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WOODS Richard
38756
Private
Driver
3rd Australian Field Artillery Brigade
Pomona
Yes
1 May 1896
Yangan
24 May 1917
A38 Ulysses
19 December 1917
Sydney

Richard Woods was born at Yangan on 1st May 1896 one of ten children to parents Richard and Cecily (nee Lingard). He was a single man, aged 21 years who stood 5ft 8 inches tall, weighed 139 Lbs with fresh complexion, hazel eyes and brown hair and worked as a dairy farmer on his parent’s property at Cooloothin Creek, Pomona. Richard Jnr and his brother Frederick enlisted in Brisbane on 24th May 1917 and were each assigned to 3rd Australian Field Artillery Brigade and his brother Frederick had the previous sequential service number of 38755. Their military service reads the same apart from one extra entry in 1919 for Richard. Following enlistment they both went into 11th Depot Battalion camp at Enoggera and in December 1917 entrained for Sydney. Overseas deployment started when they embarked aboard H.M.A.T A38 ‘Ulysses’ which sailed on 19th December and travelled to Suez where they disembarked, the first stage completed. There followed a series of changes as he and his brother travelled from Suez across to Alexandria and into Camp ‘A’ Galbray from which they boarded another ship to take them into No. 9 Rest Camp at Taranto. Leaving Taranto they travelled to Cherburg arriving on 14th February 1918 where they boarded H.M.T ‘Prince George’ to arrive at Southampton, England on 15th February 1919 and marched into camp at Heytesbury later that day. Orders to proceed to France arrived and on 31st March 1918 the brothers departed from Southampton and across the channel and into the Australian General Base Depot at Le Havre until taken on strength with 3rd Field Artillery Brigade at Franvillers on 14th April where they each were assigned as Drivers for the brigade. Their war service was uneventful and remained in France and following the Armistice and the systematic demobilization of equipment, horses and troops which started in January and February 1919 Frederick embarked for England on 18th March 1919, his brother Richard had been detached to 1st Field Artillery Brigade in February. The brothers met up again and sailed together to England where both were granted leave from 20th March – 20th June to assist on a civilian farm, a Poplar farm owned by J.W. Shearman at Anwick Fen, Seaford, Lincolnshire. On 1st August their names appeared on List 341 for return to Australia and they sailed aboard H.M.A.T ‘Argyllshire’ and disembarked at Melbourne on 22nd September 1919 before making their way to Brisbane and discharge. Following a return to civilian life Richard married Annie Elizabeth Woof, daughter of John Thomas and Lizzie Smith, on 3rd December 1919 and resumed farming on his father’s property at Cooloothin Creek, Pomona. Around 1936 the couple moved to live and farm at Montville and stayed in the area until a move to become a garage proprietor at Tewantin in 1958. By 1968 they were in retirement at Glencoe Street, Redcliffe where Richard died on 20th April 1973 at the age of 76. He was buried on 26th April in Redcliffe Cemetery, plot 2/Q/9 alongside Annie who had died on 22nd November 1971.

  • France
  • France
  • France
WOODS Richard
WOODS Richard
WOODS Richard
Returned to Australia
22 September 1919
20 April 1973
Redcliffe
76
Redcliffe Cemetery plot 2/Q/9

Cootharaba Honour Roll, Pomona Hall, Reserve Street, Pomona

Shire of Noosa Roll of Honor, Shire Council Chambers, Pelican Street, Tewantin

Robyn Dahl

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