Pte
Thomas Sayle Corlett

Informations sur naissance

Année de naissance:
1890
Lieu de naissance:
Ballaugh, Isle of Man, Isle of Man

Informations générales

Profession:
Agriculteur

Informations service militaire

Pays:
Australia
Force armée:
Australian Imperial Force
Rang:
Private
Numéro de service:
1110
Incorporation date:
03/02/1916
Incorporation nom de lieu:
Perth, Western Australia, Australia
Unités:
 —  Australian Pioneers, 3rd Bn.  (Dernière unité connue)

Informations sur décès

Date de décès:
19/10/1917
Lieu de décès:
Zonnebeke, Belgique
Cause du décès:
Killed in action (K.I.A.)
Âge:
27

Cimetière

White House Cemetery
Parcelle: III
Rangée: L
Tombe: 12

Distinctions et médailles 2

British War Medal
Médaille
Victory Medal
Médaille

Points d'intérêt 3

#1 Lieu de naissance
#2 Lieu d'enrôlement
#3 Lieu du décès (approximatif)

Mon histoire

Private Thomas Sayle Corlett enlisted for the Australian Imperial Expeditionary Forces on the 2nd of February 1916. He was assigned to the Australian Pioneers, probably because he only had three toes on his left foot. He consequently served in D Company of the 3rd Battalion Australian Pioneers, part of the Divisional Troops of the 3rd Australian Division. Private Thomas Sayle Corlett embarked for the front on the 6th of June 1916.
The 3rd Battalion Australian Pioneers participated in the Third Battle of Passchendaele. It’s main tasks during the October 1917 were to work on construction and maintenance of Mule tracks, for the supply of ammunition, food and supplies to the frontline. They also constructed and maintained artillery roads, to move the guns forward and laid duckboard tracks, which led the men through the boggy terrain to the frontline.
At 4 a.m. in the night of the 18th and 19th of August 1917 three officers and 51 other ranks of the 3rd Australian Pioneers left their billets, to work on the Mule track, running from Zonnebeke Station to Seine. Artillery Roads were also repaired. Particular attention was paid to drainage of the roads. Shell holes were filled up or were bridged and tracks were levelled ready for duckboards. The 3rd Australian Division was relieved on the 20th of October 1917, and the men of the 3rd Australian Pioneer Battalion left the Ypres area on the next day.
The 3rd Battalion Australian Pioneers suffered a total of fifteen casualties between the 18th and 20th of October 1917. Three men were killed and twelve men were wounded. Private Thomas Sayle Corlett was one of the men who were killed, while working on the Mule- and Duck tracks or the Artillery roads round Zonnebeke. He probably fell victim to German shell fire, while he was South of Potsdam and the Ypres-Roulers Railway. He was buried close to where he fell next to a track, leading to Zonnebeke, near an old German pill-box. He was later reburied at White House, St. Jean-les-Ypres Cemetery.

Sources 7

AIF-project
https://www.aif.adfa.edu.au/search
Sources utilisées
Australian War Memorial
https://www.awm.gov.au/people/roll-search/all/?preferred_name=&service_number=&unit=&conflict=0&op=Search
Sources utilisées
CWGC
http://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/454470/CORLETT,%20THOMAS%20SAYLE
Sources utilisées
Discovering Anzacs
http://discoveringanzacs.naa.gov.au/
Sources utilisées
National Archives of Australia
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/SearchScreens/BasicSearch.aspx
Sources utilisées
The Long, Long Trail
http://www.longlongtrail.co.uk/army/
Sources utilisées
War Diary Australian Pioneers 3rd Bn.
https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/awm4/
Sources utilisées