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![]()
'remembering Jack'
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![]() His parents were notified of his death on 26 April
1941.
[AWM PR89-56 Item 2]
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![]() A cutting from Mrs Edmondson’s scrapbook, The Sun, Tuesday, November 11, 1952.
[AWM PR89-56]
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![]() The grave of Corporal John Edmondson VC in the Tobruk
War Cemetery, 1941.
[AWM P00426.005]
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![]() Corporal John Edmondson, Joshua Smith, 1958.
[Oil on Canvas, 76.4 x 61 cm. AWM ART27532]
documents
![]() Memorabilia from Mrs Edmondson's scrapbook
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'remembering Jack'
![]() The World War II style form letter forwarded
by the King to Jack's bereaved parents.
[AWM PR86/56]
In a way this great honour seems futile. Like thousands of her countrymen and women, the well-known Australian poet Dame Mary Gilmore was affected by Corporal John (Jack) Edmondson’s brave actions and tragic death at Tobruk. Although her verse praises the young soldier’s gallantry, her words highlight the loss suffered by his family, and particularly the anguish of his mother. Poem
![]() Dame Mary Gilmore's poem, Edmondson VC.
Jack and his mother appear to have had a particularly close relationship and, according to newspaper reports at the time, she educated him at home for the first years of his school life. Before he left for overseas she had promised Jack that she would keep ‘notes’ of her day-to-day home life while he was away and he was to do the same. A copy of Mrs Edmondson’s diary is in the Australian War Memorial together with a large scrapbook filled with Jack’s childhood photographs and the many newspaper accounts of her son’s death at Tobruk on the night of 13-14 April 1941. In her diary diary
![]() Read excerpts from Mrs Edmondson's diary
Mrs Edmondson’s earlier entries during the first months of 1941 finish with the news of her son’s death and the entries after 26 April are sparse.
![]() John Edmondson's grave in the Tobruk war cemetery.
[Garrie Hutchinson, 2003]
April 26th 41 July 4th 1941 4th Sept 1941 September 27th 1941 18th Dec 1941 25th October 1941 Nov 16th 1941 Dec 21st 1941 June 27th 1942
Mr and Mrs J W Edmondson, at Admiralty House in Sydney, hold their son’s Victoria Cross after the official presentation by the Governor-General of Australia Lord Gowrie, 27 September 1941.
[AWM P1170.001]
Jack’s mother didn’t mention all the other requests she received. People everywhere wished to commemorate her son’s actions. She was asked to give her permission for numerous streets around Australia to be named after her son and he was to be commemorated by a new clock tower in Liverpool, New South Wales. Jack Edmondson’s heroism was widely acclaimed. Newspapers around Australia featured articles and stories of his bravery together with accounts of the battle in which he was injured. Officers and men from his unit, the 2/17th Battalion, wrote to his parents praising John. Many of the letters are in the collection at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra. There are also numerous press accounts and photographs of his parents attending his posthumous investiture at Government House, Sydney, and other services to commemorate their son. Pasted on one page of the scrapbook, among the newspaper reports applauding her son’s heroism, is a small cutting in which his mother is quoted: Of course I am proud of him. I have always been proud of him. In a way this great honour seems futile. I would rather have my son. [An uncited report of an interview with Mrs Edmondson: press cutting, Edmondson scrapbook, PR 86/56 AWM] |
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