1914-15 Star : Private S J Crozier, 12 Light Horse Regiment, AIF

Place Middle East: Ottoman Empire, Turkey, Dardanelles, Gallipoli
Accession Number REL31913.001
Collection type Heraldry
Object type Medal
Physical description Bronze
Maker Unknown
Place made United Kingdom
Date made c 1920
Conflict First World War, 1914-1918
Description

1914-15 Star. Impressed reverse with the recipient's details.

History / Summary

759 Private Sydney James Crozier, was a 20 year old farm hand at Culcairn, NSW, when he enlisted in the 1st Reinforcements to 12 Light Horse Regiment, AIF, on 12 January 1915. After training in Australia he sailed for overseas service aboard HMAT A40 Ceramic on 25 June 1915. Crozier saw service on Gallipoli and after this campaign transferred to B Troop of B Squadron in 6 Light Horse Regiment. He was captured by the Turks on 28 March 1918 during the raid on Amman. B Squadron was dismounted and ordered to advance about a mile over fairly open country in the face of heavy Turkish machine gun fire. Many men were wounded and by the time the order was given to fix bayonets and go on few were left standing. None of the men reached the objective and the 12 survivors, of whom 10 were badly wounded, were taken prisoner by the Turks and placed on a train near Amman. Three, including Crozier, died during the night and were buried in unmarked graves beside the railway track near Amman station. A witness said that while Crozier was on the ground wounded a Turk had driven a bayonet between his shoulders. Despite this a fellow prisoner, Trooper Gannon, also from B Squadron, wrote 'I saw Crozier brought in [to the train]. He was very severely wounded. I thought he was dying. The Turks injected morphia, which I knew prevented him from suffering pain...I desire to emphasise that although his wounds were severe, the Turks treated him kindly and I know his end was painless.'