Trooper Hubert Charles Rigby, 4th Australian Light Horse Regiment, AIF
Hubert Charles Rigby was born to Richard and Jane Rigby in October 1894 in Coleraine, Victoria. Hubert attended Coleraine State School, where he was a member of the Junior Cadets. After he left school, he worked in the district as a farm labourer.
Rigby enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force in July 1915. As he was under the age of 21, his parents had to give their consent for him to serve overseas. As a farm worker, he had a good knowledge of horses, and Rigby joined the reinforcements of the 4th Australian Light Horse Regiment. He undertook preliminary training at the Broadmeadows army camp north of Melbourne. In September, he sailed for Egypt on the transport ship Hororata.
By the time Rigby arrived in Egypt, it was clear that the Dardanelles campaign had failed. The members of his unit had been on Gallipoli reinforcing Australian infantry, but were evacuated from the peninsula in early December. Rigby and the other members of the 4th Light Horse trained at Heliopolis, near Cairo, in preparation for future operations against the Ottoman Empire in the Middle East.
However, Rigby would not join this campaign.
At about 7:15 on the morning of 28 December 1915, a single shot was heard at Racecourse Camp in Heliopolis. It had been accidentally fired by a Light Horse soldier who was emptying his rifle of ammunition. The bullet killed fellow Light Horseman Corporal William Young, and badly wounded Rigby, who was admitted to the Australian hospital in Cairo, but died two days later, on 30 December 1915. He was 21 years old.
Hubert Rigby is buried in the Cairo War Memorial Cemetery in Egypt, alongside more than 2,000 Commonwealth servicemen from the First World War. He was given a military funeral, and soldiers from his company fired a farewell volley. The minister, an army chaplain, later sent his condolences in a letter to Rigby’s parents.
Rigby was survived in Australia by his parents, his sisters Clarice and Dorothy, and his brother Alick. His cousin Private Harold Rigby also served in the AIF, returning to Australia in 1919.
- AWM Honour Roll https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/R1665376
Australian War Memorial