The Last Post Ceremony commemorating the service of (3411) Private William Hackman, 55th Battalion, First World War.

Places
Accession Number AWM2018.1.1.132
Collection type Film
Object type Last Post film
Physical description 16:9
Maker Australian War Memorial
Place made Australia: Australian Capital Territory, Canberra, Campbell
Date made 12 May 2018
Access Open
Conflict First World War, 1914-1918
Copyright Item copyright: © Australian War Memorial
Creative Commons License This item is licensed under CC BY-NC
Copying Provisions Copyright restrictions apply. Only personal, non-commercial, research and study use permitted. Permission of copyright holder required for any commercial use and/or reproduction.
Description

The Last Post Ceremony is presented in the Commemorative area of the Australian War Memorial each day. The ceremony commemorates more than 102,000 Australians who have given their lives in war and other operations and whose names are recorded on the Roll of Honour. At each ceremony the story behind one of the names on the Roll of Honour is told. Hosted by Craig Berelle, the story for this day was on (3411) Private William Hackman, 55th Battalion, First World War.

Film order form
Speech transcript

3411 Private William Hackman, 55th Battalion
KIA 11 May 1918
Story delivered 12 May 2018

Today we remember and pay tribute to Private William Hackman.

William Hackman was born in 1890, the youngest son of the seven children born to Henry and Mary Hackman of Bellingen on the New South Wales mid-north coast. Henry Hackman was a merchant sea captain who drowned the year after William was born when his schooner capsized off Nambucca Heads. Mary Hackman remarried two years later. William spent his formative years in Bellingen, where he attended school and afterwards worked as a farmer. On the eve of the First World War, he moved with his mother to Croydon in Sydney, where it is likely he earned a living at the nearby farmers’ markets.

William enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force in November 1916. After several weeks’ training at the military camp at the Sydney Showgrounds, he embarked for England with a reinforcement group for the 55th Battalion. After further training on the Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire, William sailed for the battlefields of the Western Front in October 1917, and joined the battalion in camp at Dickenbusch near Ypres in Belgium, as it rested after heavy fighting during the Third Battle of Ypres.

The 55th Battalion remained in Belgium until March 1918, when the Australians were rushed south to help defend the city of Amiens against the Germans breakthrough on the Somme. If Amiens fell, the Germans would control the main support and logistical hub for the British and French armies in northern France, and could press on towards the coast. The 55th Battalion was sent to Villers-Bretonneux where it was held in reserve during the famous assault on the night of the 24th to the 25th of April 1918. By then the line had been stabilised, Amiens was no longer threatened, and the Australians had dug-in on their newly-won positions.

Throughout the following weeks the 55th Battalion remained in the area, where it was frequently subjected to German artillery bombardments. One of these occurred on the morning of 11 May 1918, after the battalion had intercepted a German wireless signal that the guns were about to fire. Although the battalion was prepared, the bombardment resulted in two casualties.

William Hackman was killed outright by a high-explosive shell. Aged 28 at the time of his death, he was buried at the nearby Daours Communal Cemetery Extension. His grieving mother included the following epitaph to him in the local newspaper several weeks later: “Greater love hath no man”.

William Hackman is listed on the Roll of Honour on my right, among almost 62,000 Australians who died while serving in the First World War.

This is but one of the many stories of service and sacrifice told here at the Australian War Memorial. We now remember Private William Hackman who gave his life for us, for our freedoms, and in the hope of a better world.

Aaron Pegram
Historian, Military History Section

  • Video of The Last Post Ceremony commemorating the service of (3411) Private William Hackman, 55th Battalion, First World War. (video)