James GREEN

GREEN, James

Service Numbers: Not yet discovered
Enlisted: Not yet discovered
Last Rank: Not yet discovered
Last Unit: Headquarters Staff
Born: 1864, place not yet discovered
Home Town: Newtown (NSW), Inner West, New South Wales
Schooling: Not yet discovered
Occupation: Methodist Clergyman
Died: Waverley, NSW, 6 November 1948, cause of death not yet discovered
Cemetery: Rookwood Cemetery & Crematorium
Memorials:
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World War 1 Service

21 Oct 1914: Involvement Australian Army Chaplains' Department, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '1' embarkation_place: Melbourne embarkation_ship: HMAT Orvieto embarkation_ship_number: A3 public_note: ''
21 Oct 1914: Embarked Australian Army Chaplains' Department, HMAT Orvieto, Melbourne
22 Oct 1914: Involvement Headquarters Staff, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '1' embarkation_place: Melbourne embarkation_ship: HMAT Orvieto embarkation_ship_number: A3 public_note: ''
22 Oct 1914: Embarked Headquarters Staff, HMAT Orvieto, Melbourne

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Biography contributed by Sharyn Roberts

SENIOR CHAPLAIN JAMES GREEN, C.M.G.
Senior Chaplain James Green, C.M.G., who recently returned from the front, was last night elected President of the New South Wales Methodist Conference. He is 63 years of age, and was born at Newcastle-on-Tyne, and was educated at Rutherford College, In that town. He left college to become a Public school teacher In England, and remained at this occupation for three years.
He arrived In Sydney 30 years ago, and immediately studied for the Methodist Church, of which he has been an ardent worker ever since. Mr. Green's first appointment was to the Newcastle district, where he spent six years. Then he laboured in Marrickville and Balmain.
It was during his occupancy of the Balmain pulpit that the South African war broke out, and he went away as the Methodist chaplain to the First Bushman's Contingent. He was with the Australians at the battle of Elands River, during the 13 days' siege by the Boers under General de la Rey, and received the Queen's South African Medal and the King's South African medal with seven clasps, representing engagements or special campaigns.

On returning to Sydney the Rev. James Green was placed in charge of the Manilla and Ballina circuits, and then proceeded to Camden. At the outbreak of the present war Mr. Green was ministering to the Methodist people at Newtown, and he Joined the A.I.F. as chaplain, leaving with the 1st Battalion, First Division, First Brigade. After six months in Egypt he landed with the Australians at Gallipoli, and after 12 weeks' work on the Peninsula was appointed to organise the hospitals In Egypt. He returned to Gallipoli, where he met with an accident and up to the time of the evacuation was at Lemnos Island at the Third Australian General Hospital. Mr. Green then served with the 14th Brigade Infantry in the Suez Canal zone, and later went with this brigade to France. He was then transferred to London to carry out administrative work at headquarters, but made frequent visits to France, and was present at Passchendaele. For his services Mr. Green received the C M.G. last January.

The Rev. James Green's publications include "The Story of the Bushman," mostly letters contributed during the South African campaign; and two novels, "The Selector" and"The Lost Echo." Recently he published a book dealing with the work of the 14th Brigade, called "News from No Man's Land," the introduction to which was written by General Birdwood.

The Sydney Morning Herald Thursday 28 February 1918 page 8

James Green (1864-1948), clergyman and military chaplain, was born on 14 October 1864 at Newcastle upon Tyne, England, son of William Green, journeyman mason, and his wife Isabella, née Palmer. He was educated at Rutherford College, Newcastle upon Tyne, and was a teacher before migrating to New South Wales in 1889 and entering the ministry of the Primitive Methodist Church. He served in parishes in the Newcastle area, married Caroline Jane Atkinson on 19 April 1893 at Annandale, Sydney, and was appointed to Marrickville in 1894. In February 1900 he sailed as Wesleyan chaplain to the New South Wales Citizens' Bushmen, raised for service in the South African War. When the contingent returned home in June 1901 he served with troops in training before re-embarking with the 1st Australian Commonwealth Horse.

At Eland's River, Green was captured by the Boers but his imprisonment was short lived. Following the death, illness or evacuation of many newspaper correspondents he became the sole Australian correspondent, sending regular reports to the Sydney Morning Herald. These became the basis of The Story of the Australian Bushmen (1903), his first book, which was a straightforward account of service, somewhat romanticized, but sensitive to the evils of warfare. Of Eland's River he wrote: 'It is easy to … throw a glamour over an engagement, but the truth should be told. One has to be in an engagement to see what "the glorious death of the soldier" really is in these times of modern artillery. One man was lying with an arm blown away, and a great hole in his side such as is made in the earth with a shovel'. He returned to Sydney in 1903 and after three country postings was appointed to Newtown in 1912. He also acted as a part-time chaplain to the Commonwealth Military Forces. 

Green was a logical choice for the senior Methodist chaplaincy on the formation of the Australian Imperial Force in August 1914. He was appointed chaplain colonel with the 1st Battalion. He claimed to have landed at Anzac Cove on 25 April 1915. This is unlikely; however, he was one of the first chaplains ashore and probably conducted the first formal burial party. His service at Gallipoli impressed on him the 'bedrock simplicity' of the men. With A. E. Talbot, an Anglican, he conducted a joint communion service, a rare event because communion was reckoned as a sign of membership of a particular church. He left Gallipoli on 29 June, returning to Egypt to take charge of hospital visitations and continued to exercise the practical ecumenism learnt at Gallipoli.

​Green worked with the Red Cross and comforts funds authorities in Egypt to secure supplies for the troops at Gallipoli, such as the first consignment of mosquito netting and crude petroleum. He considered this 'one of the most useful things done during [his] chaplaincy' as the supplies saved many lives by preventing the spread of disease. He returned to Gallipoli on 9 November but was soon evacuated when he injured his knee. He reached the 3rd Australian General Hospital, Lemnos, and, although a patient, resumed duty because there was no other chaplain available. He served with the 55th Battalion from its formation and accompanied his men in the trenches in France in 1916 and through the battle of Fromelles and the first battle of the Somme. Then from December 1916 to April 1917 Green was attached to A.I.F. Headquarters in London. Moved by the sight of Australians loitering on the streets, he gained the co-operation of the Australian Young Men's Christian Association and the Wesleyan Army and Navy Board, and opened a recreation centre in Horseferry Road which became a focal point of A.I.F. life in London. 

Green returned to the front regularly but became seriously ill in November 1917 and was invalided to Australia. He had been awarded the Distinguished Service Order for tending wounded men 'under a barrage … in the front line trenches, Fleurbaix', in September-October 1916 and for similar work previously at Fromelles. He was appointed C.M.G. in 1918 and twice mentioned in dispatches. As one of the longest-serving A.I.F. chaplains he was recognized by the New South Wales Methodist Conference which elected him president for 1918. He devoted this year to establishing the Church's War Memorial Hospital at Waverley. He published two books arising from his experiences at the front: News from No Man's Land (1917) and The Year of Armageddon (1919). His letters home, in which he strove for realism, were published in the Methodist.

Green's war experience left a permanent mark on his ministry. He was a very approachable man who hated aloofness or snobbery of any kind. He asserted that institutional Christianity had 'humbugged' men and interfered with the relationship between man and God. His ministry continued in Sydney, first at Paddington, then at Croydon Park. In 1927 he became commissioner for Leigh College, the Methodist theological institution. He retired from active ministry in 1934 and in 1935 wrote From my Hospital Window, a series of essays on 'sane democracy'. This book is his best: he emerges as a good-natured, tolerant, faithful man, compassionate towards the unemployed and other victims of economic crisis. His other books were The Selector (1907) andThe Lost Echo (1910).

Survived by his wife and two sons, Green died on 6 November 1948 at Waverley and was buried in Rookwood cemetery.

http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/green-james-6471

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