Private Frederick James Adams, 8th Battalion, AIF

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Photo Pte F.J Adams

Author: Australian War Memorial

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Born in 1890 in Yorkshire, England, Fred Adams was the son of James Rawson Adams and Sarah Elizabeth Adams. The family moved to Australia when Frederick was two, and he attended Mildura Grammar School.

Fred went on to become a fruit-grower in the Riverland. He enlisted shortly after the outbreak of war, and was followed by his younger brother Rob, who was just 18. Fred left Australia with the original 8th Battalion, while Edgar followed two months later with the first reinforcements.

Both brothers landed at Anzac Cove with the 8th Battalion on the 25th of April 1915. Later that night Fred Adams was digging in through the rain with his mate Tom. Every now and then the Turks would conduct small-scale attacks against their position, and Adams and his mate were forced to put down their tools and start firing to keep the Turks in check. During one of these attacks Adams was shot through the head. Tom later wrote to Fred’s parents:

It will be some consolation to you to know that death must have been instantaneous and that he did not suffer, as he lay motionless and without a murmur. In fact, for a minute I thought he had fallen asleep.

Fred’s brother had become parted from him in the thick scrub of the peninsula and was reported missing after a Turkish counter-attack. Curiously, a message in a bottle was found months later on a beach at Alexandria, seemingly written by Edgar. Signed E.R.C. Adams, AIF, the letter said that he had been taken prisoner about two miles from where he and Frederick had landed. His family held hopes that he was still alive as a prisoner of war, but a Red Cross report declared him “one of the many mysteries of that fatal landing at Gallipoli, when so many were killed and have never been found”. Despite a lack of official confirmation, a court of inquiry concluded in 1918 that Edgar Robert Colbeck Adams died on or around the 25th of April 1915 while a prisoner of war of the Turks.

Photo Pte Edgar Robert Colbeck Adams

Pte F.J AdamsFrederick Adams was buried on the side of a hill facing the Aegean Sea. His mate Tom wept as he was buried. After the war Adams was reinterred in Shell Green cemetery. He was 25 years old.

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