Millicent Hulda Maria (Millie) DORSCH

DORSCH, Millicent Hulda Maria

Service Number: SFX10597
Enlisted: 29 November 1940, Adelaide, South Australia
Last Rank: Lieutenant
Last Unit: Australian Army Nursing Service (WW1)
Born: Brighton, South Australia, Australia, 25 February 1912
Home Town: Hove, Holdfast Bay, South Australia
Schooling: Adelaide Technical High School, Adelaide, South Australia
Occupation: Nurse
Died: Lost at Sea - Presumed Drowning (SS Vyner Brooke), Banka Island, 14 February 1942, aged 29 years
Cemetery: No known grave - "Known Unto God"
Commemoration - Memorial Location: Column 140, Singapore Memorial
Memorials: Adelaide Royal Adelaide Hospital Chapel Roll of Honour, Adelaide Technical High School Old Scholars WW2 Honour Roll, Adelaide WW2 Wall of Remembrance, Augusta Australian Army Nursing Sisters Monument, Australian Military Nurses Memorial, Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, Ballarat Australian Ex-Prisoners of War Memorial, Bicton Vyner Brooke Tragedy Memorial, W.A., Daw Park Repatriation Hospital WW2 Women of the Armed Forces Who Died HR, Heidelberg Repatriation Hospital Memorial Rose Garden, Kapunda Dutton Park Memorial Gardens Nurses Plaques, Minlaton District Council Honour Board, Singapore Memorial Kranji War Cemetery
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Biography contributed by John Edwards

"...SFX10597 Sister Millicent Heulda (Millie) Dorsch, 2/4th Casualty Clearing Station, Australian Army Nursing Service (AANS). She was one of sixty five Australian nurses and over 250 civilian men, women and children evacuated on the Vyner Brooke from Singapore three days before the fall of Malaya. The Vyner Brooke was bombed by Japanese aircraft and sunk in Banka Strait on 14 February 1942. Of the sixty five nurses, thirty two survived the sinking and were taken Prisoner of War (POW) of which eight later died in captivity, another twenty two also survived the sinking and were washed ashore on Radji Beach, Banka Island, where they surrendered to the Japanese along with twenty five British soldiers. On 16 February 1942 the group was massacred, the soldiers were bayoneted and the nurses were ordered to march into the sea where they were shot. Only Sister Vivian Bullwinkel and a British soldier survived the massacre. Both were taken POW, but only Sister Bullwinkel survived the war. Sister Dorsch, aged 30, was one of twelve nurses who were lost at sea. She was washed out to sea on a raft along with Matron Paschke and Sister's Trenery, McDonald, Clarke and Ennis. They were never seen again. She was the daughter of Adolph Dorsch of Hove, SA." - SOURCE (www.awm.gov.au)

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Biography contributed by Carol Foster

Daughter of Adolph John Walter Dorsch and Elsie Victoria (nee Downing) Dorsch of 137 Brighton Road, Hove SA; sister of Albert Walter Dorsch who served in the RAN until 1946 and Charles Ernest Dorsch who served in the RAN until 1951

Medals: 1939-45 Star, Pacific Star, War Medal