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Frederick William Gabert (Fred) Rutter | |||
Rank: | Private | Number: | 637 |
Ship/Rgn/Sqn No: | 18th Bn | ||
Died: | 27/08/1915 | Age: | 32 |
How Died: | Killed in Action | ||
Country of burial: | Gallipoli | ||
Cemetery or Memorial: | Lone Pine Memorial | ||
Town Memorial: | Sale | ||
Extra Information: | |||
Born - 27 July 1883, Waverley, New South Wales, Australia, the son of John Clement and Elizabeth Ann Rutter, Coton House, Queens Road, Ashton on Mersey. John Clement Rutter was the son of John L. & Harriett E. Rutter. In 1871 J.L.R. was a Solicitor at Penn, Staffordshire. 1891 Census - 87 Cromwell Road, Patricroft, Barton on Irwell - mson - aged: 7 - Scholar - born: New South Wales Australia. 1901 Census - Glebelands Road, Ashton upon Mersey - son - aged: 17 - occ: Warehouse Apprentice - born: Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. 1911 Census - No Trace. Educated at Highfield School for Boys, Eccles. Joined the firm of Messrs. Sparrow, Hardwich & Co, Manchester. Captain of Sale RUFC's 'A' Team 1904/05. From the A.I.F. Database. Religion - Church of England. Occupation - Labourer. Address - Coton House Queens Road, Ashtons on Mersey Cheshire, England Marital status - Single. Age at embarkation - 32. Next of kin - Mother, Mrs Elizabeth Ann Rutter, Coton House, Ashton on Mersey Cheshire, Enlistment date: 20th February 1915. Age at Enlistment: 31 years 7 months. Occupation: Labourer. Served with the Royal Army Medical Corps, Manchester for 5 years before resigning. Rank on enlistment - Private. Unit name - 18th Battalion, B Company. Enlisted in the AIF in February 1915. He was 5 feet 8½ inches tall. He weighed 148 lb. Chest measurements were - 33 inches and 35½ inches. His complexion was: Dark. His eyes: Brown and his hair: Brown. He had no distinctive marks. He attested at Liverpool, New South Wales on the 23rd February 1915. Drafted into the 18th Battalion Australian Infantry, 5th Infantry Brigade he was in the first batch of troops sent to Galliopoli. AWM Embarkation Roll number 23/35/1 Embarkation details - Four Companies of the 18th Battalion embarked from Sydney, New South Wales, on board Transport A40 Ceramic on 25 June 1915 bound for Egypt via the Suez Canal. Rank from Nominal Roll - Private. Unit from Nominal Roll - 18th Battalion. Posted as missing on the 27th August 1915. Fate: Killed in Action - 27 August 1915. Decision of a Court of Enquiry held at Tel el Kebir, Egypt on the 21st January 1916. Age at death from cemetery records - 32. Australian War Memorial - 87 Cemetery records Parents: John and Elizabeth RUTTER, Combe Martin, Devon, England. Native of Bondi, New South Wales Other details War service: Egypt, Gallipoli. Medals: 1914-15 Star, British War Medal, Victory Medal. The 18th Battalion arrived on Gallipoli as fresh-faced troops eager for battle. Two days later this was completely shattered and the romantic myth of war was lost forever. Orders were issued almost immediately for the battalion to move up to the front line. Many of the men were not aware that they were to assault Hill 60 until just before 5.00am on the morning of 22 August 1915. Hill 60 was considered of strategic importance for two reasons. First of all it overlooked the much of the Anzac positions and second of all who ever controlled it also controlled two wells that supplied water. Syd Goodsell (now a major) led his company into murderous machine gun and rifle fire and several men were killed. He managed to get his a considerable number of his men into the first line of Turkish trenches before halting. Chapman could see that more men were needed so he ordered the next two companies into the firing line. Captain Alexander McKean (a school teacher from Penrith), part of the second wave, was struck in the shoulder and took no more active part in the war. Cyril Lane (also a major and company commander of ‘B’ Company) lost most of his men before reaching Goodsell attempting to consolidate. One young man, Private Joseph Maxwell, was appointed stretcher-bearer of ‘B’ Company and believed he would not get much opportunity to participate; he was wrong. After failing to make further headway through the day someone gave the order to withdraw although no one knew issued it. Those that managed to survive were shattered with the loss of so many friends and (in some cases) brothers. If those still fit thought that was their first and last experience of total carnage they were wrong. Just five days later the Battalion was ordered back into the line for a second attempt to remove the Turks from Hill 60. Chapman called for volunteers this time and every fit and able man stepped forward. This time they were successful in securing a foothold on the hill but many more men were killed, including the heroic Lane, struck once in the heart by a bullet during a bomb fight with the enemy. He fell in the Battle for Sulva Bay The 18th Battalion remained on Gallipoli until the end in December 1915 before evacuating without casualties. Major George Murphy (later battalion commander) transferred from the 20th to the 18th Battalion just after the August debacle. He was killed in the second charge. A few days before his death, Frederick wrote a letter to a Miss Gersbach stating that he had made out a will in the back of his pass Book and had left everything to her. A.W.M. Memorial He was born at Bondi Beach, New South Wales and attended the Highfield School, Sydney He must have gone to the UK at some time and then returned to Australia as he had previously served with the Medical Corps, Manchester Rgt. His Mother - Elizabeth Ann Rutter, gave the Memorial information and she was by then residing at Combe Martin, Devon. The 22/06/1915 edition of the local newspaper, reporting his brother's (Claude Arthur Gordon Rutter) death, states that FWG Rutter was on his way to the front with the Australian Contingent. During WW1 two of his sisters Ellen Geraldine Lilian Rutter who in 1911 was employed as a Nurse at the Austin Street Hospital Bethnal Green, London and Ethel Theodora Christina Rutter, who in 1912 was a Student Nurse at the Royall Infirmary, Gloucester, served with the Queen Alexandra's Imperial Medical Nursing Reserve and four of his brothers were also in the forces. An older brother, Clement Henry Edward Rutter, served with the London Volunteers Regiment and managed to survive the war as did another brother George Leopold Norman Rutter who was serving with the Manchester Regiment and was invalided home during the Gallipoli fighting. Claude Arthur Gordon Rutter served with the 6th Bn Manchester Regiment and was killed in action at Gallipoli. The youngest brother, Geoffrey Ronald Morton Rutter served with the Durham Light Infantry and was killed in action on 27th May 1918 whilst taking part in the Second Battle of the Marne, France. Commemorated on the private family gravestone in St. Catherine's, Barton on Irwell. Ref: 7l4. His father, John Clement died 18/03/1899 aged 51 years and his mother Elizabeth Ann died 16/08/1922 aged 67 years. CWGC lists mother's address as - Combe Martin, Devon. Listed in the Guardian Year Book - Roll of Honour for 1918, which states that he was from Ashton on Mersey. |
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