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In Search of Private Henry Wood, 6th MG Company AIF, Killed in Action 101 Years Ago - Montage 1 of 4
Photo and documents relating to Private Henry Wood, Service Number 712, one of the more than 20,000 Australians killed during WWI with no known grave (ie about 1 in 3 who died).
Known affectionately as Harry to his friends and family, he was actually born in Hackney, London, England, on 19 October 1895. His family later lived in Bethnal Green, then moved to Dorking in Surrey. He had immigrated to Australia before 'The Great War', his stated occupation at enlistment being a tea blender and was living in Pinders St in the Melbourne suburb of Northcote. There Henry married Mabel Gwendoline Brett, the day before the Anzac landing at Gallipoli. She had also emigrated from Dorking and went by the name Gwendoline Wood, after she was married.
Henry had chosen to answer the call 'for God, King and Country' by volunteering for the Australian Imperial Force on 15 February 1915, aged just 19. This was just under 6 months after the civilised world had been willfully abandoned, plunging humanity into the first of its horrendous, yet highly profitable world wars - in no small part thanks to its Bankrolled politicians, academia & mass media (a story that sadly echoes on, even 100 years later, in the mindless shenanigans playing out today).
Henry's brave and loyal decision to enlist, however, also notably came before the appalling death and injury toll Australia experienced in participating in Britain and France's disastrous invasion of Turkey in 1915, at Gallipoli. This Machiavellian stunt was the brainchild of soldier/politician/media poster boy Winston Churchill - venerated to this day in the mainstream media as a great leader, despite a long track record of scandals which followed him after his involvement in the Gallipoli debacle, not the least of which his involvement in the Lusitania scandal. Those avoidable death and injury tolls would however be eclipsed by an even more appalling engineered slaughter on the Somme, between 1 July and 18 November 1916.
It was in the wake of these unprecedented and seemingly endless casualty tolls, that Henry saw fit to pen a last letter to his family, in November 1916, part of which is included on the right of the montage. A message which sadly, but astutely, anticipated his own death barely five months later. Note the date Henry was recorded killed in action (K.I.A.) is wrong, it should be 11-4-17.
Henry's death left his wife Gwendoline a widow at just 22, still in Melbourne, but by then living in Stanley St Elsternwick - just a short distance from where the Jewish Holocaust Centre would generations later also find a home.
Additional info:
In Search of Private Henry Wood, 6th MG Company AIF, Killed in Action 101 Years Ago - Montage 1 of 4
Photo and documents relating to Private Henry Wood, Service Number 712, one of the more than 20,000 Australians killed during WWI with no known grave (ie about 1 in 3 who died).
Known affectionately as Harry to his friends and family, he was actually born in Hackney, London, England, on 19 October 1895. His family later lived in Bethnal Green, then moved to Dorking in Surrey. He had immigrated to Australia before 'The Great War', his stated occupation at enlistment being a tea blender and was living in Pinders St in the Melbourne suburb of Northcote. There Henry married Mabel Gwendoline Brett, the day before the Anzac landing at Gallipoli. She had also emigrated from Dorking and went by the name Gwendoline Wood, after she was married.
Henry had chosen to answer the call 'for God, King and Country' by volunteering for the Australian Imperial Force on 15 February 1915, aged just 19. This was just under 6 months after the civilised world had been willfully abandoned, plunging humanity into the first of its horrendous, yet highly profitable world wars - in no small part thanks to its Bankrolled politicians, academia & mass media (a story that sadly echoes on, even 100 years later, in the mindless shenanigans playing out today).
Henry's brave and loyal decision to enlist, however, also notably came before the appalling death and injury toll Australia experienced in participating in Britain and France's disastrous invasion of Turkey in 1915, at Gallipoli. This Machiavellian stunt was the brainchild of soldier/politician/media poster boy Winston Churchill - venerated to this day in the mainstream media as a great leader, despite a long track record of scandals which followed him after his involvement in the Gallipoli debacle, not the least of which his involvement in the Lusitania scandal. Those avoidable death and injury tolls would however be eclipsed by an even more appalling engineered slaughter on the Somme, between 1 July and 18 November 1916.
It was in the wake of these unprecedented and seemingly endless casualty tolls, that Henry saw fit to pen a last letter to his family, in November 1916, part of which is included on the right of the montage. A message which sadly, but astutely, anticipated his own death barely five months later. Note the date Henry was recorded killed in action (K.I.A.) is wrong, it should be 11-4-17.
Henry's death left his wife Gwendoline a widow at just 22, still in Melbourne, but by then living in Stanley St Elsternwick - just a short distance from where the Jewish Holocaust Centre would generations later also find a home.
Additional info: