9th Battalion. Flinders Street, Townsville, Queensland

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A Soldier of the Great War Captain John Patrick Ramkema 9th Battalion AIF Regimental number 1616 Date of birth --/03/1893 Place of birth Paradise Goldfields Queensland Religion Roman Catholic Occupation Stock rider Address Flinders Street, Townsville, Queensland Marital status Single Age at embarkation 21 Next of kin Mother, Mrs H Ramkema, Flinders Street, Townsville, Queensland Enlistment date 17 December 1914 Date of enlistment from Nominal Roll 14 December 1914 Rank on enlistment Corporal Unit name 9th Battalion, 3rd Reinforcement Embarkation details Unit embarked from Brisbane, Queensland, on board HMAT A49 Seang Choon on 13 February 1915 Regimental number from Nominal Roll Commissioned Rank from Nominal Roll Captain Unit from Nominal Roll 9th Battalion Promotions Lieutenant Unit: INF9 Promotion date: 3 August 1916 Recommendations (Medals and Awards) Military Cross Recommendation date: 5 July 1916 Fate Returned to Australia 10 September 1917 Medals Military Cross 'For conspicuous gallantry during a raid. He led the way into the enemy trenches and shot several of the enemy. He then rushed a dug-out, and killed seven and captured fourteen of the men inside it. He finally brought back twelve prisoners alive.' Source: 'Commonwealth Gazette' No. 176 Date: 30 November 1916

John Patrick Ramkema was born in 1893 and a stockman from Paradise Goldfields near Townsville in North Queensland and was just 21 years old and 9 months when he enlisted in the AIF on the 14th December 1914. He had already been mobilised as part of the 2 nd AN and MEF in August 1914 when he embarked Cairns for Thursday Island and garrison Duty there. He would also depart on the Troopship Kanowna for the capture of German New Guinea on the 6 th September 1914. Due to trouble with the firemen on the ship he would not take part and return on the 18 th September 1914 at which time he was discharged. He would go on to enlist in the AIF in December and would be enlisted in the 3 rd reinforcements 9 th Battalion embarking from Brisbane on the Seang Choon on the 13 th February 1915. The 9th Battalion was among the first infantry units raised for the AIF during the First World War. It was the first battalion recruited in Queensland, and with the 10th, 11th and 12th Battalions it formed the 3rd Brigade. The battalion was raised within weeks of the declaration of war in August 1914 and embarked just two months later. After preliminary training, the battalion sailed to Egypt, arriving in early December. The 3rd Brigade was the covering force for the ANZAC landing on 25 April 1915, and so was the first ashore at around 4.30 am. The battalion was heavily involved in establishing and defending the front line of the ANZAC beachhead. It served at ANZAC until the evacuation in December 1915. After the withdrawal from Gallipoli, the battalion returned to Egypt. It was split to help form the 49th Battalion and bought up to strength with reinforcements. In March 1916 the battalion sailed for France and the Western Front. From then until 1918 the battalion took part in operations against the German Army. The battalion's first major action in France was at Pozieres in the Somme valley. The 9th Battalion attacked on the extreme right of the line and it was during this action that Private John Leak won, with the bayonet, the battalion's only Victoria Cross. Later the battalion fought at Ypres, in Flanders, before returning to the Somme for winter. In 1917 the battalion moved back to Belgium for the advance to the Hindenburg Line, and in March and April1918 helped stop the German spring offensive. The battalion participated in the great allied offensive of 1918 and fought near Amiens on 8 August. The advance by British and empire troops was the greatest success in a single day on the Western Front, one that German General Erich Ludendorff described as "the black day of the German Army in this war". The battalion continued operations until late September 1918. At 11 am on 11 November 1918, the guns fell silent. The November armistice was followed by the peace treaty of Versailles, signed on 28 June 1919. In November 1918 members of the AIF began to return to Australia for demobilisation and discharge. On 5 February 1919, the 9th and 10th Battalions were amalgamated.

John would arrive at Gallipoli in late April after the initial landing and serve until the evacuation in December 1915. While at Gallipoli he would be promoted to Corporal and then Sergeant. In October 1915 he would be reported sick and would be transferred from ANZAC to an auxiliary Hospital ship and then spend some time in the No1 Auxilary Hospital in Cairo with mild diarrhoea and flu like symptoms. Many soldiers had become sick like this with conditions on the Gallipoli Peninsula. He would then end up in Zeitoun and transferred back to duty. He would remain at Gallipoli until evacuation in December at which time he would be stationed at Mudros awaiting the BEF force advance to France. On the 3 rd April 1916 he was aboard the Saxonia from Alexandria and disembarked at Marseilles and made his way to Northern France. In late April he would be promoted to 2 nd Lieutenant. The battalion were first located at St Omer and Strazelle about west of Lille in France. They were behind the lines but not far from the front. On the 20 th April the first Australian casualties of the Western Front occur when German shells hit the farmhouse where members of the 9th Battalion, C Company are billeted at Rouge de Bois. 25 men are killed and 50 wounded. It was here and around Armentieres that the Australian forces got their first experience in trench warfare in France. It was called the nursery sector and successive battalions would be prepared here the battles that lay ahead. In May the Battalion would find themselves in the Fromelles sector and around Fleurbaix. John would be slightly wounded on the 7 th June 1916 in the Petillion Sector near Armentieres and would spend a small time in hospital and then return to duty. On the 29 th June he would be wounded again slightly but quickly return to duty. On the 2 nd August he would be awarded the Military Cross for gallantry on the 1 st and 2 nd June in actions around Fleurbaix and on the 9 th August would be promoted to Lieutenant. His recommendation would read:- 'For conspicuous gallantry during a raid. He led the way into the enemy trenches and shot several of the enemy. He then rushed a dug-out, and killed seven and captured fourteen of the men inside it. He finally brought back twelve prisoners alive.'

In July the Battalion would move from France into Sternwerck in Belgoium and then back France and to Doullens, Halloy and Naours. He would remain in Naours from the 12 th till the 16 th July. It was during this time that he would have visited the caves and left his signature and name there with over 2000 other soldiers. Naours was just 19 miles from the firing line and the Battalion would be prepared for the infamous attacks at Pozieres.

In late July he would move to Warloy and Albert and finally onto Pozieres and relieve depleted battalions who had lost huge numbers of men. On the 25 th August during the action in and around the Pozieres area a gunshot would to the left thigh would take him out of action and to the 4 th Australian Field Ambulance for treatment and finally back behind the lines to the 2 nd Auxiliary Military Hospital at Etaples. He would eventually be evacuated back to England and the 4th General London Hospital at Denmark Hill by the 26 th August 1916 for treatment and recovery.. He would remain in England and after recovery be released to training at Perham Downs Salisbury. Pozieres, a small village in the Somme valley in France, was the scene of bitter and costly fighting for the 1st, 2nd and 4th Australian Divisions in mid 1916. The village was captured initially by the 1st Division on 23 July 1916. The division clung to its gains despite almost continuous artillery fire and repeated German counter-attacks but suffered heavily. By the time it was relieved on 27 July it had suffered 5,285 casualties. The 2nd Division took over from the 1st and mounted two further attacks - the first, on 29 July, was a costly failure; the second, on 2 August, resulted in the seizure of further German positions beyond the village. Again, the Australians suffered heavily from retaliatory bombardments. They were relieved on 6 August, having suffered

6,848 casualties. The 4th Division was next into the line at Pozieres. It too endured a massive artillery bombardment, and defeated a German counter-attack on 7 August; this was the last attempt by the Germans to retake Pozieres. Following his recovery in England he would again return to Etaples on the 22 nd November 1916 in France and be placed on the seconded list for those who had been evacuated wounded. He would remain here until the 8 th March 1917 when he would again rejoin his unit. These wounded soldiers would be slowly rehabilitated and then when well enough return to full duty. There were many tasks that needed doing behind the lines to supply the fighting troops often more strenuous than the front line.. By the 16 th March 1917, John was back with his unit again around Albert on the Somme and near Dernancourt training. April saw action around Montabaun,Boursies and Hermies where the battalion was in support and in the front lines. Fighting at Morchies,Lagnicourt and Bapaume were front line duties for John at this time. The 9 th Battalion attacked the Hindenberg line around Bapaume on the 6 th and 7 th May. During this time John was wounded again for the 4 th time and was treated by the 6 th Field Ambulance before being removed to a casualty clearing station nearby. Again with very serious gunshot wounds to his left arm he was evacuated to the 8 th General Hospital at Rouen and finally again back to England. On the 24 th August he was promoted to Captain and placed on the supernumery list. The Great War was now over for John. His left arm,due to wounds would be amputated. On the 10 th September he would depart for Australia on the Ulysess, returning on the 13 th November 1917 and officially discharged in March 1918. John would leave his mark on the cave walls at Naours as a legacy to his service and bravery during the Great War. John would be married in 1921 RAMKEMA BRYSON. At Sacred Heart Church, Sandgate, on 21st October, by the Rev. Father Power, Kathleen, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Bryson, Palm avenue, Sandgate, to Captain J. P. Ramkema, M.C. (late 9th Battn.), eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. H. Ramkema, North Queensland.

France, showing