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Born near
Castlemaine, Victoria on 9 August 1887 the son of William Peeler a farmer
and Mary née Scott. Having married Kathleen née Hewitt (d
1969) on 10 July 1907, the lure of war was too great and he enlisted on 17
February 1916 with the 3rd Pioneer Battalion. Wounded during the Battle of
Messines on 7 June 1917, Peeler returned to his unit for the final phase of
the Third Battle of Ypres, being the assault on Broodseinde Ridge on 4
October 1917. Initially assigned for anti-aircraft operations attached to
the 37th Battalion, confusion reigned when the Germans commenced shelling
the assembled positions and Peeler found himself in the first wave of the
assault. He rushed a shell-hole killing nine Germans who were snipping at
the advancing troops, clearing the way for the advance. On two subsequent
occasions, he likewise performed similar feats. In one particular incident,
he was directed to a hot-spot in which an enemy machine-gun was firing on
the Australians. Locating and killing the gunner, the remainder of the
occupants ran to a nearby dug-out where Peeler threw a bomb and shot the ten
who tried to escape. In all he accounted for over thirty of the enemy and
“displayed an absolute fearlessness” in one of the most incredible sustained
pieces of aggression in the war that earned him the Victoria Cross. When
interviewed for Mufti in 1966, Peeler said in typical modest fashion:
“I’m not a hero. I’m just an ex-soldier who did his job. I never saw the
faces of those I killed. They were just men in an enemy uniform, it was
simply them or me. I don’t think I was brave - not any more than the other
Aussies with me. I simply had a job to do and I did it”. At the subsequent
battle of Passchendaele on 12 October Peeler was wounded, but returned to
his unit in May 1918. Later that year he was one of a group of V.C winners
selected for furlough leave and returned to Australia in October with the
rank of sergeant. With the construction of the Shrine of Remembrance
completed in 1934, Peeler was appointed custodian (1934-64) a position he
held until his retirement 30 years later and as a public face of the
Victoria Cross recipients, came into contact with many prominent persons,
including in January 1936 Baron Gowrie V.C, on the day he was sworn in as
Governor-General of Australia. In the Second World War, understating his
age by fourteen years, he enlisted on 29 May 1940 (VX8345) and became with
Walter Brown V.C (1885-1942) and Arthur Blackburn V.C (West Terrace
Cemetery) one of three Victoria Cross recipients to enlist for active
overseas service. He fought in the Syrian campaign with the 2/2nd Pioneer
Battalion only to be captured by the Japanese at Java in March 1942 but
against all odds survived the horrors of the Burma railway as a prisoner of
war; his son Donald (VX93902) was killed at Bougainville on 31 December
1944. After a life that can only be described as eventful, Peeler died at
his residence 10 Moore Street, Caulfield South on 23 May 1968 aged 80. |
.jpg)
(above) Walter Peeler
(Image courtesy of the
Australian War Memorial,
P01383.005)

(above) Monumental Headstone (enlarge
image) |
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Source:
ADB Volume 11 1891-1939 (Nes-Smi).
The Age 29 November 1917, 12 October 1918, 24
January 1936 & 19 October 1951.
The Herald 31 August 1918.
The Sydney Morning Herald 27 & 28 November
1917, 1 January 1918 & 28 August 1918.
Mufti 1 October 1966.
AWM “Biographical Cards for the Official
History 1914-18”, AWM140.
AWM “Biographical Cards for the Official
History 1939-45”, AWM168.
Wigmore, L. (ed), “They Dared Mightily” (1963
& 1986 revised edition). |
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