Saturday, October 26, 2013

AHS Wanganella

Private Allan Scott - VX76002
D Company - 2/24th Battalion
Australian Infantry

Not long now.  Excitement.  Nervousness.  Trepidation. Relief.  Joy.  The air was electric with anticipation. Beaming smiles abounded, even on the most hardened faces.

After so long abroad, we were nearly home.  Land was in sight.  How I had dreamt of this moment.  My heart ached and raced to see my dearest Eva.  I hope she could bring the nips to see me.

But then there was a moment of doubt.  Had I changed too much?  In getting the job done, I had seen things and done things that she should never know about.

I looked around at the smiling men, lining the deck and my fears disappeared.  The sun was shining.  I had made it home.  Very soon my arms would be around my sweetheart.  Life is Good.


This is how I imagine that my grandfather felt as the Australian Hospital Ship, Wanganella, approached Melbourne in March 1943.


This photo was in my grandmothers photo album and was labelled;
"The hospital ship that Allan came home from the Middle East on 1st April 1943"
A search of Australian hospital ships on the internet soon revealed that this ship was the Wanganella as it is easily identified by the number 45 on the bow and stern.

The Advertiser (Adelaide)
29 May 1941
Source: www.trove.nla.gov.au
Wanganella - December 1945
Source: State Library of Victoria
My grandfather, Allan Scott, contracted Rheumatic fever whilst on active service in the Middle East. He was evacuated on the 6th February 1943.  He wrote a letter to my grandmother while onboard the Wanganella.

" 19th March 1943
Dear Eva, 
Well just a line to let you know I am still in the land of the living, in fact I am feeling very well again now and will be seeing you in about a fortnights time.  I lost a lot of weight while in hospital but am putting it on again now & I should be too as I have an enormous appetite at present.  I think  it must be the change back to Aussie rations.  I am having a bit of a struggle to write this as the boat is pitching about considerably & I am just sitting on the side of the bed with the pad on my knee.  We are on a hospital ship that carries between five and six hundred when fully loaded but there is only 180 on this trip as we are the last of our lot to return.  One thing we have plenty of room & the staff have a pretty good time as well & they look after us extra well too.  Most of us are feeling pretty right & there isn't many bed patients.
You will be notified a couple of days before we arrive & I believe they give you a free rail pass to come & meet us & don't go thinking I am bad just because I am on this boat because I am quite well.  I will get this posted airmail from Perth & hope you get it before you come to the city.  You had better wire Wally (his brother) & get him to meet you at Spencer St or you may have some trouble finding your way about.  His address is 2 Coburg Street, Coburg in case you don't know it.
I think we get away very soon after leaving the boat & I believe we get 14 days leave for a start & probably some more after but am not certain of that.  The 14 days is convalescent leave.  If your pass is good for a few days you might like to have a look around the city while you are there.  I think I will send a wire from Perth too in case you don't get this before you leave to meet me.  We expect to get to Perth about next Thursday or Friday & to Melbourne about six days later.  We have run into quite a few rain storms in the last few days.  It is very hot too.  We crossed the equator about 4 o'clock yesterday morning so it will get gradually cooler from now on.
I wish you could bring the nips to meet me too but I don't spose you would be able to as Don will be going to school & besides you would have to bring too much baggage.  I will have a fair bit of stuff to carry too.  Tho I will be wearing quite a bit more than at present as I am only wearing a pair of shorts & just put a pair of canvas shoes on to get up on deck.  I play a fair bit of deck quoits during the day and five hundred at night & spend the rest of the time sun bathing, reading or sleeping.  Well dear I think I will stop now & write to a few of the others between here and Perth & will most likely write a bit more to this in the mean time so for the present I say cheerio & will be seeing you soon.

25th March 1943
Well we are just about to Freemantle now, expect to pull in sometime this morning so another week & I will be seeing you I hope.  I don't know if we are going to get ashore for a while or not so may not send the wire I mentioned earlier.  I can get one of the chaps that are going off here to post this.  We are still having a good trip.  It will take us

about five to six days from when we leave Freemantle to get to Melbourne.  Well now old dear I must stop as its nearly breaker time so cheerio with all my love to you all now and forever.   Allan"
Evidently the trip was not as totally uneventful as my grandfather's letter as he later told his family that the hospital ship needed to turn quickly and change course to avoid a Japanese torpedo boat that was in their path.

The Argus (Melbourne)
5th April 1943
Source:  www.trove.nla.gov.au



Received by Allan Scott the day he returned to Australia in 1943.  It was discovered among my grandmothers papers after she died in 2006.
My grandmother, Eva Scott, wrote more than 50 years after my grandfather returned from WWII;
"Allan’s regiment were sent as reinforcements to El Alamein where the fighting was pretty fierce, but all over before they got there – thank goodness.  So they were sent home on leave, but he did not come.  I wrote to the headquarters Melbourne – asking why.  Got a registered letter, which I didn't keep (wish now I had).   It said he developed hepatitis and asthma and was on his way to Heidelberg Military hospital and they would let me know when he arrived by hospital ship – which they did –and asked me to keep it under my hat.  As soon as I got word I went down.  Wally was stationed at Bourke St so I made for there thinking he would be there, but red tape kept them at Barracks which Mavis knew so she took me there.  Barry was only 6 weeks old, so I carried him for Mavis and one cheeky devil of a soldier said quite loud – "Where did you get that baby"?  From then on he spent quite a bit of time at Heidelberg – they made him TPI".
My grandmother was mistaken in her writings as the army records indicate that my grandfather contracted Rheumatic Fever not Hepatitis as she states.

The Argus (Melbourne)
10 March 1941
Source:  www.trove.nla.gov.au

My grandfather was still in the hospital at Heidelberg in July 1943 as I also have a letter written to my grandmother, dated 8th July 1943 from "Ward 18, 115th AGH Heidelberg".  The Defense records indicate that he was made TPI and discharged on 30th November 1943.

My grandfather, Allan Scott, died 6th April 1965 at age 56, as a result of  an "acute cardiac arrest" as a result of long term "chronic rheumatic valvular disease of heart", which would have been a result of the rheumatic fever that he contracted whilst serving in the Middle East.  

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Originally posted 8th June 2013 but re-posted to celebrate 200 Sepia Saturday posts

Sunday, October 6, 2013

Unknown Pilgrim Wedding

Whose wedding is this?  When do you think it was taken?

Many of you would remember James Pilgrim senior from my prior posts.  Someone has marked him with an asterix in this photo. (Gee I hate it when people do this!  Write it on the back or copy the photo and write it on the copy!)

James Pilgrim senior has been marked with an asterix

The photo is not easy to see, so with my limited knowledge of Photoshop, I did some simple adjustments to make it clearer;

Click to enlarge

When I zoom in closer, James Pilgrim has a flower in his lapel, which indicates that he is related to one of the people being married.  He is on our right of the bride, so he is most likely related to her. But who is she?

Four of James' daughters were married;
Catherine "Amy" Pilgrim married James Abraham Weir on 22 July 1885 at Winiam
Alice Munson Pilgrim married Henry Westendorf on 15 May 1890 at Winiam
Emma Sarah Pilgrim married James Richard Oldfield on 14th January 1896 at Winiam
Eleanor Elizabeth "Bess" Pilgrim married Ernest Muller on 17th February 1902 at Winiam

The photo is more than likely taken on James' property.  It was reported in Victoria and its Metropolis, written in 1888, "Mr Pilgrim, who has had charge of the Winiam post-office for some time, has one of the nicest gardens in the Wimmera, fruit trees, grape vines and flowers growing luxuriantly."  The old photo does not do it justice but it is easy to imagine that the garden looked lovely.

I am not a gardener (as I don't have time) but I immediately discounted Amy and Alice's wedding.  I don't think that the flowers would be growing in Autumn and Winter in Australia, but am happy to be corrected.

If this photo is of one of James's daughters weddings, then it is likely that my Great Great Grandmother Mary Ann is pictured as she lived until May 1902.  Could I be that lucky?   No, I don't think so as it is too difficult to tell.

Left:  My Great Great Grandfather James Pilgrim is pictured in the centre.  Could either of the ladies be my Great Great Grandmother?
Right:  The only known (poor quality) photo of  my Great Great Grandmother, Mary Ann Pilgrim (nee Warner)

There are no known photos of Emma Sarah Pilgrim, who died two years after her wedding (swallowed a pin).  However there is a painting of her husband James Abraham Weir (below).  Could this wedding photo be the only photo of Emma Pilgrim?

Do you think the grooms are the same?
James Abraham Weir on the right
Too difficult to say.  The hairline is opposite.  But I don't "feel" it is the same man.

So then I compared to photos I had of Ern Muller and Bess Pilgrim, who married in 1902.

Unknown Couple - Ern Muller 1908 - Bess and Ern Muller 1928
Still no luck.  They do not look like the same people either.  Now what?  I was stuck.  Looking at the faces of those in the wedding photo, I thought that I could recognise some of the Pilgrim brothers, with their huge moustaches.  Then a lady with her baby "jumped out" at me.  Could it be?  My heart rate actually accelerated.  Surely not! I went looking through my photos to find a match.

Could this be the same people?
Left:  Unknown mother and baby from front mid right of wedding photo
Right:  Mabel Pilgrim and Eva Pilgrim 1911
Same high cheekbones and big hair.  The neck brooch, shirt and skirt look like they could be the same?  The baby's hair has that same dark curl and the skirt line is similar.
The lady on the right is my Great Grandmother, Mabel Pilgrim (nee Geyer) who married one of James Pilgrim's sons.  The wedding photo was found in a box of photos previously belonging to Mabel Pilgrim. The baby is my grandmother, Eva Pilgrim.  The photo on the right was a Geyer family gathering but maybe they had limited "good" clothes and the same were worn in both photos?
The first photo is so old with so little detail, that it is really hard to tell.

My family history program allows me to sort by date of marriage.  If this was my grandmother, then the wedding would have been in 1911. I quickly sorted them and discounted the wedding of two of the Pilgrim brothers (as I have their wedding photos).  The only one remaining was Caroline Sarah "Carrie" Warner, who is the niece of James Pilgrim.  Carrie and her siblings were orphaned at a young age and were brought up by James and Mary Ann Pilgrim so it was a possibility? I hadn't considered the nieces before.

Unknown bride and Carrie Warner

The date of marriage I had for Carrie Warner to Gilbert Blythman was "1912".  It didn't fit but I thought I would order a certificate as maybe the marriage was registered in the following year?  Unfortunately not.  Carrie and Gilbert were married on James Pilgrim's property on 30 September 1912. I don't think that the baby could be my grandmother as she would have been age two in September 1912 and the baby pictured looks younger, maybe it is her brother Lloyd born June 1912?  The initial photo is just too poor quality to match.

Carries sister, Maria - known  also as Ria - was married in 1913 and it is definitely not Ria's wedding as I have a copy of their wedding photo and the groom, George Ridgwell, has a thick dark moustache in their wedding photos.

James and Mary Ann Pilgrim also brought up Emma's young daughter, their granddaughter, but I have confirmed that it is not her wedding photo either.

So I still don't know whose wedding it is!

Please label your photo's so that your ancestors know who is pictured.



Inspired by Sepia Saturday.Click for more posts.