Rfn
Ernest Jesse Goer
Informations sur naissance
Date de naissance: 18/06/1881 |
Lieu de naissance: Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand |
Informations générales
Profession: Chauffeur |
Informations service militaire
Pays: New Zealand |
Force armée: New Zealand Expeditionary Force |
Rang: Rifleman |
Numéro de service: 53490 |
Incorporation date: 03/02/1917 |
Incorporation nom de lieu: Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand |
Unités: — New Zealand Rifle Brigade, 1st Bn. |
Informations sur décès
Date de décès: 07/12/1917 |
Lieu de décès: Reutel, Beselare, Belgique |
Cause du décès: Killed in action (K.I.A.) |
Âge: 36 |
Cimetière
Polygon Wood Cemetery Parcelle: Inconnu Rangée: F Tombe: 6 |
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
Ernest Goer was born in Wellington, New Zealand, on 18 June 1881 to James and Betsy Goer. The family arrived in New Zealand from Staffordshire, England in the 1870s. Several children were born in England and five, including Ernest, were born in New Zealand. Ernest married Olive Murch in 1906 and the couple had a daughter, Olive Cleta Charlotte, born in 1908 and another, Glady in 1913. He was a driver for Wellington City Corporation when he enlisted on 3 February 1917.
He joined the 27th Reinforcement, service number 53490, training at Trentham and Featherston camps before embarking on the troop ship Maunganui from Wellington on 12 June 1917, arriving at Devonport on 16 August.
As part of a Rifle Brigade group Ernest entered Tidworth Camp on the Salisbury Plain. He sailed to France on 23 October , spending some time at Etaples until being posted to B Company of 1st Battalion, 3rd (New Zealand Rifles) Brigade on 2 November 1917.
The New Zealand Division was in the Polygon Wood area, after the end of the Third Battle of Ypres. Much of the time was spent in wiring, repairing crumbling trenches and improving defences. The landscape was covered with waterlogged shellholes. The opposing German forces generally held higher ground and movement in the New Zealand lines was often observed and shelled or machine-gunned.
The Division relieved the 21st Division from 13th November, when the 3rd (NZ Rifle Brigade) and 4th NZ Infantry Brigades took over the front line. On 1st December the NZ Rifle Brigade relieved the 4th Infantry Brigade in the Becelaere Sector, with the 1st Battalion ( Ernest’s unit) relieving the 3rd Otago Battalion. The brigade headquarters was at the Polygon Butte.
On 3 December part of 2nd Brigade attacked Polderhoek Chateau, with limited success and heavy casualties. The Rifle Brigade history does not offer much detail on this period so it is difficult to say how Ernest Goer died on 7 December 1917. There were heavy snow storms during the time.
His body was recovered and he, along with others from the New Zealand Rifle Brigade, is buried at Polygon Wood Cemetery. He is in Row F, Grave 6.
Ernest’s older brother Charles was killed at the Battle of Broodseinde on 4 October 1917.
He joined the 27th Reinforcement, service number 53490, training at Trentham and Featherston camps before embarking on the troop ship Maunganui from Wellington on 12 June 1917, arriving at Devonport on 16 August.
As part of a Rifle Brigade group Ernest entered Tidworth Camp on the Salisbury Plain. He sailed to France on 23 October , spending some time at Etaples until being posted to B Company of 1st Battalion, 3rd (New Zealand Rifles) Brigade on 2 November 1917.
The New Zealand Division was in the Polygon Wood area, after the end of the Third Battle of Ypres. Much of the time was spent in wiring, repairing crumbling trenches and improving defences. The landscape was covered with waterlogged shellholes. The opposing German forces generally held higher ground and movement in the New Zealand lines was often observed and shelled or machine-gunned.
The Division relieved the 21st Division from 13th November, when the 3rd (NZ Rifle Brigade) and 4th NZ Infantry Brigades took over the front line. On 1st December the NZ Rifle Brigade relieved the 4th Infantry Brigade in the Becelaere Sector, with the 1st Battalion ( Ernest’s unit) relieving the 3rd Otago Battalion. The brigade headquarters was at the Polygon Butte.
On 3 December part of 2nd Brigade attacked Polderhoek Chateau, with limited success and heavy casualties. The Rifle Brigade history does not offer much detail on this period so it is difficult to say how Ernest Goer died on 7 December 1917. There were heavy snow storms during the time.
His body was recovered and he, along with others from the New Zealand Rifle Brigade, is buried at Polygon Wood Cemetery. He is in Row F, Grave 6.
Ernest’s older brother Charles was killed at the Battle of Broodseinde on 4 October 1917.
Rapports avec d'autres militaires 1
Charles Arthur Goer
Brother |
Sources 3
Archives New Zealand http://www.archives.govt.nz Sources utilisées |
Austin WL.,The official history of the New Zealand Rifle Brigade (The Earl of Liverpool's Own), (Wellington, L.T. Watkins, 1924), pg. 255-258. Sources utilisées |
New Zealand births deaths marriages https://www.bdmhistoricalrecords.dia.govt.nz/search Sources utilisées |
Complément d’informations 5
Commonwealth War Graves Commission Database https://www.cwgc.org/find-records/find-war-dead/casualty-details/480028 |
Namenlijst (In Flanders Fields Museum) https://namenlijst.org/publicsearch/#/person/_id=5d5c5017-d84f-406e-9a9f-e3dcb406b439 |
Lives of the First World War (Imperial War Museum) https://livesofthefirstworldwar.iwm.org.uk/lifestory/7175180 |
The NZEF Project (UNSW Canberra) https://nzef.adfa.edu.au/showPerson?pid=94366 |
Online Cenotaph (Auckland Museum) https://www.aucklandmuseum.com/war-memorial/online-cenotaph/record/c5630 |