PHOTOGRAPH - REGIMENT PHOTO WWI

1916
Overview

Black and white photograph mounted on cream cardboard of army regiment. Very large number of soldiers standing in sand in front of army barracks building. Two or three rows of soldiers with two soldiers standing in front of others. 17 standing at the back, higher than the others. Three trees behind building. Text in white bottom right corner of photograph.

Historical information

John Hickson was born in c1888 in Lancashire England. As a child it seemed John lost his father and his mother Ellen married Walter Tomlinson. In 1911 the Tomlinson's migrated to Western Australia. By 1912 the Tomlinson family is living on Prospect Road in Armadale. In 1916 John had moved away and was working at the 281 mile siding of the Trans Australian Railway. He was using the name John Hickson Tomlinson.
John Hickson enlisted under step-Father's name of Tomlinson at Kalgoorlie early January 1916 aged 27. He entered Blackboy Hill camp 1st February 1916 before being sent to Maribyrnong in Victoria for artillery training with the 8th Battery, Australian Field Artillery Battery. He left Australia (Victoria) 27th June, 1916. On arrival he joined the 3rd Division Ammunition Column. On 24 November 1916 the unit was sent to France.
On 24 June 1917 he received minor wounds to his back but was back on duty the dame day. On 27 September 1917 he was confined to barracks for seven days for missing the 2pm parade.
On 19 January 1918 he was promoted to acting Bombardier but reverted back to the rank of driver at his own request on 8 June 1918.
He returned to Fremantle 24 July 1919 and was discharged on 7 September 1919.
John returned to Armadale and found work as a labourer with the Western Australian Railway. In 1927 he married Alice Grace Trame in Perth and seems to have dropped the use of his step-fathers name.. In 1954 they moved to First Avenue (today Banyard Avenue) in Kelmscott where they had an orchard. It seems they did not have any children.
John passed away in 1976 age 87. Millicent passed away the following year age 89.
On his return from the war he packed his uniform and kit into the kitbag and then left in the corner of his shed where it stayed untouched until his death.

Details

Details

Registration number
cwa-org-33-COA2007.35
Material
Width
20.4000 cm
Depth
25.7000 cm
Inscriptions and markings

[' VITA' / NAT.MUT.]

Year
1916
Statement of significance

This object is part of collection with good provenance and interpretive potential that tells the story of the City of Armadale's connection to armed conflicts around the world from the late 1800s to today. The collection explores the experiences of people associated with the City of Armadale who went to war, their experiences when they returned as well as how these conflicts impacted the community who stayed behind.

Primary significance criteria
Historic significance
Comparative significance criteria
Interpretive capacity
Rare or representative
Well provenanced
City of Armadale - History House

City of Armadale - History House

Organisation Details
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