Melody Teh
Art

Remembering the legacy of Australians at War

Dennis Ringrose, 87, ex Sherwood Foresters and Royal Warwickshire Regiments, reflects on the legacy of the generations of Australians who’ve gone to war to fight for their country. 

I was born in 1929 in Nottingham in the UK, the youngest child in a family of six. I started work at 14 at John Player and Sons, where I stayed for four years, before leaving to start my National Service. After 20 weeks of infantry training I was sent to my country regiment, the Sherwood Foresters, before I was sent overseas to Jerusalem Palestine and transferred to the Royal Warwickshire Regiment. I stayed there until it became Israel so in a way I saw history being made. I then travelled to Salonika, Greece to become a batman (an officer's personal servant) to Roman Catholic Padre, who had been wounded at the great battle at Arnhem; he was a great fellow to look after. After two years I was released from National Service and started work at the Raleigh Industries where I met my wife Doreen. We’ve now been married 64 years and have three children, four grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.

My dabbling in poetry did not start until about 2000. I have always been interested in the military side of things and as an Australian citizen for many years, I decided to try my hand at capturing the most important national occasions in Australian history. I’ve always had an affinity with Australia, one that was struck up when as a teenager I watched the film Forty Thousand Horsemen. The moment when the horsemen come over the sand hills singing Waltzing Matilda always stuck in my mind.

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Australians at War

Even before the year of our Federation

The Commonwealth called on the men of this nation

Off to South Africa when the Boer war began

Who would forget the name Breaker Morant

 

Then the world war to end all wars

Unfortunately this aim was full of flaws

Ypres, Cambrai, Passchendaele and the Somme

Under the mud and poppies of Flanders

Many would never again see the sun

And in the desert came the Aussies, to fight the Turk and the Hun

Many young men volunteered thinking it would be fun

Gallipoli saw the Anzacs, a tradition was begun

But many lost their mates before the withdrawal was finally done

After four years of conflict and peace was finally restored

The casualties were counted, it produced a dismal record

 

The years rolled by and once again the war clouds began to appear

Through that infamous man Hitler many countries were full of fear

After Dunkirk came the Battle of Britain to save a nation

In the airforce came the Aussies to help with Englands salvation

Amongst their aces never to be forgot

Was a hero called Bluey Trusscott

And all those men in navy blue

Night after night over Europe they flew

Once again the desert called, things had run amok

Who will ever forget the Australians defence of Tobruk

 

As the Japanese approached Australia the desert troops were brought home

But after retraining off to the jungle they were sent to roam

With the Fuzzies help and without fail

Performed their heroics on the Kakoda trail

The navy too they played their part

Many ships and crews lost from the start

The massacre of valiant nurses made the blood tingle

Lucky to survive was Sister Bullwinkle

But finally after countless years

The war was ended and there were tears

Service people returned to their homes for release

And the condition of the POW’S did not please

As in the first war the cream of the nation had been plundered

Will this be the last time people wondered

 

Then again in 1950 came the call

North and South Korea were at war

Through the mistake of General McArthur

Who went over the border and then strayed further

This gave the Chinese an excuse to enter the fray

Causing the United Nations to retreat day after day

Until an Aussie battalion at the battle of Kapjong

Defeated a Chinese division, another honour was won

Then after months of heated deliberation

Peace came to a devided nation

To recognise against the enemy the Aussies constant battle

The Americans gave them a special medal

 

In the years to come without failure

Came a conflict to fight communists in Malaysia

Would world friction ever end

To which Australia would her forces send

 

Then on the horizon came another conflict

For the first time the services included conscripts

Many had never heared of the name Vietnam

For many a new experience had begun

They fought people in black pyjamas

In the paddies they looked like local farmers

So in later years there came defeat

Back to their homeland forced to retreat

And I’ll never know why they were treated like dirt

Because the ‘’take over’’ by communism they had tried to avert

And like their forefathers they had done their best

Many of them had been laid to rest

Once again Australians had given their all

We hoped that never again they would have to answer the call

 

But we know this is not true

Because tyranny of nations has begun anew

The Gulf war, East Timor, Afghanistan and Irak too

Thank goodness this time casualties are few

 

But in the future if the bugle calls again

Rest assured the Australian nation will not refrain

Related links: 

Top 10 life lessons kids learn from grandparents

There are 5 different types of grandparents – which one are you?

10 pics of parents and kids who look identical

 

Tags:
australia, News, war, Community contributor, Anzac Day, Poem, poetry