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Swift C H     2nd Lt

Page history last edited by Lenore Frost 2 years, 2 months ago

Volunteers of Essendon and Flemington, 1914-1918

 

Captain Claude Hibbert Swift, 7th Battalion. 

Australian War Memorial Collection.  http://cas.awm.gov.au/item/H19226A

 

Swift C H     2nd Lt        Claude Hibbert             7 Inf Bn    20    Clerk    Single    C of E       

Address:    Moonee Ponds, Thomas St, 1   

Next of Kin:    Swift, A G, father, 1 Thomas St, Moonee Ponds   

Enlisted:    24 Aug 1914      

Embarked:     A20 Hororata 19 Oct 1914

Prior service:      58 Inf Regt, CMF

Awards: Mentioned in Dispatches

 

Swift was promoted to Major prior to his return to Australia.

 

Relatives on Active Service:

Swift A G Pte 2656 brother

Swift-A-T-Pte-662  brother KIA

Swift L C Pte 4886 brother

 

Mentioned in this publication:

Parish Magazine April 1915 p2

Letter of Cpl A T Young  Essendon Gazette 15 July 1915

Gilchrist G A L Cpl 416 letter in Essendon Gazette 14 Oct 1915

 

WOUNDED
Lieut SWIFT, C H, 7th Batt, Moonee Ponds,
Vic -Wounded

The Argus Saturday 15 May 1915

 

From Left to right: Captain Claude Swift, Captain Joseph Hopkins and Captain Herman Kuring at the 7th Battalion Quarter Master's Store, Gallopoli.   Courtesy of Brad Hopkins.

 

 

The friends of Lieutenant C. H Swift, who has been at the front for some time, will be pleased to know that he has been promoted, and is now a captain in the Seventh Battalion.

 

WITH THE COLOURS. (1915, December 31). The Essendon Gazette and Keilor, Bulla and Broadmeadows Reporter (Moonee Ponds, Vic. : 1914 - 1918), p. 5 Edition: Morning.. Retrieved January 21, 2012, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article74591326

 

KILLED IN ACTION. 2nd-LIEUT. J. ROGERS.

Mrs. J. Rogers, of Moon-street, Eaglehawk, has received the following letters relating to the death in action in France of her son, 2nd-Lieut. J. Rogers:--

 

In the Field.-

Dear Madam,-It is with the utmost regret I confirm the report of the death in action of your son, 2nd-Lieut. J. Rogers, who was killed instantly by an enemy shell on1st November, 1916. Your son was promoted to commissioned rank on 13/9/16; and this fact of itself certifies to the good work he had done as an N.C.O. As an officer he continued to do good work and his loss is greatly deplored by myself and his brother officers. The men of your son's platoon took some pains to mark out the grave with shell cases, etc., and a cross was placed on his grave. The grave is just in rear of the trenches where your son was killed. On behalf of myself and officers and the men of the battalion, I beg to convey to you our very sincere sympathy in your great loss.-

Very Sincerely yours, Claude M (sic). Swift; Major, Temp Commanding 7th Battalion, A.I.F."

 

OUR SOLDIERS

 

Capt. Claude Swift, son of Mr. A. Swift, of Thomas street Moonee Ponds, describes his home in France:-

 

I will give you a description of my dugout. It's a fine Queen Anne villa, situated one second from parapet, with side windows overlooking German lines; splendid view from front door, I overlooking graveyard; splendid asphalt footpath, ankle deep in mud, front garden in full bloom, six-inch forget-me-nots; splendid front fence of barbed wire and spikes, red tiled roof, covered with sandbags slightly damaged, owing to small boys (Huns) throwing stones on the roof-guaranteed to give way to a 12in. Krupp foundry.

 

Now we enter the house- It consists of two rooms, bed and diningroom. The bedroom consists of two double beds, liable to walk away if not well watched, beautiful spring mattrass of wire netting, also feather mattrass of sandbags; sheets changed twice weekly. Boarders supply their own blankets-blankets washed after the war. Boarders are requested not to complain if they find a rat in their beds or if one runs across their faces whilst asleep. This is no fault of the proprietors. The only other piece of furniture in this room is a dressing table made from the finest bully beef boxes obtainable.

 

Now we enter the diningroom, with its elaborate furnishings. Splendid table, seating accommodation for six, table cloth with news of the day printed on it, six beautifully upholstered chairs, one badly in need of a patch on the seat; all shelves made of the finest deal obtainable, cupboard built of fine jam box, guaranteed not to keep the rats out. All food is sampled by rats before being dished up to boarders. On the walls hang pictures of the finest Parisienne art. Visitors are requested not to gaze on the pictures too long; it is bad for the eye sight. Owing to our neighbours objecting to smoke, it has been found necessary to do away with fireplaces; electric light installed throughout. Please do not burn too many candles. Matches, tobacco and cigarettes supplied on the premises. Please do not interfere with ornaments, as they are likely to go off. Fine fireworks display every evening, continuing till daylight, both green and white flares being used. Strangers are forbidden to wander between the lines, as they are liable to be knocked down by a passing shell. After observing all these rules, boarders wander about in comfort.

 

OUR SOLDIERS. (1916, August 17). The Essendon Gazette and Keilor, Bulla and Broadmeadows Reporter (Moonee Ponds, Vic. : 1914 - 1918), p. 4 Edition: Morning.. Retrieved February 4, 2012, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article74593789

 

A clerk of Moonee Ponds, Vic, he embarked with C Company as a 2nd Lieutenant on HMAT Hororata on 19 October 1914. He was promoted to the rank of captain in August 1915. He assumed temporary command of the 7th Battalion in December 1916. He attended Senior Officers' School in England and the Commandant, Brigadier General R J Kentish, describes him as "an energetic determined Officer, hardworking and reliable ...This officer ought to be fit to command a Battalion at once". He returned to Australia on 16 June 1919.

Australian War Memorial Collection. http://cas.awm.gov.au/item/H19226A 

 

One Thousand Days with the AIF

 

Racquinghem, France. c. 1916. The cookhouse and staff of the 7th Battalion, AIF.

(Donor Major C.H. Swift)  Australian War Memorial Collection

http://cas.awm.gov.au/item/H14063

 

LIEUT. CHARLES COWAN

 

SHOT BY A SNIPER
Major C. H. Swift, temporarily in command of the 7th Battalion, Australian

Imperial Force, writing to Mrs Cowan, of 19 Moonee street, Ascot Vale,
regarding the death of her son, Lieut. Charles Cowan, who was killed in

action on November 6, 1916, says: — "Your son was shot by a sniper who

had just previously shot another officer, to whose assistance your had son

gone, quite regardless of his own danger."


Lieut. Cowan, added Major Swift, was one of the most popular officers In
the battalion, and his work was exceptionally good. Just before his death
he took part in a successful raid on the enemy trenches, and the officer in
charge attributed a large measure of the success gained to the painstaking
and thorough manner in which he carried out the important duties allotted
to him.


Lieut. Cowan was a son of the late Mr J. C. M. Cowan, a former Mayor
of Essendon. He enlisted on August 23, 1914, and left Australia in October
of the same year. He was promoted sergeant in Egypt, and was wounded
at the landing on Gallipoli. He was back in the firing line four weeks later,
but was ill at Lemnos when the evacuation look place. He gained his com-
mission in France. A brother of Lieut. Cowan has been wounded a second
time.

 

SHOT BY A SNIPER (1917, July 21). The Herald

(Melbourne, Vic. : 1861 - 1954), p. 5.  http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article242481930

 

A group portrait of the officers of the 7th Battalion.  Major Claude Hibbert Swift is identified in the

front row, third from the right.  Bowtell-Harris is seated next to him, second from the right.

Lt Vincent Robert Dickinson is standing on the far left of the centre row.  20 February 1918.

Australian War Memorial collection.  http://cas.awm.gov.au/item/E01814

 

War Service Commemorated

Essendon Town Hall R-Y

Essendon State School

Patriotic Concert 1914

Essendon Gazette Roll of Honour Wounded

“Send off to the Essendon Boys”

58th Infantry Football Club (Essendon Rifles)

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