Shep's Place Family Tree

Horace Briggs WALKER
1943 Horace Walker, John Shepherd
Horace Briggs WALKER  ‎(I6944)‎
Given Names: Horace Briggs
Surname: WALKER

Gender: MaleMale
      

Birth: 2 April 1891 34 33 Alberton, South Australia, Australia
Death: 20 February 1958 ‎(Age 66)‎ 41 Sussex Terrace, Hawthorn, South Australia, Australia
Personal Facts and Details
Birth 2 April 1891 34 33 Alberton, South Australia, Australia

Occupation Public Servant Adelaide, South Australia, Australia


Note: Horace was a public servant with the South Australian Government and eventually became the Registrar of the Motor Vehicles Department.
Military Service between 1914 and 1918 ‎(Age 22)‎

Hide Details Note: Horace was a Petty Officer in the Naval Reserve in Adelaide in the years preceding the Great War. On the outbreak of war on 4 August 1914, an expeditionary force was formed to capture the German radio transmitters in New Guinea ‎(then a German Protectorate)‎ that passed signals to the German Pacific Fleet. The expeditionary force was to be made up of an infantry battalion recruited in Sydney and 500 naval reservists to act as a naval landing force. Horace and another South Australian volunteered but only one was required and the other man was selected because he was unemployed. The transmitters were captured with the loss of only six men, one of whom was the man whose place Horace had sought.

Horace enlisted in the 27th Battalion of the Australian Imperial Force on 9 December 1914. Because of his previous experience in the Naval Reserve he was promoted to Sergeant on 26 December when the battalion was in training at Warradale, SA. On 23 March 1915 he was promoted again to Regimental Quartermaster Sergeant.

The battalion embarked on the troopship "Geelong" on 31 March 1915 and sailed at first to Egypt and after training there for two months to Gallipoli. Horace served on Gallipoli until the end of that campaign and on 9 November he was commissioned as 2nd Lieutenant. The batallion returned to Egypt until it sailed for France arriving at Marseilles on 26 March 1916 and after further training proceeded to Messines in Belgium and then to the front line.

Eight days later at 11.00am Horace and two fellow officers were hit by a high explosive shell-burst during an artilliary bombardment of the allied trenches, evidently in retaliation for a gas attack the previous night. The other two were killed. Horace, severely wounded, lay in a small hollow in the ruins of the trenches where he fell, with shells falling around him, until he could be dragged to safety after dark. His CO ‎(Colonel EW Dollman)‎ reported:
"one of Walker's legs was smashed and has since been amputated. The other was broken in three places and badly cut but might be saved if the poor fellow lives. I saw him on the stretcher as he left our lines. He was a ghastly colour but brave as a hero, but was worrying about the two others who had been killed. It has been a severe shock to lose three such good officers."

Horace was evacuated to 7 Stationary Hospital and was visited by Dollman, who was greetd by Walker: "I must apologise for not shaving today, Sir, but I am afraid that my razor got blown up with the rest of my gear." He was still there when his promotion to Lieutenant nine months earlier was gazetted, but soon afterwards he was transferred to Ridley War Hospital in London where he learned to walk with an artificial leg.

He was repatriated to Australia on the hospital ship "Kanowna" arriving home in Adelaide on 6 September 1917, and was discharged on 12 November with the 1914/15 Star, British War medal, Victory Medal and the Anzac Commemorative Medallion. When he left Adelaide he was about 185 cm tall with thick black hair but the loss of one leg and the shattering of the other reduced his height to about 180 cm and when he left hospital his hair was white.

Horace suffered more than most people realised from his injury. From time to time he had to enter hospital to have an operation on the stump of the leg he had lost or to have treatment on his "good" leg which had been broken in three places and which never completely healed. A walking stick made it possible for him to remain active but he was never without some discomfort.
In later years he was able to drive a specially adapted car with hand controls.

Marriage Gertrude Irene Gertie MATTHEWS - 28 November 1917 ‎(Age 26)‎ Baptist Church, Semaphore, South Australia, Australia

Biographical Notes 1955 ‎(Age 63)‎ Buckingham Palace, London, England


Hide Details Note: Commander of the British Empire
For services to the State of South Australia.

Biographical Notes

Note: Horace attended Le Fevre Pennisula School in Port Adelaide and then attended the Adelaide Shorthand and Business Academy. He entered the South Australian Public Service in 1907 and was posted to the Chief Storekeeper's Department. His chief interests were sport and his church. He played football in the lower grades for the Port Adelaide Football Club and was a keen runner. He attended services at the Semaphore Baptist Church and it was there that he first met Gertrude Irene Matthews.
Death 20 February 1958 ‎(Age 66)‎ 41 Sussex Terrace, Hawthorn, South Australia, Australia

Cause of death: Heart attack
Burial 21 February 1958 ‎(1 day after death)‎ Centennial Park Cemetery, Pasadena, South Australia, Australia

Last Change 23 May 2009 - 16:13:37
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Parents Family  (F1734)
William WALKER
1856 - 1939
Ellen Nellie BRIGGS
1858 - 1926
William Will WALKER
1877 - 1958
Laurie WALKER
1878 - 1954
Joseph Briggs Joe WALKER
1881 - 1965
Mabel Agnes Dot WALKER
1883 - 1973
Lydia Briggs Lily WALKER
1887 - 1966
Thomas Briggs WALKER
1889 - 1890
Horace Briggs WALKER
1891 - 1958
Ellen Briggs Nell WALKER
1894 - 1981
Gilbert Gladstone WALKER
1898 - 1915

Immediate Family  (F2462)
Gertrude Irene Gertie MATTHEWS
1892 - 1982
Aileen Scott WALKER
1919 - 1986
John Neil WALKER
1923 - 2009


Notes
Occupation Horace was a public servant with the South Australian Government and eventually became the Registrar of the Motor Vehicles Department.
Military Service Horace was a Petty Officer in the Naval Reserve in Adelaide in the years preceding the Great War. On the outbreak of war on 4 August 1914, an expeditionary force was formed to capture the German radio transmitters in New Guinea ‎(then a German Protectorate)‎ that passed signals to the German Pacific Fleet. The expeditionary force was to be made up of an infantry battalion recruited in Sydney and 500 naval reservists to act as a naval landing force. Horace and another South Australian volunteered but only one was required and the other man was selected because he was unemployed. The transmitters were captured with the loss of only six men, one of whom was the man whose place Horace had sought.

Horace enlisted in the 27th Battalion of the Australian Imperial Force on 9 December 1914. Because of his previous experience in the Naval Reserve he was promoted to Sergeant on 26 December when the battalion was in training at Warradale, SA. On 23 March 1915 he was promoted again to Regimental Quartermaster Sergeant.

The battalion embarked on the troopship "Geelong" on 31 March 1915 and sailed at first to Egypt and after training there for two months to Gallipoli. Horace served on Gallipoli until the end of that campaign and on 9 November he was commissioned as 2nd Lieutenant. The batallion returned to Egypt until it sailed for France arriving at Marseilles on 26 March 1916 and after further training proceeded to Messines in Belgium and then to the front line.

Eight days later at 11.00am Horace and two fellow officers were hit by a high explosive shell-burst during an artilliary bombardment of the allied trenches, evidently in retaliation for a gas attack the previous night. The other two were killed. Horace, severely wounded, lay in a small hollow in the ruins of the trenches where he fell, with shells falling around him, until he could be dragged to safety after dark. His CO ‎(Colonel EW Dollman)‎ reported:
"one of Walker's legs was smashed and has since been amputated. The other was broken in three places and badly cut but might be saved if the poor fellow lives. I saw him on the stretcher as he left our lines. He was a ghastly colour but brave as a hero, but was worrying about the two others who had been killed. It has been a severe shock to lose three such good officers."

Horace was evacuated to 7 Stationary Hospital and was visited by Dollman, who was greetd by Walker: "I must apologise for not shaving today, Sir, but I am afraid that my razor got blown up with the rest of my gear." He was still there when his promotion to Lieutenant nine months earlier was gazetted, but soon afterwards he was transferred to Ridley War Hospital in London where he learned to walk with an artificial leg.

He was repatriated to Australia on the hospital ship "Kanowna" arriving home in Adelaide on 6 September 1917, and was discharged on 12 November with the 1914/15 Star, British War medal, Victory Medal and the Anzac Commemorative Medallion. When he left Adelaide he was about 185 cm tall with thick black hair but the loss of one leg and the shattering of the other reduced his height to about 180 cm and when he left hospital his hair was white.

Horace suffered more than most people realised from his injury. From time to time he had to enter hospital to have an operation on the stump of the leg he had lost or to have treatment on his "good" leg which had been broken in three places and which never completely healed. A walking stick made it possible for him to remain active but he was never without some discomfort.
In later years he was able to drive a specially adapted car with hand controls.
Biographical Notes Commander of the British Empire
For services to the State of South Australia.
Biographical Notes Horace attended Le Fevre Pennisula School in Port Adelaide and then attended the Adelaide Shorthand and Business Academy. He entered the South Australian Public Service in 1907 and was posted to the Chief Storekeeper's Department. His chief interests were sport and his church. He played football in the lower grades for the Port Adelaide Football Club and was a keen runner. He attended services at the Semaphore Baptist Church and it was there that he first met Gertrude Irene Matthews.

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Sources

Source
Jean Shepherd Sargent

Source
History of the Walker Family

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Media

Multimedia Object
1943 Horace Walker, John Shepherd1943 Horace Walker, John Shepherd  ‎(M505)‎
Type: Photo

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Family with Parents
Father
William WALKER ‎(I4976)‎
Birth 3 August 1856 30 31 Green Hill Lane, Alfreton, Derbyshire, England
Death 1 June 1939 ‎(Age 82)‎ Millswood, South Australia, Australia
19 months
Mother
 
Ellen Nellie BRIGGS ‎(I4977)‎
Birth 25 February 1858 30 28 Mortomley, Yorkshire, England
Death 16 September 1926 ‎(Age 68)‎ One day from Perth, Indian Ocean

Marriage: 8 August 1876 -- Saint Johns Church, Chapeltown, Yorkshire, England
11 months
#1
Brother
William Will WALKER ‎(I5042)‎
Birth 3 July 1877 20 19 Briggs Cottage, High Green, Yorkshire, England
Death 15 January 1958 ‎(Age 80)‎ Military Road, Semaphore, South Australia, Australia
17 months
#2
Sister
Laurie WALKER ‎(I5044)‎
Birth 7 December 1878 22 20 Briggs Cottage, High Green, Yorkshire, England
Death 2 December 1954 ‎(Age 75)‎
2 years
#3
Brother
Joseph Briggs Joe WALKER ‎(I5046)‎
Birth 27 February 1881 24 23 Briggs Cottage, High Green, Yorkshire, England
Death 13 July 1965 ‎(Age 84)‎
2 years
#4
Sister
Mabel Agnes Dot WALKER ‎(I31)‎
Birth 12 May 1883 26 25 High Green, Yorkshire, England
Death February 1973 ‎(Age 89)‎ Ridgehaven Nursing Home, Ridgehaven, South Australia, Australia
4 years
#5
Sister
Lydia Briggs Lily WALKER ‎(I5048)‎
Birth 6 October 1887 31 29 Alberton, South Australia, Australia
Death 13 May 1966 ‎(Age 78)‎
2 years
#6
Brother
Thomas Briggs WALKER ‎(I5050)‎
Birth 14 November 1889 33 31 Alberton, South Australia, Australia
Death 6 May 1890 ‎(Age 5 months)‎ Alberton, South Australia, Australia
17 months
#7
Horace Briggs WALKER ‎(I6944)‎
Birth 2 April 1891 34 33 Alberton, South Australia, Australia
Death 20 February 1958 ‎(Age 66)‎ 41 Sussex Terrace, Hawthorn, South Australia, Australia
3 years
#8
Sister
Ellen Briggs Nell WALKER ‎(I5053)‎
Birth 16 March 1894 37 36 Alberton, South Australia, Australia
Death 4 October 1981 ‎(Age 87)‎ Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
4 years
#9
Brother
Gilbert Gladstone WALKER ‎(I5055)‎
Birth 20 February 1898 41 39 Alberton, South Australia, Australia
Death 1 August 1915 ‎(Age 17)‎ Training Camp, Colonel Light Gardens, South Australia, Australia
Family with Gertrude Irene Gertie MATTHEWS
Horace Briggs WALKER ‎(I6944)‎
Birth 2 April 1891 34 33 Alberton, South Australia, Australia
Death 20 February 1958 ‎(Age 66)‎ 41 Sussex Terrace, Hawthorn, South Australia, Australia
1 year
Wife
 
Gertrude Irene Gertie MATTHEWS ‎(I5052)‎
Birth 14 April 1892 Kapunda, South Australia, Australia
Death July 1982 ‎(Age 90)‎

Marriage: 28 November 1917 -- Baptist Church, Semaphore, South Australia, Australia
16 months
#1
Daughter
Aileen Scott WALKER ‎(I5086)‎
Birth 29 March 1919 27 26 Rumont Private Hospital Unley Road, Malvern, South Australia, Australia
Death 26 September 1986 ‎(Age 67)‎ Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
4 years
#2
Son
John Neil WALKER ‎(I6976)‎
Birth 27 March 1923 31 30 Unley, South Australia, Australia
Death 31 October 2009 ‎(Age 86)‎ Adelaide, South Australia, Australia