Concert party bracelet : Private E A Nicholls, 8 Battalion AIF

Place Europe: United Kingdom, England, Wiltshire, Perham Downs
Accession Number RELAWM17084.005
Collection type Heraldry
Object type Heraldry
Physical description Metal
Maker Unknown
Date made c 1917-1918
Conflict First World War, 1914-1918
Description

Bracelet made from numerous small coils of fine brass wire linked together.

History / Summary

Bracelet worn by a female impersonator in the 'Perham Stars' or 'The Aussies' concert parties. This brooch is part of the collection of concert party costumes and accessories belonging to Ernest Alfred Nicholls. Nicholls was born in London. In his youth he performed with the 'Carrie Laurie's Juveniles' on London's Piers. He immigrated to Australia where he worked as a film operator in picture theatres. Nicholls enlisted on 26 July 1916, aged 26 years. 6408 Private Nicholls embarked with the 20th reinforcements of the 8th Battalion on board HMAT Euripides from Melbourne on 11 September 1916. He arrived in England on 26 October and after a period of training, embarked for service in France, arriving at Etaples on 18 December 1916. He joined his battalion but on 23 February 1917 he was admitted to hospital with tonsillitis, eventually returning to England, where he remained for the rest of the war.

Nicholls was a baritone and after his service in France, he became a member of a concert party at Perham Downs Camp, called the 'Perham Stars'. Through the remainder of the war they toured other camps and hospitals. He wrote 'Laughing Song' and co wrote the song, 'The Kit Inspection Hymn' with 2030 Staff Sergeant George William Waight, that was performed by the Perham Stars. They later became the first official Australian concert party called 'The Aussies'. Nicholls was discharged on 20 September 1919 in London.

By 1926 he was back in Australia, living in Glenferrie, Victoria. In 1939 he married Elizabeth Mary Alice Rook in Sydney, NSW. During the Second World War he conducted the 'Sydney YWCA Open House Community Singing' for the troops for 16 months. After the war he was an acting member of the Gilbert and Sullivan society, Sydney Musical Society and a number of drama groups, including 'The Thespians'. He died at Milton, New South Wales on 13 May 1967.