Informal group portrait of children of the Hutchins family, outside their family house. Back row, ...

Accession Number P05555.016
Collection type Photograph
Object type Black & white - Film copy negative
Maker Unknown
Place made Australia: Victoria, Woorinen North
Date made c 1924-1925
Conflict Second World War, 1939-1945
Copyright

Item copyright: Copyright expired - public domain

Public Domain Mark This item is in the Public Domain

Description

Informal group portrait of children of the Hutchins family, outside their family house. Back row, left to right: Ivan; Dorothy and Myrtle. Second row, left to right: Mary and twin brother Fred. Front row, left to right: Alan and Eric. Seven brothers of the Hutchins family enlisted and served overseas during the Second World War. Only three brothers, VX41288 Private (Pte) Ivan Robert Hutchins, 2/4th Field Ambulance, VX37192 Bombardier Malcolm George "Mike" Hutchins, 2nd Anti Aircraft Regiment, and VX41229 Pte William Ernest (Bill) Hutchins, 2/22nd Battalion (later 2/23rd Battalion), survived the war and returned to Australia. They had served in the Middle East and New Guinea. VX61203 Pte Fred Hutchins, VX61202 Pte David Arthur Hutchins, VX61201 Pte Eric Everard Hutchins, and a cousin, VX50460 Pte Thomas Hutchins, all of 2/21st Battalion (Gull Force), died as prisoners of war (POW) of the Japanese at Ambon, Netherlands East Indies. Pte Fred Hutchins died on 6 July 1945, Pte David Hutchins on 29 July 1945, Pte Eric Hutchins on 20 February 1942, and Pte Thomas Hutchins on 4 September 1945. VX41293 Pte Alan Leslie Hutchins, 2/22nd Battalion (Lark Force), died as a POW on 31 March 1942 at Rabaul, New Britain. VX74662 Sapper Fredrick Wallace, 9th Field Company, Royal Australian Engineers, another cousin of the Hutchins brothers, was a member of the recovery team which visited Ambon in October 1945 to uncover mass graves and identify remains, including those of his cousins, at Laha airfield and Tantoei camp.

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