Thomas Leslie Axford Tales of the V.C.
Article with annotations.
Thomas Leslie Jack Axford VC, MM (18 June 1894 – 11 October 1983), was an Australian recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces.
Axford enlisted in the Citizen Military Forces military forces in 1912. He served in the 84th Infantry Regiment until July 1915, when he joined the Australian Imperial Force (AIF). Axford was assigned to the 11th Reinforcements of the 16th Battalion on 9 August 1915, which left Australia on HMAT Benalla that November.
Axford was wounded in August 1916 and again in August 1917, the second time so badly that he did not rejoin his battalion until January 1918. In February 1918, he was promoted to Lance Corporal. On 24 May 1918, Axford was awarded the Military Medal.
On 4 July 1918, during an Australian and American attack on a front between Villezs - Bretonneux and the village of Vaire, east of Corbie on the south bank of the Somme, 4 July 1918,the events took place for which Axford was awarded the VC. Citation:
On 4 July 1918 during the attack at Vaire and Hamel Woods, France, when the advance of the adjoining platoon was being delayed in uncut wire and machine-gun fire, and his company commander had become a casualty, Lance-Corporal Axford charged and threw bombs amongst the enemy gun crews. He then jumped into the trench, and charging with his bayonet, killed 10 of the enemy and took six prisoners. He threw the machine-guns over the parapet and the delayed platoon was able to advance. He then rejoined his own platoon and fought with it during the remainder of the operations.
In addition to the VC, Axford was also that month promoted to Corporal.
Axford returned to Western Australia in October 1918, and was discharged on 2 February 1919.
The attached account of This mad Australian... actions was written by James Price Lloyd of the Welsh Regiment, who served with Military Intelligence. After the war, the government to destroyed all the archives relating to this propaganda (section MI 7b (1)). They were regarded as being too sensitive to risk being made public. Remarkably these documents have survived in the personal records of Captain Lloyd. Many of these papers are officially stamped, and one can trace the development of many individual articles from the notes based on an idea, to the pencil draft which is then followed by the hand-written submission and the typescript. The archive Tales of the VC comprises 94 individual accounts of the heroism that earned the highest award for valour, the Victoria Cross. These are recounted deferentially and economically, yet they still manage to move the reader.
Date stamp: 10 October 1918.
CONTRIBUTOR
Jeremy Arter
DATE
1918-07-04
LANGUAGE
eng
ITEMS
8
INSTITUTION
Europeana 1914-1918
PROGRESS
METADATA
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