William Thomas Pearson

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Author: Stephen Learmonth

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William Thomas Pearson was born on 17/02/1884 in Windsor, England, to Edward Pearson and Alma Julia, nee Newman.

In 1907, William married Jane (surname unknown). No information has yet been found to explain why William was a 31-year-old farm hand in the Upper Murray, a long way from Windsor in England. Nor is there any further information on his wife, Jane. We can only assume that, because he married again upon returning from overseas service, Jane either passed away early in their marriage or the couple divorced.

On 10th August 1915, William enlisted in the AIF (Australian Imperial Forces) at Melbourne in Victoria. He was given the service number 1440 and was put on strength with the 11th Reinforcements of the 8th Light Horse Regiment.

Upon enlistment, William was 5 feet 7 inches (170 cm) and weighed 9 stone 4 lbs (59 kg). His complexion was described as dark, his eyes as blue, and his hair as dark brown. William’s records show that he had the distinctive vaccination marks on his left arm, an operation scar on his stomach and a mole on the left of his back. It is interesting to note that there is a note indicating that “candidate passed subject to getting his teeth fixed”. William’s religious denomination was given as Church of England.

After some initial training at Seymour, William and his unit were transferred to the Broadmeadows camp for further training. William embarked on HMAT A6 ​Clan McCorquodale​ on 15th November 1915, sailing from Melbourne, Victoria. The trip would take him across the Great Australian Bight to Fremantle, on to Colombo, in Ceylon, before finally disembarking at Suez, at the southern end of the Suez Canal, in Egypt, on Boxing Day, 1915.

On 19th February, William reported sick to the Australian Casualty Clearing Station at Helouan before passing on to the No. 3 Australian Hospital at Heliopolis. While the official reason for his being in the hospital was an injured arm, a note in his records stating that “mouth unfit” perhaps provides a clue that he may not have had his teeth properly attended to back in Australia. Finally, after nearly two months in hospital, William was returned to his unit at Tel-el-Kebir.

Two months later, on 6th July 1916, William was transferred to the 11th Company of the Imperial Camel Corps, based at Abbassia. It was while he was with this unit that William received his first wound. Following the capture of a major Turkish outpost at Magdhaba late in 1916, it was decided to take the next post, Rafa. During the engagement, the New Zealand Mounted Rifles Brigade and three battalions of the Imperial Camel Corps overran the positions assigned to them, precipitating the total collapse of the Turkish forces. During this battle, William received a gunshot wound to the arm and would spend over a month at the No. 14 Australian General Hospital before being posted to the 3rd Battalion of the Imperial Camel Corps. It is very likely that he was transported from the battlefield on a camel.

It wasn’t long before William found himself back in the hospital. While the complaint that he suffered from is not specifically stated, various symptoms, including incontinence of urine, injury to abdominal muscles and another simply stated as “debility would see him in and out of various hospitals from February 1917 to June 1918.

On 19th June 1918, William was temporarily detached to the 1st Camel Brigade Headquarters and then a month later transferred to the 15th Light Horse and redesignated as a driver.

On 5th March 1919, William Thomas Pearson embarked on the SS ​Port Sydney​ at Kantara, returning to Australia some weeks later for early repatriation. He was finally discharged from the AIF on 9th June 1919. For his service during the war, he was awarded the 1914/15 Star, the British War Medal, and the Victory Medal.

Upon returning to Australia, William met and married Amelia Broadhurst on 2nd May 1919. Their daughter, Ethel Grace, was born on 23rd February 1924 at Ararat, Victoria. Amelia passed away in 1934. William would outlive her by another 30 years, passing away on 12th March 1964, at Diamond Creek, Victoria, aged 80. He was laid to rest in the Diamond Creek Cemetery.

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