BROUGH, Charles Anthony
Service Number: | Officer |
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Enlisted: | 24 June 1915, Sydney, New South Wales |
Last Rank: | Lieutenant |
Last Unit: | 2nd Divisional Ammunition Column |
Born: | Maitland, New South Wales, 21 October 1889 |
Home Town: | Petersham, Marrickville, New South Wales |
Schooling: | Newington College |
Occupation: | Auctioneer |
Died: | Tuberculosis (war service related), Melbourne, Victoria, 21 July 1933, aged 43 years |
Cemetery: |
Fawkner Memorial Park Cemetery, Victoria |
Memorials: | Bolwarra Public School Roll of Honour |
World War 1 Service
24 Jun 1915: | Enlisted AIF WW1, Second Lieutenant, Sydney, New South Wales | |
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24 Jun 1915: | Enlisted AIF WW1, Second Lieutenant, Sydney, New South Wales | |
9 Aug 1915: | Involvement Lieutenant, 12th Light Horse Regiment, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '3' embarkation_place: Sydney embarkation_ship: HMAT Runic embarkation_ship_number: A54 public_note: '' | |
9 Aug 1915: | Embarked Lieutenant, 12th Light Horse Regiment, HMAT Runic, Sydney | |
4 Oct 1917: | Discharged AIF WW1, Lieutenant, Officer, 2nd Divisional Ammunition Column |
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Add my storyBiography contributed by John E
"OBITUARY. MR. C. A. BROUGH.
Mr. Charles Anthony Brough, a former captain of the A.I.F., died in Melbourne Hospital on Friday, aged 43 years. For some years he was actively associated with the Young Australia League. The elder son of the Rev. A. W. Brough, of Erode, Southern India, Mr. Brough was born in Maitland, and was educated at Newington College. At the outbreak of hostilities in 1914, he enlisted in the Light Horse, and saw service on Gallipoli and in other theatres of war. In 1923, he was appointed to take charge of a New South Wales contingent of 98 boys, who made an educational tour of Western Australia, under the auspices of the Young Australia League. In the following year he took a party of Y.A.L. boys to the British Empire Exhibition at Wembley. Subsequently, he was engaged in business in Sydney and in Melbourne, but had been a resident of the lastnamed city in recent years." - from the Sydney Morning Herald 26 Jul 1933 (nla.gov.au)