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Old 10-12-2007, 06:48 AM   #2 (permalink)
spidge
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2/15th Battalion

2/15th Battalion


Courtesy of: Australians at War


The 2/15th Infantry Battalion was raised at Redbank army camp in Brisbane on 1 May 1940, as part of the 20th Brigade. The battalion did its basic training at Redbank and went to Darwin to undertake three months of garrison duty in July. It moved to Sydney in November and at the end of the year sailed aboard the Queen Mary with the 20th Brigade to Palestine via India, transhipping to the Rohna at Bombay.
The 20th Brigade transferred from the 7th to the 9th Division en route to the Middle East. It arrived at El Kantara in Egypt at the start of February 1941 and moved to Kilo 89 in Palestine for desert training. At the end of the month the 2/15th travelled through the Libyan Desert to the front line at Kilo 789 near Mersa Brega, including Mersa Matruh, Bug Bug, Tobruk, Derna, Tocra, Benghazi, and Agedabia. The battalion relieved elements of 6th Division, becoming the most advanced part of the line.
The 2/15th moved to Gabel El Gira on 27 March and then Barce. German forces had landed at Tripoli and were advancing east. It was involved in the withdrawal of British forces to Tobruk, referred to as the “Benghazi handicap”. The withdrawal cost the battalion heavily: the commanding officer, second in command, and 154 men were captured at El Gazala.The battalion moved to Hill 69 near Gaza where it remained into 1942, before undertaking training and garrison duties in Lebanon and Syria.
In early July 1942 the Second World War in North Africa became critical for the British Eighth Army, when Axis forces reached El Alamein in Egypt. The 9th Division rushed from Syria to the Alamein area and held the northern sector for almost four months, while the British Eighth Army reinforced under new a commander.
The 2/15th relieved the 2/28th Infantry Battalion, holding the line from Hill 33 to the coast throughout August. On 1 September the 2/15th participated in Operation Bulimba, designed to test tactics and strategies for the upcoming battle. The fighting was vicious and the battalion suffered 183 casualties – about half its fighting strength. From 23 October to 4 November it fought with the brigade during the battle of Alamein.
The 9th Division was recalled to Australia to face a new enemy – the Japanese. The 2/15th left Egypt aboard the Acquitania on 25 January 1943 and disembarked at Sydney on 27 February. After leave and jungle training on the Atherton Tablelands in Queensland it embarked for Milne Bay in Papua on 2 August 1943.
On 4 September the battalion landed on Red Beach, 15 miles north-west of Lae. Shortly after it fought its way ashore at Scarlet Beach near Finschhafen and defended the area against Japanese counter-attack. The battalion also took part in the Huon Peninsula campaign, advancing along the northern coast of New Guinea from Lae to Sio.
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Glossary

2nd Australian Imperial Force ; 9 Division ; Redbank Camp ; Battles for Tobruk ; Capture of Lae ; El Alamein ; Mersa Matruh Battle HonoursCasualties
  • 197 died
  • 504 wounded
For more information please see the Roll of Honour and Second World War Nominal Roll (external website) databases.
Commanding OfficersDecorations
  • 3 DSO
  • 4 MBE
  • 9 MC
  • 1 MC and bar
  • 7 DCM
  • 16 MM
  • 2 MM and bar
  • 1 BEM
  • 47 MID
For more information please see Honours and Awards database
Collection Items

Search for related collection items
References
  • AWM52: 8/3/15 2/15 Battalion war diary
  • Austin, Ronald James; 2/15th Battalion, AIF, Remembrance Club, Let enemies beware! : "Caveant hostes" : the history of the 2/15th Battalion, 1940-1945, (McCrae, Vic : The 2/15th Battalion, AIF, Remembrance Club in asscoiation with Slouch Hat Publications, 1995)
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Spidge,
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My Avatar is the memorial to the 22 Commonwealth Coastwatchers at the Temakin Cemetery on Betio (Tarawa Atoll) who were beheaded by the Japanese on 15th October 1942. http://www.dva.gov.au/media/publicat...mem_beito.html

"You were given the choice between war and dishonor.
You chose dishonor and you will have war."

(Winston Churchill made this prophetic pronouncement in a House of Commons speech in 1938, just after Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain signed the Munich agreement with Hitler. Chamberlain returned from Germany with the signed agreement in hand, proclaiming that "peace in our time" had been achieved. Churchill attacked Chamberlain's "politics of appeasement" in this and many other speeches.)

What did the Australians do in ww2 and other conflicts? Check out this site:
http://www.diggerhistory.info/00-pag...ster-index.htm

Last edited by spidge; 11-12-2007 at 01:57 PM..
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