Skip to main content

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people should be aware this website contains images, voices and names of people who have died.

Australian wounded infantrymen at the first battle of Passchendaele, near Zonnebeke railway station, 12 October 1917

Only three of these men survived. In August 1914 the Australian Government announced that Australia would go to war to support the British, French and Belgians against invading German forces. There was general public support and enthusiasm for the announcement, although there was some opposition too. The government called for volunteers to join an army to go and fight. The initial call was for single men aged 18-35. Thousands immediately volunteered, although the number of volunteers reduced as the war dragged on. Australians (including soldiers, sailors, airmen and medical staff) served in on the Gallipoli peninsula, the Western Front (Europe) and in the Middle East.

Source

Australian War Memorial E01202

Copy rights image