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Private Walter James Stafford - 21 December 2017 

AWM Last Post
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Note: some details in Private Stafford’s story have been confirmed and amended since this ceremony was recorded. For the corrected story please read the transcript below.
In the Last Post Ceremony for 21 December, we remember Private Walter James Stafford who served Australia in the First World War.
The Last Post Ceremony streams live from the Memorial in Canberra at 4.30pm every day. Proudly supported by RSL Australia and RSL & Services Clubs Association.
If you would like to learn more about Private Walter James Stafford visit our website: www.awm.gov.au/collection/P11...
Transcript
1310 Private Walter James Stafford, 5th Australian Machine Gun Company, AIF KIA 6 May 1916
Story delivered 21 December 2017.
Today we remember and pay tribute to Private Walter James Stafford. Known as “Jim”, Walter Stafford was born near Gunnedah in 1894. His mother, Susan Stafford, an Indigenous woman of the Dharug nation, died in 1907 when he was around 13 years old. He attended the local Gunnedah public school, and went on to become a blacksmith. In March 1915 Stafford enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force, naming his brother Edward as his next of kin. He was posted to the 19th Battalion, and after a period of training in Australia, left for active service overseas in June 1915 on board the troopship Ceramic. Private Stafford served for some months on Gallipoli. Following the evacuation at the end of 1915, the AIF underwent a period of reorganisation and expansion in Egypt. Stafford was transferred to the 5th Machine Gun Company and went through machine-gun training before being sent to France to fight on the Western Front. In early May 1916 the 5th Machine Gun Company was in a quiet sector of the front line near Bois Grenier. Stafford was manning his gun when a heavy German artillery barrage came down. A chance shell scored a direct hit on Stafford’s gun, killing him and two others instantly. His friend Private Victor Thompson wrote to Walter’s brother Edward to tell him, “[he] died a real hero, his hands holding to the handles of the machine gun. No one could die a soldier’s death better than being at his post to the last moment. We mourn his loss, and such soldiers as he the King and country are proud of.” Private Stafford’s commanding officer also wrote to Edward to express his sympathy. He wrote, “I had the highest opinion of [his] qualities as a machine gunner, and, much more important, as a man … Though sad for you, this is another example of the devotion to their country of our soldiers, and I can only offer you my sincere sympathy.” Private Walter Stafford was buried near where he fell. His brother chose an epitaph that read:
In the dawn of a splendid manhood
When the tide of his youth ran high
With courage and hope in his bearing
He waved us a last goodbye.
Sadly, this was too long for the standard headstone, and Edward did not reply to requests for a shorter one. Today Walter Stafford is buried in the Brewery Orchard Cemetery at Bois Grenier in France. He was 22 years old. His name is listed on the Roll of Honour on my right, among almost 62,000 Australians who died while serving in the First World War. This is but one of the many stories of service and sacrifice told here at the Australian War Memorial. We now remember Private Walter James Stafford, who gave his life for us, for our freedoms, and in the hope of a better world.
Meleah Hampton, Historian
Military History Section
Amended March 2024

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24 апр 2024

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