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Trooper Mark Donaldson loans his Victoria Cross to the Australian War Memorial
22 January 2009 by Nick Fletcher.
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Collection,News, VC, Victoria Cross
Trooper Donaldson VC with the Director of the Australian War Memorial, Major General Steve GowerThe award of the Victoria Cross was made following Trooper Donaldson’s heroic actions when his patrol was ambushed in Oruzgan Province, Afghanistan, on 2 September last year. The citation for the medal reads, in part: “In the early stages of the ambush, Trooper Donaldson reacted spontaneously to regain the initiative. He moved rapidly between alternate positions of cover engaging the enemy with 66mm and 84mm anti-armour weapons as well as his M4 rifle. During an early stage of the enemy ambush, he deliberately exposed himself to enemy fire in order to draw attention to himself and thus away from wounded soldiers. This selfless act alone bought enough time for those wounded to be moved to relative safety.” As the ambushed vehicles manoeuvred to withdraw, with the unwounded members of the patrol running alongside, a severely wounded Afghani interpreter was accidentally left behind. The citation continues: “Of his own volition and displaying complete disregard for his own safety, Trooper Donaldson moved alone, on foot, across approximately 80 metres of exposed ground to recover the wounded interpreter. His movement, once identified by the enemy, drew intense and accurate machine gun fire from entrenched positions. Upon reaching the wounded coalition force interpreter, Trooper Donaldson picked him up and carried him back to the relative safety of the vehicles then provided immediate first aid before returning to the fight.” The patrol was ultimately able to disengage from the action and withdraw with its wounded, all of whom survived. As the citiation concludes: “Trooper Donaldson’s actions on this day displayed exceptional courage in circumstances of great peril. His actions are of the highest accord and are in keeping with the finest traditions of the Special Operations Command, the Australian Army and the Australian Defence Force.”
It is anticipated that Trooper Donaldson’s medals will be placed on public display in the Australian War Memorial’s Conflicts 1945 to today galleries by the end of February.
The Victoria Cross
22 January 2009 by Nick Fletcher.
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Collection,News, Hancocks, VC, Victoria Cross
Victoria Cross, the highest award for bravery in time of war RELAWM16499.001The Victoria Cross for Australia replaces the Victoria Cross in the Australian Honours and Awards system. It was instituted in 1991, and the first award was made on 16 February 2009, to Trooper Mark Donaldson, Special Air Service Regiment, for gallantry in Oruzgan Province, Afghanistan, on 2 September 2008. The reason for the change to the historic medal was to allow Australians to remain eligible for what is widely considered to be the world’s most prestigious gallantry award. Since the VC, a British imperial medal, was not compatible with the new Australian system of honours and awards, Queen Elizabeth II agreed to a new award; ‘The Victoria Cross for Australia’. The medal itself is completely unchanged, and is in fact a Victoria Cross in everything but name. It is still manufactured by Hancocks, and each award is individually approved by Her Majesty the Queen. Under a similar system, the Victoria Cross of Canada was created in 1993 and the Victoria Cross for New Zealand in 1999. The only other example of these Commonwealth awards so far was made to Corporal Willie Apiata, of the New Zealand SAS, in July 2007. This award was also for gallantry in Afghanistan, in 2004.
It should be noted that the recent awards of the Victoria Cross to Australia and the Victoria Cross to New Zealand are NOT considered by the British Government to be awards of the Victoria Cross. They are awards unique to the countries concerned. Australians, however, will consider Trooper Donaldson’s award to be the latest in a long line which stretches back to Captain (later Sir) Neville Howse in South Africa in 1900. This means that 97 Australians have now been awarded the Victoria Cross.
Update, 21 January 2011: Recent research has confirmed that while the recent awards of the Victoria Cross to Australia and the Victoria Cross to New Zealand are not British imperial awards, being unique to the Commonwealth countries concerned, they ARE still considered Victoria Crosses in the proud tradition of the award.
Australian Engineers in the First World War
21 January 2009 by Alessandro Antonello.
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Collection,From the collection,News
The First World War unit war diaries (AWM4) of the Australian Engineers have been digitised and are now available on the Australian War Memorial’s website. The diaries provide a wonderful testimony to the ingenuity and initiative of Australian engineers during the War, and the daily difficulty of building and maintaining structures and machines to ensure the success of the war effort.
Engineers, also known as sappers, were essential to the running of the war. Without them, other branches of the Allied Forces would have found it difficult to cross the muddy and shell-ravaged ground of the Western Front. Their responsibilities included constructing the lines of defence, temporary bridges, tunnels and trenches, observation posts, roads, railways, communication lines, buildings of all kinds, showers and bathing facilities, and other material and mechanical solutions to the problems associated with fighting in all theatres.
The 'Johnston' Shower, made by the 1st Field Company, Australian Engineers, July 1918. AWM4 14/20/43.
The ‘Johnston’ Shower is one example of ingenuity and initiative that can be found in the engineers’ war diaries. The shower was constructed in the field by the 1st Field Company of Engineers, in July 1918, around Strazeele near Hazebrouck. Company Sergeant Major James Johnston had the idea to create the shower using materials salvaged from retreating German forces. He designed a shower that weighed only 40 pounds (around 18 kilograms), and could provide hot and cold water using ‘a minimum amount of fuel and water’. A technical drawing of this shower is shown above.
Below are other notable documents from the diaries: read on
Research Centre display: Sailor art and the Second World War
16 January 2009 by Craig Berelle.
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From the collection,Personal Stories

A new display of art by sailors of the Royal Australian Navy (RAN) is now on show in the Memorial’s Research Centre. These pieces were prepared for inclusion in the RAN Christmas Annual, H.M.A.S. Mk IV, and in most cases, never used. read on
Nancy Bird Walton, Aviation Pioneer and Wartime Volunteer Leader
15 January 2009 by Alessandro Antonello.
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Collection,From the collection,Personal Stories
Nancy Bird Walton, a pioneer of Australian aviation died on Tuesday 13 January, aged 93. In addition to her life’s work promoting the place of women in civil aviation, she was a major force in leading the women’s volunteer effort on the home front during the Second World War. Walton was New South Wales and Australian Commandant of the Women’s Air Training Corps (WATC), a volunteer organisation that preceded the formation of the Women’s Auxiliary Australian Air Force (WAAAF).
Nancy Bird Walton, NSW and Australian Commandant of the Women's Air Training Corps 044461
“There is a sunny land far, far away …”
13 January 2009 by Pen Roberts.
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Collection,New acquisitions,Personal Stories, Ephemera
When Kevin Wakefield found himself in an icy Canadian landscape, many miles from sunny Australia, he wrote a poem to express his feelings of homesickness. Sixty years later, one of the original hand-written copies of ‘My Home Land Far Away’ has now been donated to the Memorial.
Poem written by Kevin Wakefield while on the Empire Training Scheme in Canada. He was there from October 1943 to February 1944. (Souvenirs: Poetry: 15/2/1)