The Woodside men and boys will be
remembered: Pte. Harold Mitchell (1068)
My small business recently joined the Woodside Commerce
Association (WCA) and at the AGM, the committee accepted my proposal to
initiate a special commemorative focus on local men and boys who died in the
Great War. Of the 178 names on the Woodside Honour Board, 25 died in the war
and are buried overseas. In the lead up to Anzac Day 2022, I aim to feature each of the 25. If you are related to or know of any living members of the
soldier’s family, please contact me and I will personally commemorate your WW1
relative on the next Connecting Spirits Community Tour planned for September
2022. In addition, if YOU are interested in taking part in the next CS tour,
then email me for the details at julie@juliereecetours.com.au
The first Woodside soldier to be remembered on this blog is Private
Harold Mitchell (service number 1068). Harold’s story was first researched in
2000 and was commemorated in the first WW1 tour I ran while teaching at
Mount Barker High School in 2001. His short biography was retold in the book we
published in 2002, ‘Journey of Remembrance: An account of Mount Barker
High School’s Remembrance 2001 project’, Reece, J (Openbook Print, 2002):
this account was compiled by Jayne Wilson (Huxtable) on behalf of his relatives
who contacted the school prior to the tour in 2001. Other details have been included
from the National Archives of Australia service records.
Born at Woodside 4 February 1895, Harold was the son of
Robert and Lucia (aka Lucy – nee Seidel) Mitchell and was the eldest of three
sons, Harold, Robert and Alick. Harold was the great-grandson of Margaret and
John Murdock who sold their cotton milling factory to Coats Limited in Paisley,
Scotland and migrated to South Australia in 1838. They were some of the first settlers
to buy several properties around Woodside, Inverbrackie and Murdock Hill areas.
Harold attended Mount Barker High School and later helped his father to farm
some of their land at Murdock Hill until the time of his enlistment. (NAA service records also record his ‘trade’
as a cleaner though it’s unknown where and who that was for)
Pte. Mitchell enlisted on 15 February 1916 at Adelaide age 21
and served as a Gunner with ‘Y3A Trench Mortar Battery’ in the A.I.F. Harold
was 5’7” tall with a ‘medium complexion’, blue eyes and brown hair. He identified
as a Methodist.
On the 9th of June 1916, Harold sailed from Outer Harbour, en-route to France on board the ‘’A” 19 Afric landing at the port of Marseilles one month later on the 20th of June. He proceeded to England and on the 17thOctober 1916 he joined the 43rd Battalion and was based on the Salisbury Plains for a month. During his time at Larkhill he committed an offence when ‘…on active service...he was AWL (absent without leave) from midnight 21st October to 6.00 a.m. two days later, the 23rd. He lost 10 day’s pay.’
(It is worth noting that in all other armies, being AWOL could result in a court martial and potential execution by firing squad: the AIF was the only force in WW1 that did NOT have capital punishment for offences committed by their troops)
And
so, after a short period in the UK, Harold was ‘taken on strength’ to face the
front lines and proceeded to France on 23rd November 1916 to endure
the coldest winter on record in the region known as the ‘Western Front’. After
only 6 short months in the field, Pte. Harold Mitchell from Woodside was Killed
in Action on Monday 21st May 1917 and according to the family’s
account, he was shot with the bullet going through his Bible and lodging in his
heart. He was just 22 years of age. Private Harold Mitchell is buried in the Strand
Military Cemetery in Belgium and on Monday 10th December 2001, his
story was shared with the R2001 tour group.
The year following the Remembrance 2001 tour, Mount Barker
High School named parts of the campus after four of their old scholars who died
in the Great War: Mitchell sub-school was named after this young man from Woodside,
and it is to be hoped that 20 years on in 2022, we will once more return to his
grave in Belgium to remember his ultimate sacrifice.
(Harold was second cousin to Margaret Schwab (nee Mitchell),
mother of Helen Fechner and Lois Zerk – see ‘Journey of Remembrance’ page
111)
Pte. Harold Mitchell was first
commemorated on Monday 10 December 2001 at the Strand Military Cemetery,
Hainaut, BELGIUM.
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