CRUMMER, Sydney Leslie
Service Number: | 1798 |
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Enlisted: | 26 February 1915, Enoggera, Queensland |
Last Rank: | Second Corporal |
Last Unit: | Army Pay Corps (AIF) |
Born: | Wolumla, New South Wales, 29 May 1890 |
Home Town: | Brisbane, Brisbane, Queensland |
Schooling: | Not yet discovered |
Occupation: | Master butcher |
Died: | Natural causes, Brisbane, Queensland, 6 August 1959, aged 69 years |
Cemetery: | Not yet discovered |
Memorials: |
World War 1 Service
26 Feb 1915: | Enlisted AIF WW1, Private, 1798, Enoggera, Queensland | |
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20 Aug 1915: | Involvement AIF WW1, Private, 1798, 25th Infantry Battalion, Enlistment/Embarkation WW1, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '15' embarkation_place: Sydney embarkation_ship: HMAT Shropshire embarkation_ship_number: A9 public_note: '' | |
20 Aug 1915: | Embarked AIF WW1, Private, 1798, 25th Infantry Battalion, HMAT Shropshire, Sydney | |
12 Oct 1915: | Involvement AIF WW1, Private, 1798, 25th Infantry Battalion, ANZAC / Gallipoli | |
18 Nov 1915: | Promoted AIF WW1, Lance Corporal, 25th Infantry Battalion | |
23 Jun 1920: | Discharged AIF WW1, Second Corporal, 1798, Army Pay Corps (AIF) |
Wives Lost and Won
My Grandfather Sydney Crummer was one of the first members of AAPC, which is an irony for my because I was a Clerk Admin in RAASC before going to Officer Cadet School. It is a link of types.
Sydney was shown as being married on enlistment and allocated the maximum possible proportion of his pay back to his wife. Except that successive emails from France to Australia and resultant police investigations failed to find existence of the 'wife'. The supposed family of the 'wife' say she never existed. But the father of the vanishing wife died during imprisonment in Brisbane about a decade ago, so the likelihood is that it was a family of 'bad eggs'. Was this a prevalent occurence?
However Sydney subsequently met and married Edith Rose Cox, a pure bred cockney from Bromley by Bow in London. They met, in London, during the war and remained there during Sydney's extended administrative service after the war. They came to Australia in 1921, where they moved into premises in Kelvin Grove in Brisbane. They lived there, close to hallowed Ballymore football grounds, all of their lives until old age took its toll. Sydney became an electrical fitter and his son, my father, became an electrical engineer. He too served, during World War II.
So a humble Queensland goes to war married to one and returns married to another. What a story!
Submitted 30 March 2017 by David Hudson
Biography contributed by John Edwards
The three sons of Arthur John Crummer and Anne Isabelle (nee Mackay) who enlisted for service in the Great War;
10141 Gnr. Arthur Herbert Crummer (/explore/people/87219), 5th Field Artillery Brigade, returned from active service in 1918
1798 2nd-Cpl. Sydney Leslie Crummer, Army pay Corps, returned from active service in 1920
488 Pte. Septimus Clare Crummer (/explore/people/53182), 1st Infantry Battalion, returned from active service in 1918