WALKER, ROBERT OF SCOTCH COLLEGE

Overview

Sepia print. A young Robert Walker, hands behind his back, dressed in a belted tunic, with metal buttons, over a kilt and sporran. He is wearing a forage cap with checked band and insignia. He has spats over his knee-high socks and shoes.

Historical information

Robert (Bob) Walker was born in Fremantle in 1893 to Annie and Charles Walker, a boatbuilder. He attended Fremantle Boys School where he excelled and in 1905 was awarded a scholarship to Scotch College, Claremont. He and his friends spent much of their spare time rowing and sailing on the Swan River. In 1910 he was Dux of the school. In 1911 he won the first UWA Exhibition and, keen to study medicine, enrolled at Adelaide University. His results won him a place as a student of Medicine at Edinburgh University in 1912. There he joined the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve. His final year of study coincided with the declaration of the First World War. He enlisted in the Royal Navy and was given the rank of Surgeon Probationer and posted to HMS Lynx on 23 July 1915. On arrival at his destination he was told the Lynx had been mined in the North Sea with a loss of 75 lives, and he was re-assigned to HMS Shark, patrolling the English Channel and North Sea. On May 31, 1916, during the Battle of Jutland, HMS Shark was ordered to attack the oncoming German ships. Robert Walker attended the many casualties. He was injured and then apparently killed shortly before the ship sank. His body was never recovered. Tributes were written, praising his briliance as a scholar and his valour under fire and heroic attempts to help injured shipmates.

Details

Details

Registration number
cwa-org-28--14-40-
Item type
Last modified
Sunday, 8 February, 2026
Completeness
83
Town of Claremont Museum

Town of Claremont Museum

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