AYLIFFE, William Hawden
Service Number: | 6537 |
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Enlisted: | 15 September 1916 |
Last Rank: | Corporal |
Last Unit: | 50th Infantry Battalion |
Born: | Permanoota Station, Broken Hill, New South Wales, 9 June 1892 |
Home Town: | Broken Hill, Broken Hill Municipality, New South Wales |
Schooling: | Pulteney Street C of E School |
Occupation: | Farmer |
Died: | Killed in Action, Villers-Bretonneux, France, 25 April 1918, aged 25 years |
Cemetery: |
No known grave - "Known Unto God" Villers-Bretonneux Memorial, Villers-Bretonneux, Picardie, France |
Memorials: | Adelaide National War Memorial, Adelaide The 50th Battalion Commemorative Cross, Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, Broken Hill War Memorial, Kingscote Kangaroo Island WW1 Roll of Honour, Kingscote War Memorial, Penneshaw Kangaroo Island Men Roll of Honor WW1, Prospect Roll of Honour A-G WWI Board, Victor Harbor War Memorial, Villers-Bretonneux Memorial (Australian National Memorial - France) |
World War 1 Service
15 Sep 1916: | Enlisted AIF WW1, Private, 6537, 27th Infantry Battalion | |
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24 Jan 1917: |
Involvement
AIF WW1, Private, 6537, 27th Infantry Battalion, Enlistment/Embarkation WW1, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '15' embarkation_place: Adelaide embarkation_ship: HMAT Miltiades embarkation_ship_number: A28 public_note: '' |
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24 Jan 1917: | Embarked AIF WW1, Private, 6537, 27th Infantry Battalion, HMAT Miltiades, Adelaide | |
25 Apr 1918: | Involvement AIF WW1, Corporal, 6537, 50th Infantry Battalion, Villers-Bretonneux, --- :awm_ww1_roll_of_honour_import: awm_service_number: 6537 awm_unit: 50 Battalion awm_rank: Corporal awm_died_date: 1918-04-25 |
Help us honour William Hawden Ayliffe's service by contributing information, stories, and images so that they can be preserved for future generations.
Add my storyBiography contributed by Faithe Jones
Father Frank Hamilton Ayliffe and mother Mrs R Bessie Ayliffe, Thomas Street, Broken Hill, NSW
Sisters:
Beithe Ayliffe
Ruthe Ayliffe
Next of kin in service (brothers):
Eldest brother
#260 Sergeant James Hamilton Ayliffe
3rd Light Horse Regiment, of Broken Hill, NSW.
A bushman prior to enlisting in August 1914, Tpr Ayliffe embarked from Adelaide on board
HMAT Port Lincoln (A17) on 22 October 1914. He served at Gallipoli from 9 May 1915 until
the evacuation in December and then proceeded to Palestine where he was was appointed
Corporal (Cpl) on 2 July 1916. Cpl Ayliffe was wounded in action at El-Arish, Palestine, on
9/1/1917 and promoted to the rank of Sergeant (Sgt) on 8/7/1917. On 7/11/1917 Sgt Ayliffe,
aged 27, died of wounds received in action at Beersheba, Palestine.
#259 Sergeant Frank Keith Ayliffe
5th Motor Transport Company, returned to Australia in October 1918, aged 24.
Described on enlisting as 23 years; single; 6' tall; 175 lbs; fresh complexion; brown eyes; brown hair;
Church of England
15/9/1916 Enlisted in Adelaide
22/1/1917 Commanding Office appointed William to 19th reinforcements 27th Infantry
Mitcham Camp
24/1/1917 Embarked from Outer Harbour, Port Adelaide on board HMAT Miltiades A28
as a Private in the 19th reinforcements
19/3/1917 admitted to ships hospital sick (22/3/1917 discharged)
27/3/1917 Disembarked into Devonport, England
28/3/1917 Marched in from Australia to Rollestone
23/7/1917 proceeded overseas to France, ex Southampton
24/7/1917 admittted from England, Havre, France
7/8/1917 proceeded to join 50th Battalion
10/8/1917 taken on strength 27th Battalion
16/9/1917 To be Lance Corporal - in the field
15/11/1917 Promoted to Corporal
25/4/1918 Stated as 'Killed in Action'
buried in:
Medals:
British War Medal (55524); Victory Medal (54644); Memorial Plaque & Memorial Scroll (345137)
Sourced and submitted by Julianne T Ryan. 11/2/2015. Lest we forget.
Biography contributed by Faithe Jones
William Hawden Ayliffe was the third of nine children of Frank and Elizabeth Hamilton (nee Davison). He was born in 1892 at Silverton, NSW. His family had moved to Myponga where Frank worked for the Zinc Corporation, either as an engineer or manager. James and Frank both joined the Light Horse, serving together at Gallipoli, then in Egypt, until May 1916, when Frank transferred to Artillery for the remainder of the war. James, still with the 3rd LHR, was fatally wounded near Beersheba, Palestine, on 7 November 1917.
William enlisted on 15 September 1916 at the age of 23. Following initial training at Mitcham, he sailed with the 19th Group of Reinforcements intended for 27th Infantry Battalion onboard HMAT A28 Miltiades from Adelaide, on 24 January 1917. After nine weeks at sea, the AIF passengers disembarked at Devonport, England, on 27 March 1917. William then travelled to the 7th Training Battalion at Rollestone, Salisbury Plains, for further training from battle-experienced instructors.
Four months later William was transferred to France then to the 50th Battalion at Kemmel on 7 August 1917, instead of his original unit. His next two weeks were spent as a member of working parties salvaging battlefield debris or on construction work. The Battalion then went forward at Ploegsteert Wood in Belgium where, fortunately, it only suffered 14 casualties during its ten days in the front line.
William must have quickly displayed leadership potential for he was promoted to Lance Corporal on 16 September while his Battalion trained and rested. Ten days later it was part of the attack on Zonnebeeke Ridge, which commenced at 5.50 am on 26 September 1917. The unit’s advance was across a 585 metre wide front continuing forward to a depth of 685 metres, which it achieved, then dug new defences. The Battalion was relieved after 24 hours strenuous action having lost 35 killed and 143 wounded.
October 1917 saw William’s unit in the frontline at Broodsneide Ridge between 10th -19th where it was shelled daily. Despite the shelling, the men repaired a railway and completed barbed wire defences while maintaining forward patrols up to 460 metres from their posts. Of the 534 men who began that period, 43 were killed, 100 wounded and 29 reported sick over the ten days. In mid-November William was promoted to Corporal.
These actions were part of a series of eleven great British attacks made between July and November 1917 in what was then called Third Battle of Ypres but now is more commonly known as the Battle of Passchendaele. Australian soldiers were at the forefront of five of those attacks.
Most of December 1917 was spent resting and preparing for the coming year. On the 11th December, members of the Battalion cast their votes in the Commonwealth Referendum on Compulsory Service Outside Australia. This referendum to introduce conscription was defeated. Christmas Day was spent at Moislains, where Christmas dinner was embellished with treats purchased from funds donated by the League of Loyal Women of Adelaide.
During the months of January-March 1918, the Battalion spent periods in the frontline or supporting the frontline north of Hollebeke then later at Henencourt. Through March and April 1918, the Allied Armies were forced back by the German spring offensive. On 5 April, the 50th Battalion, with other AIF units at Dernancourt, successfully stopped the largest German attack ever mounted against Australian troops during the war.
On 25th April 1918, the 50th Battalion, with five other Australian Battalions, began a moonlight encirclement of Villers-Bretonneux, which led to the recapture of the village. During the attack William was among the many of his unit killed by heavy German machine gun fire.
Unfortunately his body was not found after the fighting. William is one of 10,885 Australians killed in France who have no known grave. Their names appear on the walls of the Villers-Bretonneux Memorial. Many other members of his Battalion killed that day lie in the military cemetery adjacent to the Memorial. His family later received William’s British War Medal, Victory Medal.
William is commemorated on the Victor Harbor War Memorial and had a memorial plaque affixed to a Norfolk Island pine on Flinders Parade, Victor Harbor.
http://victorharborrsl.com.au/ayliffe-william-hawden-army-6537/ (victorharborrsl.com.au)