A Soldier of the Great War Private John Draddy 41 st Battalion AIF

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A Soldier of the Great War Private John Draddy 41 st Battalion AIF John Thomas Patrick DRADDY enlisted on 9 February 1917 in the Machine Gun Company 11, Reinforcement 11, Australian Imperial Force, with the rank of Private, Number 665, and was listed as Killed in Action on 21 February 1918

Regimental number 665 Place of birth Religion Occupation Address Marital status Ballycotton, Co Cork, Ireland Roman Catholic Farmer Dalby, Queensland Single Age at embarkation 22 Height 5' 6" Weight Next of kin Previous military service 157 lbs Father, Thomas Draddy, Ballycotton, Co Cork, Ireland Served for 1 day in the AIF. Enlistment date 9 February 1917 Place of enlistment Rank on enlistment Unit name Dalby, Queensland Private Machine Gun Company 11, Reinforcement 11 AWM Embarkation Roll number 24/16/3 Embarkation details Rank from Nominal Roll Unit from Nominal Roll Fate Unit embarked from Melbourne, Victoria, on board HMAT A29 Suevic on 21 June 1917 Private 41st Battalion Killed in Action 21 February 1918 Age at death from cemetery records 21 Panel number, Roll of Honour, Australian War Memorial Miscellaneous information from cemetery records 133 Parents: Thomas and Ellen DRADDY, Ballycotton, Co. Cork, Ireland

41 st Battalion The 41st Battalion was raised at Bell's Paddock Camp in Brisbane in February 1916 with recruits from Brisbane, northern Queensland and the northern rivers district of New South Wales. It formed part of the 11th Brigade of the 3rd Australian Division. After training in Australia and Britain, the 41st Battalion arrived in France on 25 November 1916. It entered the front line for the first time on Christmas Eve and spent the bleak winter of 1916-17 alternating between service in the front line, and training and labouring in the rear areas. Compared to some AIF battalions, the 41st's experience of the battles in Belgium during 1917 was relatively straightforward. It had a supporting role at Messines on 7 June, captured its objectives at Broodseinde on 4 October with little difficulty, and was spared the carnage of Passchendaele on 12 October. It was some of the battalion's more "routine" tasks that proved its most trying experiences. At the end of June 1917, the 11th Brigade was ordered to establish a new front line west of Warneton, in full view of the Germans. Work carried on night and day under heavy shellfire and the period became known to the battalion as "the 18 days". The start of August found the 41st holding ground captured by two of its sister battalions in a feint attack on 31 July. Enduring continual rain, flooded trenches and heavy shelling many of the battalion's platoons dwindled from 35 men to less than ten. Belgium remained the focus of the 41st Battalion's activities for the five months after its action in October 1917 as it was rotated between service in the rear areas and the front line. When the German Army launched its last great offensive in March 1918, the battalion was rushed south to France and played a role in blunting the drive towards the vital railway junction of Amiens. The Allies launched their own offensive on 8 August 1918, and the 41st played an active role both in the initial attack and the long advance that followed throughout August and into September. The 41st participated in its last major action of the war between 29 September and 2 October 1918 as part of the Australian-American operation that breached the formidable defences of the Hindenburg Line along the St Quentin Canal. The battalion was out of the line when the war ended, and was disbanded in May 1919. 41 st Battalion and the Battle of Messines This was a successful British assault on the Messines-Wytschaete Ridge, a strongly held strategic position on the Western Front, which had been held by the Germans since late 1914. The offensive operation was the product of long preparation, detailed planning and sound training carried out by General Plumer's Second Army. The initial assault was preceded by the detonation of 19 mines under the German font line which caused an estimated 10 000 German casualties. British, Australian and New Zealand infantry advanced behind a carefully coordinated artillery bombardment and took all their objectives within the first hours of the battle. German counter attacks the following day failed, and although German resistance continued until

14 June, British, Australian and New Zealand forces retained possession of the captured areas. The battle is often cited as a model for a well planned limited objective attack. Messines represented a preliminary to the major British offensive in Flanders in 1917, the Third Battle of Ypres. The opening of the Battle of Messines was at that time the biggest bang in history. At Hill 60, at the northern extremity of the line, the 1st Australian Tunnelling Company had been at work since November 1916 digging two large mineshafts under Hill 60 and The Caterpillar. Right along the British front were 17 other similar mines, all packed with explosives, and at 3.10 am on 7 June 1917 they were blown simultaneously as the opening move in the Messines attack. The Hill 60 mine created a crater 60 feet deep and 260 feet wide. The effect on the German front line troops was overwhelming. In the wake of the explosions, and preceded by a creeping artillery barrage, the Australians, New Zealanders and British troops advanced to find a shattered enemy. 41 st Battalion and the Battle of Broodseinde Ridge The battle of Broodseinde Ridge was the third operation launched by British general Herbert Plummer as part of the Ypres offensive of 1917. It was a large operation, involving twelve divisions, including those of both I and II ANZAC. The attack was planned on the same basis as its predecessors - the attacking troops' objectives were approximately 1,500 metres deep, the advance would be preceded by a massive artillery bombardment; and a creeping barrage would

lead the troops on to their objectives and then protect them while they consolidated their positions. The attack began before dawn on 4 October 1917. The Australian troops involved were shelled heavily on their start line and a seventh of their number became casualties even before the attack began. When it did, the attacking troops were confronted by a line of troops advancing towards them; the Germans had chosen the same morning to launch an attack of their own. The Australians forged on through the German assault waves and gained all their objectives along the ridge. It was not without cost, however. German pillboxes were characteristically difficult to subdue, and the Australian divisions suffered 6,500 casualties. John Draddy s War. John Thomas Patrick Draddy, an Irish born 22year old originally from Ballycotton in Ireland enlisted in the AIF on the 9/2/17. He was a farmer from Dalby in Qld. He was initially enlisted in the 11 th Machine Gun Company. After training in Australia near Brisbane he embarked from Melbourne on HMAT 'Suevic' on the 21 June 1917 and disembarked at Liverpool on the 26 August 1917. He marched into the 11th Training Bn on the 27 August 1917 and was finally transferred to 41st Bn from 11th Machine Gun Company on the 27 August 1917. In the 41 st Battalion now he underwent training. While in Training, Private Draddy found himself on a number of occasions in trouble for a variety of serious matters. He was found guilty on the 17 September 1917, of objecting to the obey an order: awarded 2 days' Field Punishment No 2; He marched into the 9th Training Bn, on 3 November 1917 for further training. He was then found guilty on the 21 December 1917, of being absent without leave, 12.00 pm, 18 December, to 9.00 am, 20 December 1917 and awarded 7 days' Field Punishment No 2; and forfeited a total of 9 days' pay. Finally,he proceeded to France through Southampton on the 1 January 1918 and marched into the Australian Infantry Base Depot, Rouelles,with reinforcements for his Battalion. The 41 st had already been in Belgium since November 25 th 1916. It was posted to Armentieres on the Belgium border in North-West France. The Battalion first entered the front line on Christmas eve 1916. A bleak winter was spent alternating between service on the front line, training and labouring to the rear of the fighting trenches. The trenches were slimy ditches full of mud, the surrounding land a featureless muddy quagmire. In some places the trenches were nearly invisible and it was not unusual for a soldier to get lost and end up in an enemy trench. The Battalion had taken part in the Support of the Battle of Messines and played a significant role at Broodseinde Ridge. The area around Warneton would be of great importance to the 41 st Battalion as they built a new trench system under continued barrage. Trench warfare in Belgium remained almost at a stalemate during most of the war as the front line moved back and forth with each assault never really achieving any major gains to their positions. For Private John Thomas Patrick Draddy the remainder of his time in France would be short lived.

He would finally reach the front line around Warneton on the 12 th January 1918 and take up his position in the field. The Battalion was rotated from the front line to rear support. His platoon and others would suffer heavy losses with platoons depleted from 35 men to 10 on average. In late February 1918 while in the front line he would be killed. Though difficult to read the war diary of the 41 st Battalion for the 21 st February tells of the events of the day and the loss of soldiers. Private John Thomas Patrick Draddy is one of those soldiers. A shell hit the cookhouse killing 20 soldiers. He is now buried and remembered at London Rifle Range Cemetery in Belgium.

London Rifle Brigade Cemetery is located 15 Kms south of Ieper town centre, on a road leading from the Rijselseweg, N365, which connects Ieper to Wijtschate, Mesen, Ploegsteert and on to Armentieres. From Ieper town centre the Rijselsestraat runs from the market square, through the Lille Gate (Rijselpoort) and directly over the crossroads with the Ieper ring road. The road name then changes to the Rijselseweg. The cemetery lies 800 metres beyond the village of Ploegsteert, on the right hand side of the N365. Historical Information The commune of Ploegsteert remained under Allied occupation for much of the First World War, but was in German hands from 10 April to 29 September 1918. London Rifle Brigade Cemetery was begun by units of the 4th Division in December 1914, and used by fighting units and field ambulances until March 1918; some German burials were made in April and May. The cemetery owes its name to the 22 burials of the London Rifle Brigade (which then belonged to the 4th Division) in Plot III, made in January, February and March 1915. The cemetery now contains 335 Commonwealth and 18 German burials of the First World War.

Rank: Private John Thomas Patrick Draddy Service No: 665 Date of Death: 21/02/1918 Age: 21 Regiment/Service: Australian Infantry, A.I.F. 41st Bn. Grave Reference: IV. C. 4. Cemetery: LONDON RIFLE BRIGADE CEMETERY Additional Information: Son of Thomas and Ellen Draddy, of Ballycotton, Co. Cork, Ireland.