William James Garvey
From The Orange Wiki
GARVEY, William James
Service no: 767
Place of birth: Warren
Address: c/- T. Hawer, Orange
Occupation: Butcher
Next of kin: John Garvey (brother), Mullion Creek, via Orange
Date of enlistment: 29 August 1914
Place of enlistment: Kensington
Age at enlistment: 29
Fate: Embarked HMAT Euripides A14 Sydney 20 October 1914. Joined Military Expeditionary Force 5 April 1915. Promoted to Sergeant, Mudros, 19 October 1915. Proceeded to France 30 March 1916. Killed in action in the field, France.
Date of death: 3 January 1917
Buried: Bull’s Road Military Cemetery, Flers, France, Plot 1, Row B, Grave 38
William James Garvey was born in Warren to William Gothwell Garvey and his wife Alice. In February 1902 he enlisted in the Boer War. He was living in Molong at the time, and nominated his sister Elizabeth, also of Molong, as his next of kin.
In August 1914 William enlisted for WWI. A butcher by trade, he joined the 4th Battalion F Company as a cook and embarked from Sydney in October 1914. William served in Gallipoli, and in October 1915 was promoted to Sergeant.
In March 1916 Sergeant Garvey proceeded to France. He wrote a letter home in July 1916 saying “France is very nice, a lot better than Gallipoli. I think I will be home by Xmas this year”. And in September: “It is just on two years since I left Sydney, and I have seen more in that time than I ever saw all my life … I am writing this in the trenches and I can assure you that it is not too good a place to write from.”
In January 1917 Sergeant Garvey was killed by a shell along with several other men at the mouth of a dugout known as the “Chalk Tunnel”. He is buried in Bull’s Road Military Cemetery at Flers in France.