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JONES, Oliver

Subjects

  • WW1
Author: 
Sylvia Black
WW1 Roll of Honour: 
Roll of Honour
Family name: 
JONES
Given names: 
Oliver
Gender: 
Male
Religion: 
Church of England
Date of birth: 
1 January 1891
Place of birth: 
Birth Richmond, Victoria
, Australia
37° 49' 26.0616" S, 144° 59' 23.046" E
East Melbourne addresses
Year: 
1916
1916
88 George Street
, East Melbourne, Victoria
, Australia
Military service: 
WW1
Regimental number: 
7029
Rank: 
Pte
Military units: 
5th Battalion, 23rd Reinforcement
Military casualty: 
Killed in action
Date of death: 
1918
Place of death: 
Harbonnieres
, France
49° 50' 50.3736" N, 2° 40' 10.0776" E
Biographical notes: 

Oliver Jones was born in Richmond in 1891.  He was the son of John Jones and his wife, May Matilda.  By 1909 the family had moved to East Melbourne, initially renting at 90 George Street, then moving to 1105 Hoddle Street, and then, in 1916, back to 88 George Street.  The Jones later bought 88 George Street after the death of the owner and remained there until their own deaths: John in 1938 and May in 1943.  John was a paper ruler.

Oliver was still living with his parents when he enlisted on 18 September 1916 and working as a clerk.  He was 5ft 4ins tall.  He was appointed to the 5th Battalion, 23rd Reinforcements as a private.

He embarked on 23 November 1916 aboard the Hororata and arrived at Plymouth on 29 January 1917.  He was sent to training camp at Tidworth where he qualified 2nd class at the School of Musketry and ‘has a fair knowledge of Lewis Gun.'  He was appointed lance corporal on 30 July 1917 and acting corporal on 18 December 1917 while at Sutton Veny, but reverted to private on proceeding overseas on 6 March 1918.  He was taken on strength of the 5th Battalion on 16 March.  His battalion ‘participated in the great Allied offensive launched near Amiens on 8 August 1918. The advance by British and empire troops was the greatest success in a single day on the Western Front, one that German General Erich Ludendorff described as “the black day of the German Army in this war”’.  Oliver was killed in action at Harbonnieres on 11 August 1918.

References: 
NAA name search
Trove digitised newspapers
Ancestry
AWM, Military Units, 5th Battalion
AWM, Unit War Diaries, 5th Battalion, Aug 1918
Acknowledgments: 

City of Melbourne Rate Books, Albert Ward, 1908-1924

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