Advertisement

Private Charles William Gordon Conroy
Monument

Advertisement

Private Charles William Gordon Conroy Veteran

Birth
Thames, Thames-Coromandel District, Waikato, New Zealand
Death
19 Jul 1916 (aged 41–42)
France
Monument
Fromelles, Departement du Nord, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France Add to Map
Plot
No known grave. "Known Unto God", Panel 10.
Memorial ID
View Source
~~~CONROY, Charles William Gordon, Australian Imperial Force, AIF, The Great War~~~
Transcript of military service for regimental number:--- 4460, Private Conroy.
Born:--- Thames, New Zealand. 1882.
Religion:--- Church of England
Civil employment:--- Chemist
Home Address:--- Orange PO, Orange, New South Wales.
Marital status Married
Next of kin:--- Wife, Mrs Mary Jane Conroy, Orange PO, Orange, New South Wales.
Prior military qualifications:---Rifle Corps in New Zealand.
Attested into AIF:--- 25th October 1915, Orange, New South Wales.
Age on enlistment:--- 41 years.
Final Rank:--- Private
Unit on enlistment:--- 13th Australian Infantry Battalion, 14th Reinforcement, AIF.
Embarked from:--- Sydney, New South Wales, aboard HMAT A70 Ballarat, 16th December 1916
Final :--- 54th Australian Infantry Battalion, AIF.
Fate:--- Killed in Action, 20th July 1916
Burial:--- No known grave. "Known Unto God"
War service:--- Egypt, Western Front
Medals:--- British War Medal, Victory Medal
Commemorated:-- V.C. Corner (Panel No 10), Australian Cemetery Memorial, Fromelles, France
Other Information:---Embarked Sydney, 16 February 1916.
Found guilty, 9 March 1916, of (1) being absent without leave, (2) breaking ranks: fined £1. Disembarked Egypt, 22 March 1916.
Joined 54th Bn, Ferry Post, 1 April 1916.
Admitted to No 14 Field Ambulance, Katoomba Heights, 23 May 1916; discharged to duty and rejoined unit, 26 May 1916.
Embarked Alexandria to join the British Expeditionary Force, 19 June 1916; disembarked Marseilles, France, 29 June 1916.
Posted missing, 19/20 June 1916.
Previous report of missing now, 28 July 1916, to be reported as 'Killed in Action, 19/20 July 1916'.
Statement, Red Cross File No 790109, 4433 Pte C.M. BAKER, 54th Bn (patient, 3rd London General Hospital, Wandsworth, England), undated: 'Informant states that on July 20th 1916 at Fromelles he was fighting and Conroy was struck by a piece of shell. informant saw him fall and feels sure he was dead. It was between the 1st and 2nd lines of the German trenches.'
Second statement, 4804 Pte R.G. HUGHES, B Company, 54th Bn (patient, 3rd Southern General Hospital, Towen Hall, Oxford, England), 9 November 1916: 'I saw Pte. Conroy of B. Coy. V Platoon, wounded about a quarter to 6 July 19th. 1916. at Fromelles. He was wounded by a shell in his left chest above his heart. He fell down and was carried away on a stretcher. We were in our own front line at the time and 5 mins after Pte. Conroy was wounded, we made an advance and took some ground and held it all that night but we lost it again next morning.'
Third statement, 4493 Pte E.J. FULLER, 54th Bn (patient, No 5 General Hospital, Rouen), 29 November 1916: 'Informant states tha[t] Conroy was in the attack at Fromelles on date mentioned. He got wounded in the shoulder as he went "over the top" but fought on until the Battn. came back into their trench. Soon after he got back into the trench he was blown to pieces by a shell.'
~~~~~Bio details by Contributor: Althea B (48514447)~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Research in Australia appears to have conclusively shown that Charles was Charles William Graham Gemming, born 1882 Thames, New Zealand.
PS. A group of researchers have tried for years to find this soldier, four brothers served and three died. https://www.fromelles.info/soldiers/4460-private-charles-william-gordon-conroy/
Contributor: Althea B (48514447)
~~~CONROY, Charles William Gordon, Australian Imperial Force, AIF, The Great War~~~
Transcript of military service for regimental number:--- 4460, Private Conroy.
Born:--- Thames, New Zealand. 1882.
Religion:--- Church of England
Civil employment:--- Chemist
Home Address:--- Orange PO, Orange, New South Wales.
Marital status Married
Next of kin:--- Wife, Mrs Mary Jane Conroy, Orange PO, Orange, New South Wales.
Prior military qualifications:---Rifle Corps in New Zealand.
Attested into AIF:--- 25th October 1915, Orange, New South Wales.
Age on enlistment:--- 41 years.
Final Rank:--- Private
Unit on enlistment:--- 13th Australian Infantry Battalion, 14th Reinforcement, AIF.
Embarked from:--- Sydney, New South Wales, aboard HMAT A70 Ballarat, 16th December 1916
Final :--- 54th Australian Infantry Battalion, AIF.
Fate:--- Killed in Action, 20th July 1916
Burial:--- No known grave. "Known Unto God"
War service:--- Egypt, Western Front
Medals:--- British War Medal, Victory Medal
Commemorated:-- V.C. Corner (Panel No 10), Australian Cemetery Memorial, Fromelles, France
Other Information:---Embarked Sydney, 16 February 1916.
Found guilty, 9 March 1916, of (1) being absent without leave, (2) breaking ranks: fined £1. Disembarked Egypt, 22 March 1916.
Joined 54th Bn, Ferry Post, 1 April 1916.
Admitted to No 14 Field Ambulance, Katoomba Heights, 23 May 1916; discharged to duty and rejoined unit, 26 May 1916.
Embarked Alexandria to join the British Expeditionary Force, 19 June 1916; disembarked Marseilles, France, 29 June 1916.
Posted missing, 19/20 June 1916.
Previous report of missing now, 28 July 1916, to be reported as 'Killed in Action, 19/20 July 1916'.
Statement, Red Cross File No 790109, 4433 Pte C.M. BAKER, 54th Bn (patient, 3rd London General Hospital, Wandsworth, England), undated: 'Informant states that on July 20th 1916 at Fromelles he was fighting and Conroy was struck by a piece of shell. informant saw him fall and feels sure he was dead. It was between the 1st and 2nd lines of the German trenches.'
Second statement, 4804 Pte R.G. HUGHES, B Company, 54th Bn (patient, 3rd Southern General Hospital, Towen Hall, Oxford, England), 9 November 1916: 'I saw Pte. Conroy of B. Coy. V Platoon, wounded about a quarter to 6 July 19th. 1916. at Fromelles. He was wounded by a shell in his left chest above his heart. He fell down and was carried away on a stretcher. We were in our own front line at the time and 5 mins after Pte. Conroy was wounded, we made an advance and took some ground and held it all that night but we lost it again next morning.'
Third statement, 4493 Pte E.J. FULLER, 54th Bn (patient, No 5 General Hospital, Rouen), 29 November 1916: 'Informant states tha[t] Conroy was in the attack at Fromelles on date mentioned. He got wounded in the shoulder as he went "over the top" but fought on until the Battn. came back into their trench. Soon after he got back into the trench he was blown to pieces by a shell.'
~~~~~Bio details by Contributor: Althea B (48514447)~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Research in Australia appears to have conclusively shown that Charles was Charles William Graham Gemming, born 1882 Thames, New Zealand.
PS. A group of researchers have tried for years to find this soldier, four brothers served and three died. https://www.fromelles.info/soldiers/4460-private-charles-william-gordon-conroy/
Contributor: Althea B (48514447)

Inscription

"THEIR NAME LIVETH FOR EVERMORE"

Gravesite Details

"The fortune of war, has denied this known and honoured, ANZAC, Private Conroy, burial given to his comrades in death."



Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement