Arthur Bergin

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BERGIN, Arthur Service no: 3362 [1]

Place of birth: Molong

Address: Orange

Occupation: Labourer

Next of kin: Mary Bergin (sister), Summer Street, Orange, later 147 Bridge Road, Glebe.

Date of enlistment: 15 January 1916

Place of enlistment: Brisbane

Age at enlistment: 29

Fate: Embarked HMAT A33 Ayrshire, Sydney, 24 January 1917. Disembarked Devonport, 12 April 1917. Marched in to 13th Training Battalion, Codford, 13 April 1917. Hospitalised with influenza, 30 May 1917. Rejoined 13th Training Battalion 4 June 1917. Hospitalised 26 June 1917. Rejoined 13th Training Battalion 15 July 1917. Embarked at Southampton for France, 25 September 1917. Marched in to 4th Australian Divisional Base Depot, Havre, 26 September 1917. Taken on strength, 52nd Battalion, 5 October 1917. Admitted to 58th Casualty Clearing Station with scabies, 31 October 1917. Transferred to hospital, Boulogne, 13 November 1917. Rejoined unit, Havre, 29 November 1917. Hospitalised with scabies 8 March 1918. Rejoined unit 19 March 1918. Reported as killed in action, Dernancourt sector, France, 5 April 1918. Reported as having died of wounds whilst a prisoner of war in German hands, 9 April 1918.

Date of death: 5 April 1918

Buried: Tincourt New British Cemetery, France, Plot IX, Row C, Grave 17

In May 1927 William Davey of Amaroo Public School wrote the following letter to the Officer in Charge at Victoria Barracks:

Dear Sir
I am writing to you on behalf of an old man, Patrick Bergin, whose only son was killed in the war.
Mr Bergin is 88 years old, is very feeble and is living quite alone – his only other child, a daughter, having to leave home to earn her living in Sydney.
The old man has only his pension to live on, and, as aforesaid, is in very feeble health and failing visibly. His boy was all he had, and he was killed.
The old man grieves very much, and more so because he has no memento of his son save a photo of his grave in a German cemetery.
Should he not be entitled at least to his boy’s medals? Alas, should not a photograph of his last resting place … be available?
You, sir, would be doing a kindly action, but one only just, if you would investigate this case, and if possible have the boy’s medals, or any other memento,
sent to the old man. It would cheer his last days and alleviate his sorrow,
Yours faithfully
William E Davey
(ex AIF)
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