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Private Charles Waterhouse

Commemorated at
Given name
C
Family name
Waterhouse
Gender
Male
Service number
3261
Conflicts
First World War, 1914–18
Campaign
Somme 1916 - 1917
Fate
Killed in action (KIA)
Fate date
05 November 1916
Additional information
Last held rank
Private
Unit at embarkation
3rd Battalion
Service
Australian Army - First Australian Imperial Force (1st AIF)
Veteran Notes/Bio

Contributed by Ron Inglis, October 2021:

Builder Charles Waterhouse was a veteran of the South African (Boer) War. He lived with his wife Ada at 9 Queen Street, Auburn and was a member of the Auburn Methodist Church.

Waterhouse enlisted at Holsworthy on 20 September 1915, declaring his age as ’38 years 3 months’. With five other Auburn Memorial men, Owen Coughlan, George Jerome, John Hoban, Clyde Davis and Herbert Jones, Waterhouse embarked on the Suevic in December 1915.

In Egypt, Private Waterhouse was allocated to the 18th Battalion and he arrived at the French port city of Marseilles on 28 March 1916. Transferred to the 3rd Battalion, Waterhouse served on the Western Front for seven months before he was killed in action on 5 November 1916. Waterhouse was one of eight Auburn Memorial men lost in the last days of First Battle of the Somme.

See: ‘Killed in Action: another Auburn hero’, The Cumberland Argus and Fruitgrowers Advocate, 9 December 1916, page 12.

Waterhouse had been in the AIF for a little over a year, with no wounds, accidents, diseases or crimes against his name. He was buried in the Bulls Road Cemetery at Flers in northern France. For his gravestone his wife chose the inscription: EVER REMEMBERED

Charles Waterhouse is honoured on the following memorials in Australia:

His decorations:

  • British War Medal 1914-20
  • Victory Medal
Photographs related to this veteran
Image
Headstone of Private Charles Waterhouse, in the Bulls Road Cemetery, Flers, France
Image
Bulls Road Cemetery, Flers, France, where Private Charles Waterhouse is buried
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