed with debility. With the Armistice having been signed and the war over, she was sent to the newly-opened nurses’ convalescent home, the superb Villa Casa del Mare, Cabbe Roquebrune, for Christmas 1918. After this well-earned rest, Dora rejoined her unit on 6 January 1919.

Dora spent the majority of 1919 nursing in England, but took the opportunity to attend a cooking course at the British School of Cookery in Regent Street, London, between 1 April and 23 June, and enjoyed another month’s leave in England from mid-August. She returned to Australia on the Benalla in November 1919, choosing to be demobilized in Victoria, where she was finally discharged on 21 June 1920.

The next year, in NSW, Dora married wool classer Cecil Alcorn, from Jerrys Plain’s, NSW. Seven years her junior, Cecil had served with the 30th Battalion, and studied to become a commissioned lieutenant. He lost his right leg after being wounded in action in October 1918, and was awarded a Belgian Croix de Guerre for conspicuous services in the field. Cecil became the head teacher in the Technical Education Branch’s Sheep and Wool Department and, for most of the rest of Cecil’s life, they lived in a gracious Federation home in Summer Hill, just outside of Sydney. 

Dora never returned to live in Western Australia. Cecil retired in 1953 and died in Summer Hill in 1957, aged 66. Dora survived Cecil by seven years and died in Artarmon, NSW, in 1965, aged 81. 

Roland never returned to live in Western Australia either. After his return in 1916 he donned khakis again in January 1918, and worked as a recruiting organiser but, after the war, he and his wife Elizabeth, son Gervase, and their baby daughter Loma, born in June 1918, moved to Townsville, Queensland, where he died in 1976, aged 95. 

Researched and written by Shannon Lovelady for www.streetsofeastfreo


JOSE, John Joseph, Lance Corporal, 11th Battalion

Rank: Lance Corporal

Regimental Number: 313

Place of Birth: Kerang, Victoria

Address: 20 Moir Street, Perth, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Mrs Ivy Ada Jose

Enlistment Date: 2 September 1914

Unit Name: 11th Battalion, C Company

Age embarkation: 30

Marital Status: Married

Occupation: Wood machinist

Date of Death: 24 January 1951

Place of Burial: Karrakatta Cemetery

Links: -


JONES, Walter Stanley, Private, 28th Battalion

Rank: Private

Regimental Number: 5031

Place of Birth: Wandong, Victoria

Address: Lion Mill, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Mother, Mrs Henrietta Jones

Enlistment Date: 6 March 1916

Unit Name: 28th Battalion, 13th Reinforcement

Age embarkation: 18

Marital Status: Single

Occupation: Timber hewer

Date of Death: 29 March 1962

Place of Burial: Port Hedland Old Cemetery

Links: -


JONES, Edgar Arthur, Private, 10th Light Horse Regiment

Rank: Private

Regimental Number: 3187

Place of Birth: Quorn, South Australia

Address: Perth, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Father, Joseph Jones

Enlistment Date: 7 August 1916

Unit Name: 10th Light Horse Regiment, 25th Reinforcement

Age embarkation: 30

Marital Status: Single

Occupation: Salesman

Date of Death: -

Place of Burial: -

Links: -


JOHNSTON, William James, Sapper, 11th Battalion

Rank: Sapper

Regimental Number: 5114

Place of Birth: -

Address: Perth, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Brother, G Johnston

Enlistment Date: 4 November 1915

Unit Name: 11th Battalion, July 1916 Reinforcements

Age embarkation: 40

Marital Status: Single

Occupation: Carpenter/Pearler

Date of Death: -

Place of Burial: -

Links: -


JOHNSTON, Bruce, Private, 28th Battalion

Rank: Private

Regimental Number: 4452

Place of Birth: Fremantle Western Australia

Address: Perth, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Father, William Bruce Johnson

Enlistment Date: 1 February 1916

Unit Name: 28th Battalion, 11th Reinforcement

Age embarkation: 18

Marital Status: Single

Occupation: Clerk

Date of Death: 10 July 1981

Cause of Death: -

Place of Burial: -

Links: -


JOHNSON, Walter Benjamin, Private, 28th Battalion

Rank: Private

Regimental Number: 1957

Place of Birth: Port Adelaide, South Australia

Address: 280 High Street, Fremantle, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Father, William Daniel Johnson

Enlistment Date: 28 June 1915

Unit Name: 28th Battalion, 3rd Reinforcement

Age embarkation: 31

Marital Status: Single

Occupation: Labourer

Date of Death: 3 May 1917

Place of Burial: No known grave

Links: -


JOHNSON, T E

Research is underway

Rank:

Regimental Number:

Place of Birth:

Address:

Next of Kin:

Enlistment Date:

Unit Name:

Age embarkation:

Marital Status:

Occupation:

Date of Death:

Cause of Death: -

Place of Burial: -

Links: -


JOHNSON, Ralph Percival, Private, 51st Battalion

Rank: Private

Regimental Number: 2665

Place of Birth: Sydney New South Wales

Address: 55 Duke Street, East Fremantle, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Mother, Mrs Lizzie Bennett Johnson

Enlistment Date: 21 June 1916

Unit Name: 51st Battalion, 6th Reinforcement

Age embarkation: 27

Marital Status: Single

Occupation: Labourer

Date of Death: -

Place of Burial: -

Fate: Returned to Australia 21 June 1919

Links: -


JOHNSON, Frederick Thomas, Bombardier, Howitzer Brigade 23

Rank: Bombardier

Regimental Number: 22480

Place of Birth: Fremantle Western Australia

Address: Falkirk Avenue, Maylands, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Wife, Mrs Hannah Johnson

Enlistment Date: 7 January 1916

Unit Name: Howitzer Brigade 23, Brigade Ammunition Column

Age embarkation: 27

Marital Status: Married

Occupation: Railway employee

Date of Death: -

Place of Burial: -

Fate: Returned to Australia 20 December 1917

Links: -


JANES, George, Private, 51st Battalion

Rank: Private

Regimental Number: 3485

Place of Birth: Geraldton Western Australia

Address: 10 Point Street, Fremantle, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Wife, Mrs Harriett Mary Janes

Enlistment Date: 31 October 1916

Unit Name: 51st Battalion, 9th Reinforcement

Age embarkation: 34

Marital Status: Married

Occupation: Cabinetmaker

Date of Death: -

Place of Burial: -

Fate: Returned to Australia 1 February 1918

Links: -


IBBS, Ernest George, Private, 44th Battalion

Rank: Private

Regimental Number: 3497

Place of Birth: Biggleswade, England

Address: East Fremantle, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Wife, Mrs Edyth Ibbs

Enlistment Date: 18 July 1916

Unit Name: 44th Battalion, 9th Reinforcement

Age embarkation: 25

Marital Status: Married

Occupation: Farmer

Date of Death: Fate: Returned to Australia 21 June 1919

Place of Burial: -

Links: -


HYDE, Harry, Private, 16th Battalion

Rank: Private

Regimental Number: 5326

Place of Birth: Northam, Western Australia

Address: Cottesloe, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Daughter, Gladys Hyde c/o Mrs C Laurens

Enlistment Date: 4 January 1916

Unit Name: 16th Battalion, 17th Reinforcement

Age embarkation: 26

Marital Status: Widower

Occupation: Labourer

Date of Death:

Place of Burial: -

Links: -


HUNTER, Ralph, Private, 28th Battalion

Rank: Private

Regimental Number: 446

Place of Birth: Newcastle New South Wales

Address: Preston Point Road, East Fremantle, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Father, James Hunter

Enlistment Date: 8 March 1915

Unit Name: 28th Battalion, C Company

Age embarkation: 24

Marital Status: Single

Occupation: Tram driver

Date of Death:

Place of Burial: -

Links: -


HUNTER, James, 2nd Corporal, Railway Unit

Rank: 2nd Corporal

Regimental Number: 1086

Place of Birth: Magill, South Australia

Address: 217 Piccadilly Street(WW1), Kalgoorlie, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Wife, Mrs Ida L Hunter

Enlistment Date: 27 January 1917

Unit Name: Railway Unit, Section 3

Age embarkation: 35

Marital Status: Married

Occupation: Locomotive foreman

Date of Death:

Place of Burial: -

Links: -


HULBERT, Sydney Alfred, Private, 44th Battalion

Rank: Private

Regimental Number: 282

Place of Birth: London England

Address: P&O Hotel, Fremantle, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Cousin, Mrs Sarah Elizabeth McAuley

Enlistment Date: 2 March 1916

Unit Name: 44th Battalion, B Company

Age embarkation: 38

Marital Status: Married

Occupation: Barman

Date of Death: -

Place of Burial: -

Links: -


HUDSON, Norman George, Private, 5th Pioneer Battalion

Rank: Private

Regimental Number: 3061

Place of Birth: Camperdown, Victoria

Address: East Fremantle, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Mother, Mrs A Judson

Enlistment Date: 22 March 1916

Unit Name: 5th Pioneer Battalion, Reinforcement 7

Age embarkation: 36

Marital Status: Single

Occupation: Wheelwright

Date of Death:

Place of Burial: -

Links: -


HOWE, Alexander Wilkinson, Private, 44th Battalion

Rank: Private

Regimental Number: 3291

Place of Birth: Albany Western Australia

Address: East Fremantle, Western Australia

Next of Kin: Wife, Mrs Annie Veronica Howe

Enlistment Date: 19 February 1917

Unit Name: 44th Battalion, 8th Reinforcement

Age embarkation: 29

Marital Status: Married

Occupation: Labourer

Date of Death: 28 November 1962

Place of Burial: Fremantle Cemetery

Links: -