2nd Lt
Edgar Sydney Worrall

Information about birth

Date of birth:
01/10/1897
Place of birth:
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

General information

Last known residence:
Prahran, Victoria, Australia
Profession:
Medical Student
Religion:
Methodist

Army information

Country:
Australia
Force:
Australian Imperial Force
Rank:
Second Lieutenant
Service number:
2026
Enlistment date:
18/06/1915
Enlistment place:
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Units:
 —  Australian Infantry, 24th Bn. (Victoria)  (Last known unit)

Information about death

Date of death:
04/10/1917
Place of death:
Brick Kiln & Yard, Zonnebeke, Belgium
Cause of death:
Killed in action (K.I.A.)
Age:
20

Cemetery

Aeroplane Cemetery
Plot: V
Row: A
Grave: 3

Distinctions and medals 2

Points of interest 4

#1 Place of birth
#2 Last known residence
#3 Enlistment place
#4 Place of death (approximate)

My story

Edgar Sydney Worrall, a former medical student (at Prahan, Victoria), was born on October 1, 1897 in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. He was the son of Henry and Elizabeth Ann Worrall, and the brother of Henry Vernon, Norman Rewa, Millicent Irene, Edith Rhodes and Dorothy Langham. On June 18, 1915 he enlisted in Melbourne and embarked from Melbourne on board HMAT A68 Anchises on August 26, 1915, with the 3rd reinforcement of the 24th Battalion, part of the 6th Australian Brigade of the 2nd Australian Division.

He got wounded in France in March 1916, was taken to England suffering from shrapnel wounds where he got 18 weeks treatment, after which he returned to France. He was sent to Officers’ Training College at New College, Oxford, and passed his military examinations.

The 2nd Australian Division participated in the Battle of Broodseinde on the 4th of October 1917. It attacked with two brigades, the 6th and the 7th Australian Brigades.

The 24th Battalion was part of the 6th Brigade, which attacked on the right of the divisional front. The 22nd Battalion would take the first objective, the red line. Once they had taken this line, the 24th would pass through the 22nd on the right and the 21st would do the same on the left. The Battalion assembled before the attack at the jumping-off positions in front of Tokio, but soon moved closer to the road leading to Tokio on account of German artillery fire on and around Albania. By 4.45 a.m. the companies of the Battalion were in position at the jump-off trench. They made use of shell holes and old trench systems to form a line. Their goal were the German positions at the Broodseinde ridge, which they would reach by crossing the Zonnebeke Creek, up the rising, past De Knoet Farm and across the Broodseinde- Beselaere Road, over the crest of the ridge, and to the line, of the objective, on the forward slope.
At 5.30 a.m. moments before the Battalion would attack, the German artillery, including minenwerfers, started shelling the jump-off line. The Germans were about to attack themselves in the hope of recapturing Zonnebeke. The heavy shell fire was very destructive, killing forty men and two officers instantly. The Battalion’s strength was consequently reduced by round thirty per cent, even before the attack had commenced.

At 6 a.m. the British and Australian artillery opened fire on the German positions and the troops started to advance. The 22nd led off, followed by the 21st and 24th. Zonnebeke Lake was on the jumping-off line on the left. The three battalions had to storm the front over 3oo yards right of the lake. Once they had passed the lake the units on the left had to change direction to cover the ground allotted to them.
The German infantry was utterly surprised by the allied barrage. They were quickly dispersed, killed or taken prisoner by the advancing Australians. Docile Trench and De Knoet Farm fell without much opposition and the 22nd Battalion reached their objective by 6.50 a.m. On the right flank of the 24th Battalion the troops met resistance in Romulus Wood, but the Germans were eventually overpowered. At 7.30 a.m. the 21st and 24th moved up behind the protective barrage, reaching the second objective, the blue line at 8.10 a.m., where the dug in and prepared for eventual counterattacks.

Thomas, aged 20, was killed in action on October 4, 1917. He was fatally hit at the jumping off trench around 6 a.m. by pieces from a high explosive shell. Second Lieutenant Worrall was initially buried where he fell, southeast of Brick Kiln and Road (28.D.28.c.80.20) by his men. His remains were exhumed and reinterred at Aeroplane Cemetery, Plot 5, Row A, Grave 3.

Files 3

Sources 5

24th Battalion Australian Infantry (Australian War Memorial, Campbell (AWM), AWM4 23/41/25).
https://www.awm.gov.au/
Sources used
6th Brigade Australian Infantry (Australian War Memorial, Campbell (AWM), AWM4 23/6/26).
https://www.awm.gov.au/
Sources used
First Australian Imperial Force Personnel Dossiers, 1914-1920 (National Archives of Australia, Canberra (NAA), B2455).
https://www.naa.gov.au/
Sources used
Outdoor group portrait of officers of the 24th Battalion.
https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/C1227207
Sources used
Unit embarkation nominal rolls, 1914-18 War (Australian War Memorial, Campbell (AWM), AWM8).
https://www.awm.gov.au/
Sources used

More information 4