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Major Geoffrey Gordon McCrae

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Major Geoffrey Gordon McCrae Veteran

Birth
Hawthorn, Boroondara City, Victoria, Australia
Death
19 Jul 1916 (aged 26)
Fromelles, Departement du Nord, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France
Burial
Fleurbaix, Departement du Pas-de-Calais, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France Add to Map
Plot
Plot I, Row F, Grave No. 33.
Memorial ID
View Source
Parents:---George Gordon and Augusta Helen McCrae (nee Brown), Calvin and Muir Streets, Lower Hawthorn, Victoria
~~~~~Major Geoffrey Gordon McCRAE, Australian Imperial Force, AIF, The Great War.~~~~~~
Regimential number:--- Commissioned Officer, Captain accorded to 7th Battalion, C Company.
Religion:--- Church of England
Home Town:--- Hawthorn, Boroondara, Victoria
Schooling: ---Melbourne Church of England Grammar School
Civil employment:--- Architect
Home Address:--- Calvin Street, Hawthorn, Victoria
Marital status:--- Single
Next of kin:--- Father, G G McCrae, Anchorfield, Calvin Street, Hawthorn, Victoria
Enlistment date 19 August 1914
Age on enlistment:--- 24 years and 7 months.
Rank on enlistment:--- Captain
Unit on enlistment:--- 7th Australian Infantry Battalion, AIF.
Embarked from:--- Melbourne, Victoria, aboard Transport A20 Hororata, 19th October 1914.
Final Rank:--- Major
Final Unit:--- 60th Australian Infantry Battalion, AIF.
Fate:--- Killed in Action, 19th July 1916, Fromelles, France.
Burial:--- Rue-Du-Bois Military Cemetery (Plot I, Row F, Grave No. 33), Fleurbaix, France
War service:--- Egypt, Gallipoli, Western Front
Medals:--- 1914-15 Star, British War Medal, Victory Medal
Roll of Honour:--- Australian War Memorial, Panel 170
Other Details:--- Transferred from B to D Company to be Company Commander, D Company, 3 April 1915. Embarked Alexandria to join the Mediterranean Expeditionary Force, Gallipoli, 5 April 1915.
Promoted Major, 25 April 1915. Appointed Military Transport Officer, HMT 'Mashobra', 15 May 1915.
Admitted to 1st Australian Stationary Hospital, Mudros, 1 June 1915 (improving: no further details recorded); rejoined Bn, 11 June 1915.
Slightly wounded, 13 July 1915; disembarked Alexandria from HS 'Soudan', 22 July 1915 (shell shock), and admitted to 15th General Hospital (constipation); transferred to Cyprus, 31 July 1915; rejoined Bn, Gallipoli, 26 August 1915, and posted to Headquarters as second in command.
Assumed temporary command of 7th Bn, 30 August 1915; resumed duties as second in command, 7th Bn, 10 September 1915.
Disembarked Alexandria, 7 January 1916 (general Gallipoli evacuation).
Admitted to 2nd Australian General Hospital, Cairo, 10 January 1916 (not yet diagnosed); transferred to Schubra Military Infectious Hospital, 24 February 1916 (para-typhoid); transferred to 3rd Auxiliary Hospital, 25 March 1916; to Ras el Tin Convalescent Depot, 1 May 1916; discharged to duty, 11 May 1916; taken on strength, 60th Bn, Ferry Post, 15 May 1916.
Embarked Alexandria to join the British Expeditionary Force, 18 June 1916; disembarked Marseilles, France, 29 June 1916.
Appointed to temporary command of 60th Bn, 1 July 1916.
Killed in action, 19 July 1916.
Statement, Red Cross File No 1900401, 1066 Pte H.W. POLSON, 60th Bn (patient, Fulham Military Hospital, London, England), 9 August 1916: 'Informant states that he saw Major McCrae killed at Huatieux (?) (sic) South of Armentieres on the evening of July 19th/16.' Note by interviewer: 'Informant intelligent and reliable.'
Memorials:--- Hawthorn Christ Church Anglican Memorial Window, MCC Roll of Honour 1914 - 1918 - Melbourne Cricket Club, Melbourne Grammar School WW1 Fallen Honour Roll
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Biography...contributed by Sharyn Roberts~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GEOFFREY GORDON McCRAE who was killed in action on 20th July 1916 in France was the younger son of Mr. George Gordon McCrae. He was born in 1890 and entered the School in 1905 and left in 1906. He took an interest in military matters, and was Captain 58th Infantry A.M.F. As soon as war broke out he enlisted and went to the war as Captain in the 7th Battalion, having had previous advantage of six years' military training. For several weeks he was in military charge of transports in the 2Egean, being promoted to Major on 26th April 1915, and so, though in full sight of it, was unable to be with his men at the Gallipoli Landing, which was a source of lasting regret to him. Obtaining leave, however, he rejoined the battalion, and thereafter was hard at work in the trenches up to the time of the
Evacuation. He was twice wounded at Anzac, once severely in the shoulder. He was on 1st May 1916 transferred to 60th Battalion, and on 1st July 1916 during the temporary absence of his Colonel was appointed to the temporary command of his battalion. He lost his life in the attack of the Australians at Fleurbaix. He was beloved by all his men, as well as by his brother officers, and had a name for
coolness, courage and resource. His Brigadier-General, in a letter to the young soldier's father, particularly remarked on his indifference to danger when acting as intelligence officer on Gallipoli. He was Mentioned in Sir Douglas Haig's Despatches.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Biography...contributed by Lucy O'Neill~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Major Geoff McRae's biography appears in Ross McMullin's anthology of ten potential future community leaders who were lost in action in the Great War, titled "Farewell Dear People" (2012).
Geoffrey Gordon McCrae was born on 1st January 1890 at Hawthorn, Victoria. After finishing his schooling he joined the Permanent Forces of the Commonwealth Military Forces. In 1912 Gordon was officially commissioned as a second lieutenant. On 14th August 1914, shortly after the outbreak of the First World War, he applied to join the Australian Imperial Force (AIF). Several days later, on 19 August 1914, the 24-year-old captain was officially assigned to the newly-formed 7th infantry Battalion. Two months later, on 19th October 1914, McCrae and the first contingent of the 7th battalion set sail from Melbourne aboard the troopship HMAT Hororata, bound for Egypt. The 7th Battalion was among the first infantry units raised for the AIF during the First World War, it was recruited from Victoria and, together with these Battalions, formed the 2nd Brigade.
After arriving at Egypt on the 2nd of December, the men spent the next few months encamped at the foot of the pyramids, spending their time training whilst partaking in the occasional sightseeing trip to Cairo. ...On 3rd 1915 he was made commander of "D" Company and two days later embarked for Lemnos aboard the troopship HMAT Mashobra. After staging at Lemnos the Battalion landed at Gallipoli on 25 April 1915 as part of the second wave ashore. Ten days after the landing, the 2nd Brigade was transferred from ANZAC Cove to Cape Helles to help in the attack on the village of Krithia. He re-joined the Battalion in the trenches of Gallipoli in May and was twice wounded in action during the following months On 26th August McCrae was appointed as second in command of the Battalion and several days later assumed temporary command of the Battalion for two weeks. The Battalion returned to Gallipoli in November and was evacuated the following month.
...On 7th January 1916, McCrae arrived back in Egypt and was admitted to hospital with Enteric fever that is a bacterial infection. It took him several months to fully recover and during this time he continued to write letters home to his family, in one letter included a sketch of the city outside his hospital room window. In May McCrae returned to duty and was transferred to the 60th Battalion with the rank of major. On 18th June the devastated French countryside towards the trenches of the Western Front. On the 2nd Of July, with the transfer of Lieutenant Colonel Alfred Jackson to the 58th Battalion, McCrae took temporary command of the 60th Battalion. He wrote one last letter to his family on 19th July 1916, shortly before leading the battalion into action at Fromelles. McCrae was killed in action later that same day leading his battalion in the attack against the enemy trenches. He was 26 years old.
By Lucy O'Neil
Parents:---George Gordon and Augusta Helen McCrae (nee Brown), Calvin and Muir Streets, Lower Hawthorn, Victoria
~~~~~Major Geoffrey Gordon McCRAE, Australian Imperial Force, AIF, The Great War.~~~~~~
Regimential number:--- Commissioned Officer, Captain accorded to 7th Battalion, C Company.
Religion:--- Church of England
Home Town:--- Hawthorn, Boroondara, Victoria
Schooling: ---Melbourne Church of England Grammar School
Civil employment:--- Architect
Home Address:--- Calvin Street, Hawthorn, Victoria
Marital status:--- Single
Next of kin:--- Father, G G McCrae, Anchorfield, Calvin Street, Hawthorn, Victoria
Enlistment date 19 August 1914
Age on enlistment:--- 24 years and 7 months.
Rank on enlistment:--- Captain
Unit on enlistment:--- 7th Australian Infantry Battalion, AIF.
Embarked from:--- Melbourne, Victoria, aboard Transport A20 Hororata, 19th October 1914.
Final Rank:--- Major
Final Unit:--- 60th Australian Infantry Battalion, AIF.
Fate:--- Killed in Action, 19th July 1916, Fromelles, France.
Burial:--- Rue-Du-Bois Military Cemetery (Plot I, Row F, Grave No. 33), Fleurbaix, France
War service:--- Egypt, Gallipoli, Western Front
Medals:--- 1914-15 Star, British War Medal, Victory Medal
Roll of Honour:--- Australian War Memorial, Panel 170
Other Details:--- Transferred from B to D Company to be Company Commander, D Company, 3 April 1915. Embarked Alexandria to join the Mediterranean Expeditionary Force, Gallipoli, 5 April 1915.
Promoted Major, 25 April 1915. Appointed Military Transport Officer, HMT 'Mashobra', 15 May 1915.
Admitted to 1st Australian Stationary Hospital, Mudros, 1 June 1915 (improving: no further details recorded); rejoined Bn, 11 June 1915.
Slightly wounded, 13 July 1915; disembarked Alexandria from HS 'Soudan', 22 July 1915 (shell shock), and admitted to 15th General Hospital (constipation); transferred to Cyprus, 31 July 1915; rejoined Bn, Gallipoli, 26 August 1915, and posted to Headquarters as second in command.
Assumed temporary command of 7th Bn, 30 August 1915; resumed duties as second in command, 7th Bn, 10 September 1915.
Disembarked Alexandria, 7 January 1916 (general Gallipoli evacuation).
Admitted to 2nd Australian General Hospital, Cairo, 10 January 1916 (not yet diagnosed); transferred to Schubra Military Infectious Hospital, 24 February 1916 (para-typhoid); transferred to 3rd Auxiliary Hospital, 25 March 1916; to Ras el Tin Convalescent Depot, 1 May 1916; discharged to duty, 11 May 1916; taken on strength, 60th Bn, Ferry Post, 15 May 1916.
Embarked Alexandria to join the British Expeditionary Force, 18 June 1916; disembarked Marseilles, France, 29 June 1916.
Appointed to temporary command of 60th Bn, 1 July 1916.
Killed in action, 19 July 1916.
Statement, Red Cross File No 1900401, 1066 Pte H.W. POLSON, 60th Bn (patient, Fulham Military Hospital, London, England), 9 August 1916: 'Informant states that he saw Major McCrae killed at Huatieux (?) (sic) South of Armentieres on the evening of July 19th/16.' Note by interviewer: 'Informant intelligent and reliable.'
Memorials:--- Hawthorn Christ Church Anglican Memorial Window, MCC Roll of Honour 1914 - 1918 - Melbourne Cricket Club, Melbourne Grammar School WW1 Fallen Honour Roll
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Biography...contributed by Sharyn Roberts~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GEOFFREY GORDON McCRAE who was killed in action on 20th July 1916 in France was the younger son of Mr. George Gordon McCrae. He was born in 1890 and entered the School in 1905 and left in 1906. He took an interest in military matters, and was Captain 58th Infantry A.M.F. As soon as war broke out he enlisted and went to the war as Captain in the 7th Battalion, having had previous advantage of six years' military training. For several weeks he was in military charge of transports in the 2Egean, being promoted to Major on 26th April 1915, and so, though in full sight of it, was unable to be with his men at the Gallipoli Landing, which was a source of lasting regret to him. Obtaining leave, however, he rejoined the battalion, and thereafter was hard at work in the trenches up to the time of the
Evacuation. He was twice wounded at Anzac, once severely in the shoulder. He was on 1st May 1916 transferred to 60th Battalion, and on 1st July 1916 during the temporary absence of his Colonel was appointed to the temporary command of his battalion. He lost his life in the attack of the Australians at Fleurbaix. He was beloved by all his men, as well as by his brother officers, and had a name for
coolness, courage and resource. His Brigadier-General, in a letter to the young soldier's father, particularly remarked on his indifference to danger when acting as intelligence officer on Gallipoli. He was Mentioned in Sir Douglas Haig's Despatches.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Biography...contributed by Lucy O'Neill~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Major Geoff McRae's biography appears in Ross McMullin's anthology of ten potential future community leaders who were lost in action in the Great War, titled "Farewell Dear People" (2012).
Geoffrey Gordon McCrae was born on 1st January 1890 at Hawthorn, Victoria. After finishing his schooling he joined the Permanent Forces of the Commonwealth Military Forces. In 1912 Gordon was officially commissioned as a second lieutenant. On 14th August 1914, shortly after the outbreak of the First World War, he applied to join the Australian Imperial Force (AIF). Several days later, on 19 August 1914, the 24-year-old captain was officially assigned to the newly-formed 7th infantry Battalion. Two months later, on 19th October 1914, McCrae and the first contingent of the 7th battalion set sail from Melbourne aboard the troopship HMAT Hororata, bound for Egypt. The 7th Battalion was among the first infantry units raised for the AIF during the First World War, it was recruited from Victoria and, together with these Battalions, formed the 2nd Brigade.
After arriving at Egypt on the 2nd of December, the men spent the next few months encamped at the foot of the pyramids, spending their time training whilst partaking in the occasional sightseeing trip to Cairo. ...On 3rd 1915 he was made commander of "D" Company and two days later embarked for Lemnos aboard the troopship HMAT Mashobra. After staging at Lemnos the Battalion landed at Gallipoli on 25 April 1915 as part of the second wave ashore. Ten days after the landing, the 2nd Brigade was transferred from ANZAC Cove to Cape Helles to help in the attack on the village of Krithia. He re-joined the Battalion in the trenches of Gallipoli in May and was twice wounded in action during the following months On 26th August McCrae was appointed as second in command of the Battalion and several days later assumed temporary command of the Battalion for two weeks. The Battalion returned to Gallipoli in November and was evacuated the following month.
...On 7th January 1916, McCrae arrived back in Egypt and was admitted to hospital with Enteric fever that is a bacterial infection. It took him several months to fully recover and during this time he continued to write letters home to his family, in one letter included a sketch of the city outside his hospital room window. In May McCrae returned to duty and was transferred to the 60th Battalion with the rank of major. On 18th June the devastated French countryside towards the trenches of the Western Front. On the 2nd Of July, with the transfer of Lieutenant Colonel Alfred Jackson to the 58th Battalion, McCrae took temporary command of the 60th Battalion. He wrote one last letter to his family on 19th July 1916, shortly before leading the battalion into action at Fromelles. McCrae was killed in action later that same day leading his battalion in the attack against the enemy trenches. He was 26 years old.
By Lucy O'Neil

Gravesite Details

Major Geoffrey Gordon McCRAE, Australian Imperial Force, AIF,



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  • Maintained by: Cobber
  • Originally Created by: War Graves
  • Added: Aug 6, 2010
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/56179102/geoffrey_gordon-mccrae: accessed ), memorial page for Major Geoffrey Gordon McCrae (18 Jan 1890–19 Jul 1916), Find a Grave Memorial ID 56179102, citing Rue-du-Bois Military Cemetery, Fleurbaix, Departement du Pas-de-Calais, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France; Maintained by Cobber (contributor 50072026).