William Donald DICKSON

Year of Birth: 1893

Place of Birth: Mareeba, Queensland, Australia

Date of Enlistment: 11 November 1915

Date and Place of Embarkation: 20 April 1916 Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

Ship: HMAT Hawkes Bay

Rank: Private

Unit(s):  47th  Battalion

Regimental Number: 1611A

Died: 9 August 1918

William Donald Dickson was born in 1893 in Mareeba, Qld.  He was the second child and oldest son of William Dickson and his wife Margaret Jane (nee Simfield).

Their other children were Alice (b. 1891), Margaret (b. 1895), David (b. 1896), Violet (b. 1901), Norman (b. 1905) and Jean (b. 1908).

William Donald Dickson was a baker, like his father, when he enlisted on 11 November 1915.  He was 22½ years of age, 5 feet 7 inches tall and weighed 140 pounds.  He had a dark complexion, brown eyes and black hair.  His religion was Presbyterian.  He named his father as his next of kin.

Northern Miner (Charters Towers) 29 November 1915

He embarked from Sydney on 20 April 1916 aboard SS Hawkes Bay

He disembarked Plymouth, England on 16 June 1916 and was appointed Acting Sergeant 19 July 1916.  He landed in Etaples, Frances on 13 November 1916 and entered hospital sick 3 weeks later.  He rejoined his unit on the 15 February 1917.

47th Battalion 6 March 1918, Meteren, France

                                                                                    William Dickson is 2nd row, 11 from left.

He advanced to Lance Corporal then Sergeant within a few months. 

On 28 June 1917 was award the Distinguished Conduct Medal (DCM) “for conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty in taking charge of his platoon when his seniors had become casualties.  He kept it under control in trying moments handling his men with great ability and determination.  He was greatly instrumental for the excellent morale which prevailed throughout.”

Distinguished Conduct Medal - Queen Victoria Version - Awarded by the Monarch of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.

He went on leave to England for 2 weeks, returning to France on 12 October 1917.  He was dispatched for duty at Australian School Infantry Course rejoining his unit in February 1918.  He suffered more illness requiring hospital admission and rejoined his unit in May 1918.

He was awarded the Military Medal 10 June 1918.

He died of wounds received in action on 9 August 1918 and was buried at Villers-Bretonneux Military Cemetery.

Cairns Post 12 September 1918

In a letter to Sgt Dickson’s family in July 1919, an Officer wrote –

Sgt Dickson’s mother had been writing to the AIF to obtain her son’s medals and this letter was sent to her revealing that the DCM was retrieved from his uniform pocket as he lay dead.

Online Resources

NAA: B2455 (DICKSON W D) National Archives of Australia

Australian War Memorial

National Library of Australia: Trove Digitised Newspapers

Queensland Registrar of Births Deaths & Marriages

If you have a photograph or further information about this soldier you would like to share and add to his biography, please contact the Society at projects@cdfhs.org or leave a comment below. Thank you!

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