EBSARY, Edgar James
Service Numbers: | 426056, SX9760, SX9760 |
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Enlisted: | 26 July 1940 |
Last Rank: | Lieutenant |
Last Unit: | 2nd/27th Infantry Battalion |
Born: | Bute, South Australia, 15 October 1919 |
Home Town: | Bute, Barunga West, South Australia |
Schooling: | Barunga Primary School, South Australia |
Occupation: | Farmer |
Died: | Natural Causes, Barunga Retirement Village Port Broughton, 13 January 2022, aged 102 years |
Cemetery: | Not yet discovered |
Memorials: | Bute District Council WW2 Roll of Honor, Bute War Memorial Garden |
World War 2 Service
26 Jul 1940: | Enlisted Australian Military Forces (Army WW2), Private, 426056, 2nd/27th Infantry Battalion | |
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10 Nov 1940: | Embarked Australian Military Forces (Army WW2), Private, SX9760, 2nd/27th Infantry Battalion, SS Mauretania (II) | |
7 Jun 1941: | Involvement Australian Military Forces (Army WW2), Private, SX9760, 2nd/27th Infantry Battalion, Syria - Operation Exporter | |
30 Jan 1942: | Embarked Australian Military Forces (Army WW2), Private, SX9760, 2nd/27th Infantry Battalion, Ile de France via Bombay Transfer to City of London to Colombo | |
18 Aug 1942: | Involvement Australian Military Forces (Army WW2), Private, SX9760, 2nd/27th Infantry Battalion, Kokoda - Papua | |
10 Nov 1942: | Involvement Australian Military Forces (Army WW2), Private, SX9760, 2nd/27th Infantry Battalion, Buna / Gona / Sanananda "The Battle of the Beachheads" - Papua | |
18 Oct 1943: | Involvement Australian Military Forces (Army WW2), Sergeant, SX9760, 2nd/27th Infantry Battalion, New Guinea - Huon Peninsula / Markham and Ramu Valley /Finisterre Ranges Campaigns | |
10 May 1944: | Promoted Australian Military Forces (Army WW2), Lieutenant, Army Training Units, No.10 OTU Woodside SA from 10 Feb 1944 | |
10 Oct 1944: | Involvement Australian Military Forces (Army WW2), Lieutenant, SX9760, 31/51 (amalgamated) Infantry Battalion AMF, Bougainville, Later served on Nauru and Ocean Island | |
30 Oct 1945: | Discharged Australian Military Forces (Army WW2), Lieutenant, SX9760 , 2nd/27th Infantry Battalion |
WW2
an excellent narrative of this soldiers life, pre war, war service and post war was included in the Adelaide Advertiser SA Weekend supplement on April 16th 2022. Born 15 Oct 1919, died 13 Jan 2022 at Burunga Village, at Port Broughton SA and buried locally. Awarded an OAM in 1990 for his service to the community and had been made a Life Membe of the RSL for services to his comrades since the war. Lest We Forget. Rest in Peace
Submitted 18 April 2022 by Maxwell HILL
Biography
WORLD WAR 2 SERVICE
24th June 1941 Private, 2nd/27th in Palestine
18th Oct 1943 Sargeant, 2nd/27th in Papua New Guinea
7th May 1944 Lieutenant, 31st/51st in Pacific Islands
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Joined 2nd/27th Battalion AIF 25/7/41
Served in the Middle East. Palestine, Egypt, Lebanon (Syrian campaign)
Served Papua New Guinea and Pacific Islands
Attended No 10 course O.C.T.U. 14/2/44
Confirmed rank Lieutenant 7/5/44
Posted to 31/51 Battalion AMF 10/10/44
Served Pacific Islands. Bouganville Island, Nauru Island & Ocean Island
Discharged 30/10/1945
Total Service: Australia 679 days
Overseas 1,031 days
Total 1,710 days
Wounded in Action: 8/9/42
Wounded in Action: 29/12/42
Malaria: 16/3/43
POST WAR SERVICE: Citizens Military Forces 23/8/51
Lieutenant, 4/26056, C Coy 43/48 Bn
Biography contributed
Biography written by Annabel Arbon from Endeavour College SA attached as a document. Winning entry for 2021 Premier's Anzac Spirit School Prize.
Biography contributed by Cornerstone College
Edgar Ebsary was a soldier who fought in WWII, was born on the 15th of October 1919. He was the fourth born of all his siblings. At an early age Edgar attended school in Barunga, which he gained his Qualifying Certificate from, at the age of 12, but considering that he did not fit the size standards to harness and manage draft horses, he endured a second year in the seventh grade. Although he eventually left at 13 to work on the farm his family owned, often working from sunrise until sundown. During his teenage years, he went through many struggles, such as The Great Depression, but was a stoic, wise and gentle presence to his entire family and his town community. Ed’s father was a grain agent at the Barunga Gap wheat stacks, which provided a chance for Ed to get a job, which he did eventually get. His job was to weigh each bag of grain and enter the weight of each bag in a tally book and write a cart note to authorize the grower of the wheat to collect his payment. A lot of time during his teenage years, Ed played tennis in the summer, and football in the winter. At the age of just nineteen, he joined up to fight in WWII.
When Ed went to sign up and join the war he had to have a medical, where he could not provide a urine sample, unlike his mates. This provided an advantage for Ed as majority of his mates were shipped out before him into the 2/3rd Machine Gun Battalion where they fought in the Middle East and majority of the crew were captured by the Japanese and were taken as prisoners of war.
In time and after a long three months of grueling drill and weapon training, Ed was sent on the Mauritania, which was a part of a fleet of ships which has departed from Melbourne and was to arrive in the Middle East. The men had to shave their hair and were given steel helmets, which made it hard for them to balance, although it was shown why they needed them when they got into the actual fighting. Ed joined a platoon, whose commander was Lieutenant A.J. Lee who eventually won the Military Cross. Ed was assigned as a runner, which was a highly important job, as except the radio, runners were frequently used to exchange messages between platoons and Battalion Headquarters.
During the invasion of Syria, which took roughly six weeks and where Ed and his fellow soldiers fought over rocky and hilly landscape, the soldiers finally saw victory. They were shipped out to Bombay where they were sent onto The City of London, which was a boat which was originally sailing to Burma and then Java, but since they were taken over by the Japanese, they had to sail back to Australia briefly before being sent to Papua New Guinea.
The landscape of Papua was full of rugged mountains and jungle. The men’s packs consisted of half a blanket and a spare pair of clothes so they could maximize the amount of food and ammo they could carry. The progress up the mountains was slow and scary due to the soldiers hiding any time they heard the roar of a plane engine.
Eventually, American bombers were called in to bomb Japanese forces. When the Japs retaliated, a man in Ed’s trench pulled the pin on a grenade and it blew up alongside many of his comrades. A man called out Ed by name and told him to “finish him off”. Eventually, he was the last man in his section, and watched as the enemy advanced. As he shot a few rounds at them, a bullet struck the fingers on Ed’s left hand, but even though, he still managed to escape by throwing a grenade.
When he was back fighting on the north coast, Ed was again struck by a stray bullet in his left foot, which hit and split his heel bone on exit. He was put on a stretcher and again spent time in the hospital due to an injury, this time in Brisbane, then Baulkam Hills in New South Wales, where he fell ill with malaria.
In August of 1943, Ed was back to fighting and by this time he was a Sergeant. And yet again, he fell sick and was moved to Port Moresby to recover. There he was told that he had been recommended to attend the Officer Cadet Training Unit in Woodside of South Australia. He passed and became a Lieutenant. He was sent to Queensland, to the Jungle Warfare Training Center, where he instructed platoons of young recruits.
In the later months of 1944 Ed was fighting on the island of Bougainville. After this he was discharged only a couple weeks before his birthday. Ed admitted that he “found camp life almost as enjoyable, with regular meals and exercise and a surplus of activity” which kept him busy.