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a life nobly given...

Fall of Ambon
'a life nobly given forever remembered'
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Mrs White lost her son,
Flying Officer William White,
in Ambon.
[NAA A705/15 Item 166/43/989]

William White was listed as missing on Ambon sometime on or about 20 January.   His Hudson aircraft had been damaged by a Japanese attack and so he and his crew were unable to leave with the rest of 2 Squadron when they evacuated the island.

In 1946 his mother received a letter from the Secretary, Casualty Section, Albert Park Barracks, advising her of the circumstances of her son's death. William had been one of a party of Dutch and Australian POWs who were killed by the Japanese at Laha sometime between 6 and 20 February 1942. He and a group of 11 other RAAF personnel were making their way from Ambon to the neighbouring island of Ceram where they had made arrangements to be picked up by a RAAF aircraft. They were captured by a Japanese naval patrol as they attempted to cross from Ambon to Ceram and were taken to Laha where they were executed.

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'F/O WVD WHITE and his
crew were taken prisoners
at AMBOINA after their
aircraft had been damaged
to such an extent that it was
unable to proceed to Darwin'.
[2 Squadron logbook entry,
NAA A9186/1 Item 5]

William's mother first received confirmation of her son's death in June 1946, ten months after the Japanese surrender and more than four years after his death. She had written to the Directorate of War Graves requesting a photograph of the Galala War Cemetery on Ambon where her son was buried and in her letter she had asked that her son be commemorated with the inscription:

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The Distinguished Flying
Cross as awarded to
F/O William White.
[DVA]

A life nobly given forever remembered

Unfortunately it was not possible to give her son a personal inscription because he, like many of the men who died in Ambon, has no known grave. William White is instead commemorated on the Ambon memorial.

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White’s mother received this
letter in 1946 describing the
circumstances of her
son’s death.
[NAA A705/15 Item 166/43/989]

William White died before he knew he had been recommended for the award of the Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC) for his skill and daring on operations in CELEBES-AMBON areas. His DFC was presented to his mother at Government House in Sydney on 13 January 1946. It is held at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra.

 

 

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Libya and the Siege of Tobruk 1941
Greece and Crete April-May 1941
Syria and Lebanon June 1941
Malaya December 1941 to Moresby May 1942
Australia under attack 1940-1945
Coral Sea, Kokoda, Milne Bay May-September 1942
El Alamein October-November 1942
The Home Front 1939-1945
The Coastwatchers 1941-1945
Australian prisoners of war 1940-1945
Little-known operations 1939-1945
Papua 1942-1943
The Japanese retreat March 1943-January 1944
War at sea 1939-1945
Air war Europe 1939-1945
Bougainville, Borneo, New Britain, New Guinea 1944-1945
8 May 1945/15 August 1945
Australia at war 3 September 1939
Libya and the Siege of Tobruk 1941
Greece and Crete April-May 1941
Syria and Lebanon June 1941
Malaya December 1941 to Moresby May 1942
Australia under attack 1940-1945
Coral Sea, Kokoda, Milne Bay May-September 1942
El Alamein October-November 1942
The Home Front 1939-1945
The Coastwatchers 1941-1945
Australian prisoners of war 1940-1945
Little-known operations 1939-1945
Papua 1942-1943
The Japanese retreat March 1943-January 1944
War at sea 1939-1945
Air war Europe 1939-1945
Bougainville, Borneo, New Britain, New Guinea 1944-1945
8 May 1945/15 August 1945