Friday 24 February 2017

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgements

I wish to thank the many family members, friends and professional historians and archivists who have assisted me in various ways whilst writing this blog.
  • The late Arthur Parker Adams, who kept the letters and papers and memorabilia of his two younger brothers who gave their lives in WW1, and to Arthur's son...
  • The late Harold John Parker Adams, who kept these archives after Arthur died in 1955 until his own death in 2007.
  • James Renwick and other members of my family - for their patience and encouragement.
  • Harold and George Clapham who shared WW1 photos and photographed other memorabilia for me to upload onto the blog.
  • Dizzy Carlyon who provided a silver napkin ring which belonged to Athol G. Adams.
  • Charlie and Annie Maslin for their encouragement and support.
  • David A J Parker (keeper of the Parker family archives).
  • The Melbourne Grammar School.
  • Philip Powell, Wesley College, Melbourne (archives and history).
  • David Perkins, The Australian Society of World War 1 Aero Historians.
  • The Australian War Memorial.
  • The Australian National Archives.
  • The Melbourne Cricket Club.
  • Athol Clapham (nee Adams) who shared her memories and stories of her father, AP Adams.
SMPR
26 February 2017

This is the last Blog Post
Thank you for following Athol's story


"Their hearts felt out to hold me"

The grave of Lieutenant A.G. Adams AFC
Hadra War Cemetery, Alexandria, Egypt
 2006


For nearly a century no one from the family visited Athol's grave. Like many other families of WW1 soldiers their grief was compounded by the fact that the departed soldier's grave was so far from home. Even these days a long-haul flight from Australia to Egypt is not possible for most families of lost diggers. Athol's mother, Adah, did not travel to Egypt to see her son's grave, nor did his step-father, Guy Sherwood. Nor did the aunts May and Puff. Nor did Arthur, the last of the four Adams boys.

It was not until 2006 that a member of the family made the pilgrimage to Alexandria to visit the grave. Harold Adams made that journey - he was the youngest of Arthur's children. He too served our country in uniform - with the Royal Australian Navy from 1946-1983. I accompanied him to Egypt when he was 73 years of age about a year before he died.

CDRE Harold Adams AM RAN Ret'd (and SMPR) at Athol's grave, Alexandria, Egypt, 2006

Harold wore his Melbourne Grammar School old boys' tie and said prayers from the Book of Common Prayer. A wreath was laid - all dried plant materials collected from Victoria, NSW and NT of Australia: Banksia cones, Eucalyptus leaves and nuts, Hakea cones and Casuarina cones. Harold presented the local Egyptian gardeners with memento badges from the Australian War Memorial and thanked them for tending the graves so well.

The posy of Australian native plant materials collected in Victoria, Northern Territory, and NSW

The long wait for the family to visit Athol's grave, for nearly 100 years, was too long for those left behind as well as the brave lads which had passed out of the sight of men. My friend Annie remembered this poem when we talked about Athol.

The Day My Family Came – by Michael Edwards
I half awoke to a strange new calm
And a sleep that would not clear
For this was the sleep to cure all harm
And which freezes all from fear.
Shot had come from left and right
With shrapnel, shell and flame
And turned my sunlit days to night
Where now, none would call my name.
Years passed me by as I waited,
Missed the generations yet to come,
Sadly knew I would not be fated
To be a father, hold a son.
I heard again the sounds of war
When twenty years of sleep had gone,
For five long years, maybe more,
Till peace once more at last had come.
More years passed, new voices came,
The stones and trenches to explore,
But no-one ever called my name
So I wished and waited ever more.
Each time I thought, perhaps, perhaps,
Perhaps this time they must call me,
But they only called for other chaps,
No-one ever called to set me free.
Through years of lonely vigil kept,
To look for me they never came,
None ever searched or even wept,
Nobody stayed to speak my name.
Until that summer day I heard
Some voices soft and strained with tears,
Then I knew that they had come
To roll away those wasted years.
Their hearts felt out to hold me,
Made me whole like other men,
But they had come just me to see,
Drawing me back home with them.
Now I am at peace and free to roam
Where ‘ere my family speak my name,
That day my soul was called back home
For on that day my family came.
Reference: http://anzacalbany.com.au/visitors-ww1-poem/

'That day my soul was called back home'

It was Harold's idea that this story be called 'Not Mentioned in Dispatches'.

Much later - Photograph and letter Harold O. Smith

Harold O. Smith, who appears to have served with Athol at Aboukir at the School of Military Aeronautics, wrote this thoughtful letter in March 1920 - three years after Athol was killed. I do not have a copy of this letter, but found it with the National Archives of Australian among Athol's Service Record. A copy of this letter and the accompanying photograph must have been sent to Athol's mother as I have the photograph he refers to in my records. The photograph is annotated on the reverse and I include an image of this in this post. The Australian Army's Base Records reply is also provided.


72 Savernake Road
Hampstead
London NW3
March 13th 1920

To Officer in Base Records
Department of Defence, Melbourne, Australia.

Sir,
Re the Late Lieut. Athol Gladwyn Adams 5th Battalion AIF and Australian Air Force
I am sending herewith a photograph of the grave of the above mentioned officer, whom I believe was killed as the result of an aeroplane crash in Egypt, Feb 19th 1917, and who lies buried in Hadra Cemetery Alexandria. During my service with the 22nd Training Squadron Royal Air Force as a leading air-craftsman, 2 wreaths were periodically received, one from the Australian Welfare Fund, and the other from a Mrs Guy Sherwood and I had the privilege of taking the wreaths and, incidentally, tending the grave. On my last visit before returning home it occurred to me to snapshot the grave and have now had same enlarged and respectfully ask you to endeavour to send same to Mrs Guy Sherwood or failing, to the next of kin of Lieut A. G. Adams as I feel sure they may appreciate my action.

Hoping eventually to hear you have been successful.

I remain,
Yours respectfully,
Harold O. Smith



The photograph of Athol's Grave - dated about 1918.

The annotation on the reverse of the photograph.


The Army's reply to Mr Smith saying that they have forwarded the letter and photograph to Mrs Guy Sherwood as Athol's next-of-kin.




24 February 1917 - Death Notices

Adah placed these Death Notices in the local Melbourne newspapers.


Reference: can be found via TROVE in 'The Australasian' (Melbourne, Vic.),
Saturday 3 March 1917, p.53, in the Family Notices, Died on Service section.



Reference: can be found via TROVE in 'The Argus' (Melbourne Vic.),
Saturday 24 February 1917, p.13 in the Family Notices, Died on Service section.

The text in the notices is the same for both:

'ADAMS - On the 19th February, accidentally killed on duty, Lieutenant Athol G. Adams of the Royal Flying Corps, Egypt, loved youngest son of Adah E. Sherwood and the late Alex. J. Adams, aged 22 years and 9 months, after 2 years and 6 months active service.'


Thursday 23 February 2017

British records - a little more information

I have found a copy RFC Casualty Card. An extract appears below. A little more information comes to light as we can see the aeroplane 'Avro 7989' and the nature and cause of accident being 'failing engine with nose dive'. The record also notes that Lt G.C.H. Culley was injured.


Ref: The RAF Museum http://www.rafmuseumstoryvault.org.uk/

Reply from the Army Base Records

Many months later the AIF wrote to Adah in reply to Guy Sherwood's letter asking for more information about the circumstances of Athol's death:



8 October 1917

Dear Madam,

With reference to the report of the regrettable loss of your son, the late Lieutenant A. G. Adams, 5th Battalion, seconded 67th Squadron, Australian Flying Corps, I am now in receipt of advice which shows that he died at 17th General Hospital, Alexandria, on 19/2/17, of wounds and shock following compound fracture skull, received through aeroplane accident, and was buried at Hadra New Military Cemetery, Alexandria, grave No. 3008, on 20/2/17. Chaplain W. H Harding, officiating.

The additional details are furnished by direction, it being the policy of the department to forward all information received in connexion with deaths of members of the Australian Imperial Force.

Yours faithfully,

Major
Officer i/c Base Records


Wednesday 22 February 2017

February 1917 - Letters of condolence

In the Melbourne Grammar publication 'War Services Old Melburnians, 1914-1918' (compiled and edited by J. Beacham Kiddle, 1923) Athol's accident is recounted by his fellow officers:
'...the engine was heard to stop, and the machine dived from a height of about 100 feet to earth, becoming a total wreck. The pilot was not suffering much from his injuries, but Athol was unconscious, and died soon after. He was accorded a military funeral. The official enquiry resulted in a verdict of accidental death. 
'His Captain writes: "The Flying Corps have lost not only an officer popular with all he met, but one who gave promise of making a good and valuable pilot"
'Another officer writes: "I could not have wished for a better officer; he was keen and full of zeal in all his work, and I, as well as the CO was looking forward to the time when he would join the squadron as a pilot, which would have been in a very few days but for his untimely end".'
I do not have copies of the letters referred to in this book.

Unfortunately I don't have access to the British records, in particular, the RFC unit war diaries, so I cannot set out the contemporaneous account of the accident.

From Athol's log book we do know, that at the time of the accident, there was another pilot in the plane as an instructor. That airman was Flight Lieutenant George Charles Henry Culley, RFC. I thought it might be interesting to find out a little about Athol's co-pilot, George.

George Culley was born on 25 April 1893 and educated at Norwich Grammar School and Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, where he studied law. After his studies George was articled to H. H. Cole, of Norwich. However, his studies were interrupted by the war. Like Athol, George enlisted in the first month of the war. He signed up on 24 August, 1914, as a 2nd Lieut., in the Norfolk Regiment. He was sent to Gallipoli in 1915 and gazetted Lieutenant in April 1915. In 1916 and 1917 he served in Egypt where he was transferred to the Machine Gun Corps. He was promoted to Captain in June 1916. That same year he joined Royal Flying Corps in September.  In 1918 he was transferred to France.

After the war George returned to the law. He passed his solicitors' Final Examination in October 1919 and was admitted to Supreme Court of England and Wales in 1920. He first practiced with Gordon Rice in Cardiff, Wales, but in 1942 enlisted again to serve in World War II in the Royal Air Force. After the war he lived at Little Shelford Cambridge until 1957. He died on 12 December 1982, aged 88.

How sad that no one from Athol's family was able to contact George to find out a little more about Athol and the fatal accident.

In 2005, George Culley's medals came up for sale at Bonhams auction house. They were sold for about £364 pounds. The sale catalogue describes the medal set as:
"1914-15 Star (Lieut. G.C.H.Culley Norf.R.); British War and Victory Medal (Capt. G.C.H.Culley. R.A.F.); 1939-1945 Star; Atlantic Star; Defence Medal; War Medal."


Ref: http://www.bonhams.com/auctions/11927/lot/123/
and https://cms.lawgazette.co.uk/Uploads/2014/06/17/c/y/l/recordofserviceo00soli.pdf This record also notes Culley 'crashed at Aboukir, Egypt, in aeroplane Feb. 19, 1917'.