Edmond Arthur Ashdown

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Edmund Arthur Ashdown. Image courtesy Australian War Memorial.

ASHDOWN, Edmund Arthur

Service no: 1819 [1]

Place of birth: Mackay, QLD, 31 August 1881

Address: 34 Cowles Road, Mosman

Occupation: Clerk

Next of kin: Florence Eleanor Ashdown (mother), 40A Cabramatta Road, Mosman

Date of enlistment: 2 February 1915

Place of enlistment: Liverpool

Age at enlistment: 34

Fate: Embarked HMAT A9 Shropshire, Sydney, 17 March 1915. Joined battalion, Gallipoli Peninsula, 27 May 1915. Hospitalised 13th Casualty Clearing Station with debility 23 August 1915. Admitted to War Hospital, Reading, suffering from dysentery, 17 September 1915. Discharged from hospital 13 October 1915. Rejoined unit, Tel-el-Kebir 4 March 1916. Proceeded to France 7 June 1916. Wounded, Battle of the Somme,11 August 1916. Admitted to 3rd London General Hospital with a gunshot wound to the abdomen 29 August 1916. Rejoined unit, France, 18 January 1917. Killed in Action, Bullecourt, France, 11 April 1917

Date of death: 11 April 1917

Buried: Queant Road Cemetery, Buissy, France, Plot III, Row H, Grave 34


Edmund Arthur Ashdown was born in Mackay in 1881, the first son of Edward Parker and Florence Eleanor Ashdown. Edward was the manager of the Mackay branch of the Commercial Banking Company of Sydney. He was later transferred to Newtown, then Inverell and later Bega. In April 1899 he was appointed manager of the Orange branch, a position that he held until his death in March 1909.

Edmond was educated Crown Street Public School, where he served in the School Cadets. He was living in Mosman and working as a clerk when he enlisted in February 1915. Assigned to the 13th Battalion, he embarked with the 4th Reinforcements on HMAT A9 Shropshire on 17 March 1915.

He proceeded to Gallipoli in May, but was evacuated in September with enteritis and septic poisoning. In June 1916 Edmund joined the British Expeditionary Force in France. On 11 August 1916 he suffered gunshot wounds at the Battle of Somme. After repatriation to England for convalescence, he returned to France in December 1916.

On 11 April 1917 Edmund was wounded by a shell while acting as an observer outside Battalion Head Quarters. He was conscious when taken to the dressing station by the stretcher bearers but later died of his wounds. He was 36.

A fellow soldier, Corporal Walton, described Edmund as: “very popular…a splendid soldier…he was very well liked.”

Edmund is commemorated on the Holy Trinity Church Orange Honour Roll. He is also commemorated on his father’s grave in Orange Cemetery.

In 1923 the Anzac Memorial Avenue of trees was planted along Bathurst Road to commemorate fallen WWI soldiers. A tree was planted in honour of “Pte AE Ashdown”; presumably Edmund. It was donated by Dr Arthur Edmund Colvin. Very few of the trees are still standing today.

Three of Edmund’s brothers and a sister also served in WWI; Cecil Parker Ashdown, Clive Ashdown, Ernest Edwin Ashdown and Maud Ashdown.


  • Margot Sharpe, 2015
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