S156
WEIDENHOFER, George Henry
Service Number: | 17965 |
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Enlisted: | Not yet discovered |
Last Rank: | Private |
Last Unit: | 15th Field Artillery Brigade |
Born: | Woodside, SA, 1889 |
Home Town: | Norton Summit, Adelaide Hills, South Australia |
Schooling: | Not yet discovered |
Occupation: | Chainman (Surveyor) |
Died: | 29 April 1955, cause of death not yet discovered, place of death not yet discovered |
Cemetery: |
Centennial Park Cemetery, South Australia |
Memorials: | Adelaide Crown Lands Department WW1 Honour Board, Findon & Flinders Park RSL Honour Roll, Payneham District Council Roll of Honor |
World War 1 Service
8 Aug 1917: | Involvement Private, 17965, Army Medical Corps (AIF), --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '23' embarkation_place: Sydney embarkation_ship: HMAT Anchises embarkation_ship_number: A68 public_note: '' | |
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8 Aug 1917: | Embarked Private, 17965, Army Medical Corps (AIF), HMAT Anchises, Sydney | |
11 Nov 1918: | Involvement Private, 17965, 15th Field Artillery Brigade |
George Henry Weidenhofer
Name: George Henry Weidenhofer
Service Number: 17965
Place of Birth: Woodside
Date of Birth: 16 December 1889
Place of Enlistment: Adelaide
Date of Enlistment: 18 October 1916
Age at Enlistment: 26 years 10 months
Next of Kin: Mother, Mary Ann Weidenhofer
Occupation: Chainman, Survey Department
Religion: Church of England
Rank: Private
George left Sydney on board the Anchises on 8 August 1917, reaching Liverpool on 2 October, then proceeded to France a month later. He served with the 15 Field Ambulance in France throughout the duration of the war. George was hospitalised for 3 weeks with bronchitis at Rouen, France on 26 March 1919 before returning to Australia on the Maine on 23 July and was discharged on 6 November.
Submitted 26 October 2023 by christopher collins
George Harold Weidenhofer
Harold continued to serve in the fields of France until on 6 May 1918 he was reported killed in action on the Somme- just 2 weeks before his 23rd birthday. His burial site was never recorded. Some years later a memorial was erected at Villers- Bretonneux in the Somme area of France “to commemorate by name, 10,000 Australian soldiers who fell in the battlefields of France, and who have no known graves.”
Death notices were placed in Adelaide newspapers by the Weidenhofer family on Harold’s behalf, one read:
“Somewhere in France he’s sleeping in a grave we will never see, may some tender hand lay flowers there for me.”
Another read: “In loving memory of our dear brother, Sergeant G.H.Weidenhofer, killed in action on May 6 1918”. Inserted by his loving brother Hine and sister-in-law Irene.
Details courtesy of The Weidenhofer Family History and Hannah Weidenhofer / Death notices courtesy of the Australian War Memorial.
Submitted 26 October 2023 by christopher collins