'With the Diggers 1914-1918' - cover art by Cyril Leyshon-White
1933Book entitled 'With the Diggers 1914-1918', being the unit history for the 4th Division Australian Army Medical Corps during World War One.
The book has brown card covers and light brown cloth binding. The colourful cover illustration by war artist, Cyril Leyshon-White, depicts an Australian digger in his uniform and slouch hat sniffing a yellow flower he is holding in his hand. The upper background is sky blue, while the lower area is white and has the signature of the artist printed in black. The illustration is pasted onto a rectangular black background which acts as a frame. The title of the book is printed in black upper case letters underneath the illustration.
The Fourth Division Army Medical Corps comprised the 4th, 12th, and 13th Field Ambulances. According to a bookseller's description, this compilation is not just a record of fallen comrades, but "a remarkably rich work, not just an anthology of digger verse, song, and illustration but an extensive record of Australian war service, including the Anglo-Boer War. In addition to the requisite chronology of the Great War, the volume includes laboriously compiled records of the entire Australian Imperial Force, giving every unit in all divisions, the principal engagements, casualties, etc; a detailed record of the Nursing Service; a detailed record of the Australian Navy and the Royal Australian Naval Brigade in the war; details of warship and mercantile marine losses; number and name of every transport requisitioned by the Australian Navy with complements of officers and men (and horses); honour rolls of the 4th, 12th, and 13th Field Ambulances; etc. The Boer War section includes details of enlistments, principal actions, casualties, as well as South African War songs and verses (and printings of these are especially elusive). The illustrations are by, among others, Hal Gye, Cecil Hartt, and Leyshon White."
Cyril Leyshon-White was born on 29 June 1896 in Melbourne.
He was a 23 year old artist from Melbourne when he enlisted with the 2nd Field Ambulance, Section C, Australian Imperial Force, on 22 February 1915. His unit embarked from Melbourne, Victoria, on board HMAT A31 Ajana on 4 June 1915. He served in Gallipoli and France and was awarded the military medal for his service during the Lone Pine Bombardment, along with another soldier, William James Benwell.
The citation from the 'Commonwealth Gazette' No. 62 dated 19 April 1917 reads as follows:
'These two men [3156 W.J. BENWELL and 3160 C.L. WHITE] during the Lone Pine Bombardment were doing duty as dressers at out Brown's Dip advanced Dressing Station. They continued to dress and evacuate patients during the bombardment. These men were especially conspicuous being under shell fire the whole time.'
When the war concluded he was transferred to A.I.F. Headquarters, Australian Section, 3rd Echelon British Expeditionary Force.
He was an official war artist and after the war had ended he was granted leave with pay and subs from 15 May to 1 September 1919 to attend the École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts (National School of Fine Arts) in Paris for two and a half months, and the Glasgow School of Art for an additional month to further his art education.
He contributed artworks including cartoons to 'The ANZAC Book' and several other publications. He did the cover art for the unit history of the 4th Division, Australian Army Medical Corps, 'With the Diggers, 1914-1918' and also produced a series of four comic postcards entitled 'Greetings from France, Xmas 1916' which are held in the collection. He also contributed work to the London magazine, 'The Bystander'.
He returned to Australia 8 September 1919 on board the former cargo ship, SS Raranga.
Upon his return to Australia, he operated a commercial art school in Melbourne, and then with a number of other artists formed 'The Art Training Institute' from 1925-1935. He reportedly also became a mentor to the young Sydney Nolan.
He enlisted again, aged 44, in World War Two (service number V4797), on 31 July 1940, by which time his occupation was given as an instructor of industrial art at a technical college. He was made a probationary Lieutenant on 1 July 1941. He served with the 17 Garrison Battalion which guarded the camps around Tatura holding German internees and prisoners of war. He was discharged on 14 March 1944.
He died, aged 59, on 20 December 1955. His cremated remains were scattered at the Springvale Botanical Cemetery, Melbourne.
Details
Details
On book cover:
"WITH THE DIGGERS
1914-1918"
Related Objects
Related Objects
Other items from Recollections of War
- Art Training Institute prospectus featuring Cyril Leyshon-White
- Sanitarium collector card featuring aviatrix Jean Batten
- Mars Confections Ltd. collector card featuring aviatrix Jean Batten
- Walking stick belonging to Cyril Leyshon-White - 1
- Walking stick belonging to Cyril Leyshon-White - 2
- Framed autograph of aviatrix Jean Batten
- Autobiography of aviatrix Jean Batten entitled 'My Life'
- Framed photograph of aviatrix Jean Batten
- R. & J. Hill, Ltd. collector card featuring aviatrix Jean Batten
- Photograph of Jean Batten in the Royal Aero Club of N.S.W. 1970
- Photograph of Jean Batten taken at R.A.F. Fairford in Gloucestershire, August 1970
- Leslie Horton Partridge self portrait




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