Corporal Clarence Hallard Page, 2nd Division Signals Coy, AIF

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Studio portrait of 4908 Private (Pte) Clarence Hallard Page, 27th Battalion, of Kadina, SA. c.1915

Author: Australian War Memorial

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Clarence “Clarrie” Page was born on 30 April 1895 to Arthur and Annie Page of the Yorke Peninsula in South Australia.

He grew up in Kadina, and was later employed with the post office. He was later transferred to Kapunda in the Barossa Valley as a telegraphist. There he continued his involvement in the cadets, and received his commission as lieutenant in the senior cadets.

He then went to the remote Smoky Bay to work at the repeating station. He enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force in March 1915, a month before his 20th birthday.

Page’s experience as a telegraphist made him an obvious recruit for the 2nd Divisional Signals Company. He underwent initial training in Australia before being sent for overseas service.

Page arrived in Egypt in September 1915 and spent some time on Gallipoli but was evacuated from the peninsula with a fever at the end of November. He later spent time in hospital in Alexandria suffering from frostbite.

After he re-joined his unit he was promoted to lance corporal and was sent to France to fight on the Western Front in March 1916. He was promoted again shortly after his arrival.

Corporal Page survived the fighting at the French village of Pozières and the subsequent fight for Mouquet Farm in July and August 1916. The fighting ended in an allied victory but not without cost. In the words of Australian official historian Charles Bean, the Pozières ridge was “more densely sown with Australian sacrifice than any other place on earth”.

Following its withdrawal from the front line, the 2nd Division Signals Company spent time training and playing football before being called into the front lines once more.

On 14 October 1916, Corporal Page was killed in action in the front line in Belgium near a position called Railway Dugouts.

He was 21 years old.

His body was recovered from the battlefield and today lies in Railway Dugouts Burial Ground under the words, “In memory of the dearly loved son of Mr & Mrs Page of Australia”.

After the war, Page’s mother was asked to fill out a short circular to supply information for the Roll of Honour. One of the questions asked for “any other biographical details likely to be of interest to the Historian”. Annie Page wrote that her son was “just a lad whose motto was always ‘duty first’”.

Corporal Clarence Hallard Page is listed on the Australian War Memorial’s Honour Roll, among more than 60,000 Australians who died while serving in the First World War.



Dr Meleah Hampton, Historian, Military History Section

Image: Studio portrait of 4908 Private (Pte) Clarence Hallard Page, 27th Battalion, of Kadina, SA. c.1915

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