Private Ernie Coyle, 33rd Battalion & Corporal Joe Coyle, 19th Battalion

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Tents of the Rutherford AIF training camp, NSW, 1916

Author: Australian War Memorial

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Ernie Coyle was born in 1891 to Dominick and Charlotte Coyle.

His father ran the hotel at Yamba for some years before the family moved to Dorrigo in New South Wales. He had a large number of siblings but in 1896, his seven-year-old brother Patrick drowned in the Clarence River.

In 1909 his only other brother, Joe, left Dorrigo for a job in Grafton. Ernie stayed in Dorrigo, and a year later narrowly avoided being in a house fire that left his mother badly burned. He was known in Dorrigo as “a steady, upright and smart young man”, and went on to work as a barman at the Imperial Hotel in Moree.

After the outbreak of war in August 1914, Coyle made a number of attempts to enlist in the Australian Imperial Force but was turned down as medically unfit because of his poor eyesight.

Joe Coyle had also tried to enlist on a number of occasions, and was accepted in November 1915. In March 1916 Ernie Coyle was finally successful and went into camp.

In April 1916 Corporal Joe Coyle went on leave from his posting as a clerk at Liverpool Camp. On 15 April, on the train on his way back, he fell off the bogie he was sitting on and was crushed beneath the train. He died in hospital shortly afterwards, aged 32.

Private Ernie Coyle continued training at Rutherford Camp, interrupted by a serious bout of bronchitis. He left Sydney in September 1916 on board the troopship Port Sydney.

However, Coyle never made it to the battlefields of Europe. On 25 September he died at sea of a previously undiagnosed heart condition. He was buried at sea shortly afterwards.

The local newspaper lamented that “Mr and Mrs D. Coyle had only the two sons, and it is indeed sad that they should be robbed of both of them.” Both had been prepared to fight but neither had reached the battlefield.

Ernie Coyle was 23 years old.

 

Dr Meleah Hampton, Historian, Military History Section

Image: Tents of the Rutherford AIF training camp, NSW

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