Mulitple tributes will be made in Delungra on Saturday when the traditional Remembrance Day service combines with commemorating a century since the district’s Honour Roll was unveiled and the 100th anniversary of the battle of Beersheba.
Delungra historian Peter McCarthy has developed a service that links the events of World War I back to his local community by researching the people who lived and worked in the district during the Great War.
Through those connections, a newly restored Honour Roll - listing the names of 106 men from the district who fought in the war - will be freshly unveiled by Inverell mayor Paul Harmon but not just in memory of those who served in battle but also those who served at home – in particular the Delungra woman who first unveiled the large brass plate in 1917.
That woman was Mrs Mary McLeod who performed the ceremony at Delungra’s old School of Arts Hall shortly after her youngest son, Lester, was killed in France.
On Saturday, Mrs McLeod’s great grandson, Robert Batterham - a retired Sydney academic with farming properties north of Moree – will also speak at the service helping to link the century-old past with the present.
Mr Batterham will be one of many descendants of those named on the Honour Roll who will attend the service with today’s relatives travelling from as far as Cootamundra and Dalby to pay tribute to their forebears.
Mr McCarthy will also draw local connections in his speech about the battle of Beersheba, fought in Palestine on October 31, 1917; and how it led to the death of 25-year-old Delungra farm labourer Cecil Thomas Hills just a few days later. Although born in England, Mr Thomas was working as a station hand with Colin Macintyre at ‘Dunvagen’ when he signed up.
Saturday’s Remembrance Day service will start at 10.30am at ANZAC Park in Delungra. Senator John Williams will also give an address at a luncheon afterwards at the bowling club.
Inverell RSL will also hold a Remembrance Day service on Saturday at the Inverell War Memorial starting at 10.45am.