Charles Ewart Hawke

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[[File: Charles_Ewart_Hawke_1916_smal.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Charles Ewart Hawke 1916.
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[[File: Charles_Ewart_Hawke_1916_smal.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Charles Ewart Hawke 1916. Image courtesy Patricia Hobbs.]]
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Image courtesy Patricia Hobbs.]]
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Revision as of 22:40, 19 February 2014

Charles Ewart Hawke 1916. Image courtesy Patricia Hobbs.


Service no: 3535 [1]

Place of birth: Orange

Address: Canobolas Road, Orange

Occupation: Orchardist

Next of kin: Tom Hawke (father), Canobolas Road, Orange

Date of enlistment: 28 September 1915

Place of enlistment: Sydney

Age at enlistment: 23

Fate: Embarked Sydney 20 December 1915. Returned to Australia 26 June 1919. Discharged 18 August 1919.

Date of death: 22 September 1954, aged 62, Martinvale, Canobolas

Buried: Orange Cemetery



Charles Hawke was the son of Thomas Hawke, a name long-associated with the Orange fruit growing industry. A keen cricketer and footballer, 23 year old Charles was working as an orchardist on his father’s property on Canobolas Road when the war broke out. He enlisted in September 1915 and embarked for the continent in December that year. Charles served as a private in France and Belgium, returning to Australia in June 1919.

In September 1919 Charles and Valerie Lawson became were engaged in Orange. They married at the Methodist church in Leichhardt on 25 October that year. The couple had three children - Bruce, Marie and Neville, and spent the rest of their lives at Martinvale, 24 Canobolas Road. Charles died in September 1954, and Valerie in January 1965.

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