Legacy and the Gallipoli Lone Pine

Similar documents
State Funeral for Alec Campbell

ANZAC DAY ON THE WESTERN FRONT

EMU PARK SOLDIERS OF WORLD WAR I THE GREAT WAR. FROM EMU PARK and SHIRE OF LIVINGSTONE

The Battle of Gallipoli was fought from April to December, 1915.

1st battle of the marne By: Jacob

Australians on the Western Front: A special display commemorating Australians in France and Belgium in the First World War

11/6/2018. The Battle of the Somme. 1 July Darkest Day in the History of the British Army. 1 July 18 November 1916

Booklet Number 42 ALEXANDER EASTON. The 9th Battalion AIF marching through Queen Street, Brisbane, 1914.

9/28/2015. The Gallipoli Campaign (Dardanelles Campaign) Including the Armenian Genocide. February December 1915

ANZAC Centenary and ANZAC Day

3762 PRIVATE S. CLARKE 49TH BN. AUSTRALIAN INF. 21ST JUNE,

3861 PRIVATE C. A. JENNINGS 32ND BN. AUSTRALIAN INF. 22ND MARCH,

Frederick George FORD

ANZAC Centenary and ANZAC Day

The word ANZAC stands for Australian and New Zealand Army Corps.

HINXHILL. The Great War

FEDERATION TIMELINE DATES

HIGHLIGHTS AND INCLUSIONS

Why did this building inspire Victorians to pay for and build it in ?

ARMY MUSEUM OF TASMANIA. Collection Guide AMT 5. Major Augustus Oliver Woods Collection. ARMY MUSEUM OF TASMANIA COLLECTION GUIDE AMT 5 1 of 6

Section 2. Objectives

TURKISH AUSTRALIAN RAPPROCHEMENT IN LIGHT OF THE GALLIPOLI CAMPAIGN

IST battlefields exhibition 2010

AUSTRALIA. Kangaroo and Map Watermarked Wide Crown and Wide "A" /2P 1P 2P 2 1/2P 3P 4P 5P 6P 9P 1SH 2SH 5SH 10SH

Experience the Front Line with European Highlights

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. World War I on Many Fronts

Remembrance Day on the Western Front

GALLIPOLI THE WICKHAM CONNECTION

The Price of Freedom is Eternal Vigilance. ANZAC Day What is ANZAC Day? ANZAC Day 25 April is


ANZAC Memorial Hyde Park June 2013

DOUGLAS DUNMORE CAMPBELL

Booklet Number 145 ALAN GORDON CORRIE

Trentham Military Camp

2009 runner-up Northern Territory. Samuel van den Nieuwenhof Darwin High School

A New Kind of War. Chapter 11 Section 2

RSL Hellenic Sub-Branch RETURNED SOLDIER APOSTRATOS

The Alliance System. Pre-WWI. During WWI ENTENTE ALLIANCE. Russia Serbia France. Austria-Hungary Germany. US Canada. Italy CENTRAL POWERS

With Lord Ramsbotham & Cicely Taylor 17th 21st September 2018

JAMES WATT

Anzac Day at Villers Bretonneux

ALKHAM. The Great War ( )

Background. The Allies were stuck in a stalemate in WW1 with the Central powers and were looking for different strategies

5117 PRIVATE H. T. STRATFORD 31ST BN. AUSTRALIAN INF. 4TH MARCH,

29844 PRIVATE A. J. NICOLSON N.Z. OTAGO REGT. 14TH JULY,

Anzac Day 25 th April 2014

The North African Campaign. War in the Desert Expands 12 July May 1943

3/29/2017. The North African Campaign. War in the Desert Expands 12 July May The Battle of El Alamein. Torch.

Private Reginald John Paul (Regimental Number 731) is interred in Hawthorn Ridge Cemetery No. 2, Auchonvillers Grave reference A. 8.

RSL Hellenic Sub-Branch RETURNED SOLDIER APOSTRATOS

SELECTED GENEALOGY RESOURCES HELD BY THE LOCAL HISTORY COLLECTION STRATHPINE LIBRARY

JAMES SHAW ROSE MACDONALD

In Memory of Sapper EDWARD PENNINGTON , 105th Field Coy., Royal Engineers. who died on 27 May Remembered with honour ARRAS MEMORIAL

Location: Mametz Wood in France Locations are given in latitude and longitude.

Western Necropolis Cemetery, Glasgow, Scotland. War Graves

St. George s Churchyard, Fovant, Wiltshire. War Graves

ALBERT EDWARD RUNCORN

Honour and respect for Spirit of ANZAC

New Zealand's First World War Heritage (First World War Centenary History) By Tim Shoebridge

Private Joseph Wellington Evans (Regimental Number 181) is buried in Hawthorn Ridge Cemetery Number 1, Auchonvillers Grave reference B. 47.

OR Winnie Orr on +44 (0)

Subject of the book: The book consists of:

WWI road trip - Day 01

Canada s Contributions Abroad WWII

St. George s Churchyard, Fovant, Wiltshire. War Graves

Economic Performance of Australia s Cities and Regions Embargoed until Tuesday 5 December 2017

PRESENTS THE YSER FRONTLINE & YPRES SALIENT TOUR

AUSTRALIA Leaving home to start something new.

D-Day. June 6th, 1944

An opportunity for New Zealanders to take a Journey of Remembrance to honour their ancestors who bravely fought on the World War I Western Front.

ANZAC DAY ON THE SOMME

Fort Carillon/Ticonderoga

ANZAC Day on the Somme

Navy League of Australia Vic-Tas Division September 2018 NEWSLETTER

SAPPER ALFRED SHANKS nd Tunnelling Company

Freedom Project. American Revolution, DK Eyewitness Books, DK Publishing written by Stuart. Course/Grade level: Guided Reading/Social Studies 5 th

Private 8247 Frederick James Turner

Gallipoli 2015 Premium Bus Tour

Remembrance Day. Vol 56 Page 13

FIELD OF LIGHT: Avenue of Honour BY BRUCE MUNRO

The Australian Historic Shipwreck Protection Project: the Clarence project. Mark Staniforth Monash University Seminar

T H E F A L L E N O F S U T T O N - I N - C R A V E N P E R C Y S T E L L D U K E O F W E L L I N G T O N R E G I M E N T

RSL & SERVICES CLUBS ASSOCIATION 14 DAYS WESTERN FRONT BATTLEFIELD TOUR 22 SEPTEMBER - 05 OCTOBER 2018 (12 NIGHTS / 14 DAYS)

Booklet Number 178. SAMUEL McGREGOR. This booklet remains the property of Saint Andrew s Uniting Church. Please see a Guide if you would like a copy.

25 th March Greek Independence Day

Bedford House Cemetery

Chatham Naval Memorial, Kent

The Trooper Potts HERITAGE TRAIL. A walk around Central Reading


RAF Biggin Hill : The Story Of The Aerodromes Role During The Battle For France, Dunkirk & Battle Of Britain READ ONLINE

A journey through the history of the Sapphire Coast Part 1 Introduction

AUSTRALIA. VY_32_INOVACE_MAT42 Libuše Matulová

Attractions. All In The Memorial The Memorial

2018 ANZAC DAY ORDER OF MARCH Step Off Time

The Age of European Expansion

AHC Submission to National Commission for the Centenary of ANZAC

18 March THE VIGNACOURT PROJECT July 2014 YOUTH EMBASSY VISIT TO AUSTRALIA

2017 ANZAC DAY ORDER OF MARCH

Australia Tutor Resources for the AMEP A new life Beginner

DOMESTIC TOURISM REPORT: OVERVIEW OF ACCOMMODATION PERFORMANCE

Transcription:

Legacy and the Gallipoli Lone Pine Taking of Lone Pine by Fred Leist Battle of Lone Pine The Battle of Lone Pine was fought on a ridge line at Gallipoli between the 6th and 9th of August 1915. The battle was originally intended as a diversion as other Australian, New Zealand, British and Indian units attempted to break through the Turkish encirclement further to the north at Chunuk Bair. The attack was launched in the late afternoon of the 6th of August by the 1st Brigade of the Australian Imperial Force (AIF). The Turkish forces were well entrenched and while the main Turkish trench was taken in the initial 20 minutes of the attack, the battle raged for a further four days as the Turkish forces mounted a series of counter-attacks to re-take the lost ground. The fighting at Lone Pine was very intense and mostly hand to hand combat in the trenches. In fact the trench fighting at Lone Pine became the bench mark by which the ANZACs gauged the later trench warfare in France and Belgium. It is an indication of the intensity of the fighting at Lone Pine that there were seven Victoria Crosses awarded, over 2,000 Australian casualties and nearly 7,000 Turkish casualties.

The cemetery at Lone Pine (courtesy Wikipedia) The origin of the name Lone Pine There are two usages of the term Lone Pine. The ridge and battle at Gallipoli allegedly derived its name from a solitary lone pine tree which didn t survive the battle. When a pine tree grown from a seed brought back from Lone Pine was planted at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra in 1934, construction of the building was only just beginning and that tree was also referred to as the lone pine. Aleppo Pine (Pinus halepensis) in Australia In addition to the lone pine tree on the battlefield on the 6th of August 1914, the Turkish defences had been constructed from locally felled pine as well as pine brought from other locations. The main Turkish trenches were actually covered with these pine trunks, and it was this covering which contributed to the intensity of the fighting in the battle. There were two sets of pine cones brought back from Lone Pine by Australian soldiers. Lance Corporal Benjamin Charles Smith of the 3rd Battalion collected several pine cones from the battlefield and sent them home to his mother who lived at Inverell in NSW. She left the seeds in a drawer for 13 years before sowing them. She successfully raised two trees, one was planted at Inverell

and the second was planted at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra in 1934 by HRH Prince Henry, the Duke of Gloucester. Sergeant Keith McDowell of the 23rd Battalion claimed that he collected a pine cone from the remains of that solitary tree on the battlefield. On his return from the war he gave it to his aunt Emma Gray who lived near Warrnambool in Victoria. Twelve years later she planted the seeds, five sprouted and four survived. One tree was planted at the Shrine of Remembrance in Melbourne in 1933 while the others were planted at Wattle Park in Camberwell in Melbourne s eastern suburbs, the Warrnambool Botanic Gardens and The Sisters near Warrnambool. So while we are not sure if the seeds did come from the solitary tree at Gallipoli, we do know that they came from the battlefield at Lone Pine. The trees in Australia have been identified as Pinus halepensis, the Aleppo Pine. The Hobart Legacy Connection Stefan Mucha was born in Poland. He fought against the Germans in World War Two in North Africa and then in Italy, including at the Battle of Monte Casino. After the war he immigrated to Tasmania. Stefan was a strong supporter of Hobart Legacy and also the Military Museum at Anglesea Barracks. Sometime in the period 1972-1988 Stefan went to Canberra and harvested seeds from the Lone Pine growing at the Australian War Memorial. He successfully grew a number of Lone Pine trees in the old nursery at Anglesea Barracks. These trees were then presented to veteran and community groups around Tasmania.

One of the trees grown by Stefan was planted at the Cornelian Bay War Cemetery for the 75th anniversary of Hobart Legacy. In 2013 it was identified that the tree had to be removed. On the 2nd of July Alistair Hodgman, an arborist at the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens collected approximately 300 seeds from the tree before it was felled. Those seeds were then placed in the seed bank at the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens. Legacy Preisdent L/Peter Hodge with President of the Polish Association, Mr Jo Laszczak and his son Richard. The Centenary of ANZAC Lone Pine Project at the Tasmanian Royal Botanical Gardens In July 2014 two groups joined forces to grow a new generation of Lone Pine trees for Tasmanian schools, veteran and community groups. Students from Rose Bay High School combined with the Veterans and Families Garden Plot from the Tasmanian Community Food Garden to each sow 100 seeds under the guidance of the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens Nursery. It is intended that the high school seedlings will be grown in a special glass house at the school while the other seedlings will remain in the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens Nursery. Written by COL M.J. Romalis, 17th September 2014

Sources: 1. Australian War Memorial Website 2. Australian Geographic Lone Pine: Seeds grown into a living memorial 11 Oct 2011 by Aaron Smith 3. Stephan Mucha Project Notes Hobart Legacy Inc.