General service whistle : Second Lieutenant H W Crowle, 10 Battalion, AIF

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Accession Number RELAWM09767
Collection type Heraldry
Object type Heraldry
Physical description Lead, Leather, Nickel-plated brass, Wood
Maker J Hudson & Co
Place made United Kingdom: England, West Midlands, Birmingham
Date made c 1915
Conflict First World War, 1914-1918
Description

Standard police style nickel-plated tube bodied general service whistle with opposing windows, lead fipple and integral suspension loop. The words 'J. Hudson & Co / Birmingham / 1915' are impressed into the body; the words 'Patent 5727.08' are impressed into the end dome. Attached to the suspension loop via a copper rivet is a tapering leather retaining strap with a button hole slot, impressed at this point '[broad arrow symbol] M 13'.

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History / Summary

General service whistle issued to and used by Herbert Crowle. Crowle was born in North Carlton, Victoria on 29 February 1884. A resident of Glen Ormond, South Australia, he enlisted in the AIF on 12 December 1914, aged 30. Assigned to 10th Battalion Reinforcements, Crowle embarked for Egypt on 19 February 1915 aboard the transport ship Runic. He joined 10th Battalion at Gallipoli on 7 May but less than two weeks later, suffered a blast injury to his left eye which necessitated evacuation to 1 Australian Casualty Clearing Station. Crowle rejoined his unit at the end of May and remained on the peninsula until its evacuation in December.

Redeployed to the Western Front Crowle arrived in France on 3 April 1916. Tenth battalion’s first major action was at Pozieres in the Somme Valley from 22 to 25 July. They then relieved 3rd Battalion at Mouquet farm on 19 August. Two days later Crowle was wounded in action. He died from his wounds at 3rd Casualty Clearing Station on 25 August 1916.

On the night before he died Crowle wrote a letter home to his wife Beatrice. He wrote 'I was hit running out to see the other officer who was with me but badly wounded. I ran too far as I was in a hurry and he had passed word down to return. I got two machine gun bullets in the thigh, another glanced off my water bottle and another by the periscope I had in my pocket. The Stretcher Bearers could not get the wounded out any way than over the top and across the open. They had to carry me four miles with a man waving a Red Cross flag in front and the Germans did not open fire on us. It is no use trying to hide things. I am in terrible agony...gas gangrene has set in and it smells rotten. ... they have taken pounds of flesh out of my buttock my word they look after us well here. I am sorry dear, but still you will be well provided for - I am easy on that score.'

Crowle was buried at Puchervillers Military Cemetery. In a letter to Beatrice, the Reverend A H Broughton wrote 'He wrote this letter the evening before he died. As he could not address it, I enclose it in my letter. I buried him the next day in the Soldier's Cemetery here and a wooden cross has been erected over his grave with an inscription.'
This whistle was returned to Beatrice in May 1917 amongst a collection of Crowle’s personal effects.

The periscope Crowle mentioned in his letter is held in the Memorial's collection at RELAWM09765.