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One of four
recipients of the Victoria Cross buried at Brighton General Cemetery, James
Ernest Newland was born on 22 August 1881 at Geelong, the son of William
Newland and Louisa née Wall. He enlisted as Private 2354 4th
Battalion, Australian Commonwealth Horse for service in the Boer War under
the command of Lieutenant-Colonel
George Johnston (q.v.) arriving in Durban just over a month before
the end of hostilities and was soon back in Australia. He served for a
period in the Royal Australian Artillery (1903-07) and later became a
permanent member of the Instructional Staff of the Military Forces
(1910-14). Enlisting with the Tasmanian section of the 12th Battalion on
22 August 1914 as regimental quartermaster sergeant, Newland landed with the
battalion at Gallipoli and was wounded on that fatal day. A month later,
promoted to 2nd lieutenant he re-joined the unit and in early June left
for Egypt to take charge of the battalion’s transport section. It was in
Egypt that Newland was promoted to captain and appointed Adjutant in March
1916, but would have been spared the unfortunate task of reorganising the
battalion by having to split the unit in order to form its sister battalion
- the 52nd. In France, during the battalion’s first major battle of the war
- the bloody battle of Poziéres and later Mouquet Farm between July-August
1916 - Newland commanded ‘A’ Company and was recommended for the Military
Cross, but was instead mentioned in despatches “for conspicuous courage,
leadership and organisation”. After a brief interlude with Headquarters of
the 2nd Brigade (Dec 1916-Feb 1917), he returned to his old post and fought
in the battalion’s operations on the Hindenburg Outpost Villages where he
was wounded in late February. He again returned in April 1917 where the 3rd
Brigade was involved in a series of sharp engagements on the retiring
Germans. It was here that Newland was awarded the Victoria Cross for “most
conspicuous bravery, and devotion to duty in the face of heavy odds, on
three separate occasions” in what was one of the great leaderships displays
of the war, thus becoming with Sergeant John Whittle V.C (Rookwood
Cemetery), the only permanent officer of the A.I.F to be awarded the V.C in
the Great War. On the first occasion he led a bombing attack against a
strong-point under heavy fire. At dusk the Germans led a ferocious
counter-attack, and “by personal exertion, utter disregard of fire, and
judicious use of reserves, he succeeded” in holding the position. Six days
later, at Lagnicourt, the Germans launched yet another counter-attack and
until outflanked, retired for a last stand, and in spite of repeated
attacks, he led the unit until reinforcements arrived as the citation said
“with tenacity and disregard for his own safety”. The next month during the
Second Battle of Bullecourt, he was wounded for the third time and
eventually invalided home to Australia in July 1917 and discharged the
following March. He retired from the army in 1941, but served on the home
front during World War II.
Residing at 54 Briggs
Street, Caulfield, Newland suddenly died from heart failure on 19 March 1949
at the age of 66; his medals spanning three conflicts can be seen at the
Australian War Memorial, Canberra. |
.jpg)
(above) James Newland
(Image courtesy of the
Australian War Memorial,
P02939.013)

(above) Monumental Headstone |
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Source:
ADB Volume 11 1891-1939 (Nes-Smi).
The Argus 21 March 1949.
The Age 21 March 1949.
The Herald 21 March 1949.
“Sabretache” (Jan-March 1985)
AWM “Biographical Cards for the Official
History 1914-18”, AWM140.
Bean, C., “The Official History of Australia
in the War 1914-18” .
Wigmore, L. (ed), “They Dared Mightily” (1963
& 1986 revised edition).
Coulthard-Clark, C., “The Diggers” (1993).
Murray, P., “Records of Australian
Contingents to the War in South Africa 1899-1902” (1911). |
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