AN ORDINARY MAN BY MARGARET TANNER
The story of my father Private Edward Alexander Crosher, VX29604
2/29 th Battalion, 8 th Division
My father always maintained he was ordinary. Just the kind of man you would pass in the street and not really notice. Slightly stooped; bad posture interlaced with age most would say.
Once blond hair was now grey, blue eyes faded and a little watery.
Dad’s pastimes were following the football, growing tomatoes in the back garden, or amusing his grandsons. He considered his only claim to fame was that his tomatoes were the best in the neighbourhood.
In March 1940, Dad felt duty bound to answer his country’s call to war. When the Japanese poured into Malaya he was there as a member of the 2/29 th Battalion of the Australian 8 th Division. The letters he wrote home to his fiancée (later his wife), described the hordes of marauding mosquitoes, scorpions and other horrible, wriggly creatures, who inhabited the jungle.
He told of the pleasure in having real white sheets on the beds in one of their camps, and described the various native villages he had visited.
There was an ever-continuing plea for news of home, cakes and other comforts to make life just a little more bearable in such an alien, inhospitable land. Yellowing letters, carefully kept by my mother, worn thin from having been read and re-read, unfolded a tale that the history books never told. Words of love more poignant than if they had been whispered in a romantic, fragrance filled garden, were beautiful in their simplicity as my father had left school after reaching the eighth grade.
Amongst his medals was a silver boomerang bearing the words “I go to return.” It was a good luck charm, and my father wore it throughout the war. There was magic in the boomerang, the relation who gave it to him was convinced of it. Had not the original owner survived the carnage of the 1 st World War? Did the good luck charm live up to its name the second time around?
Wounded in action and transferred to the 113 th Australian General Hospital in Singapore, this ordinary man from the country town of Wangaratta was blown out of bed, but survived the Japanese bombs which took the roof off his ward.
The British forces fell back across the causeway into Singapore. Day and night the fires burned. The bombers came over spreading their destruction. Shattered shops were left to the mercy of looters, bodies rotted in the streets, and packs of marauding dogs gorged themselves with little resistance, as a pall of black smoke hung over Singapore. The bastion of the British Empire, the Gibraltar of the Far East teetered on the brink of surrender. The giant British guns that might have saved them were embedded in concrete and pointing out to sea, useless to quell the invaders who came over land through the jungle.
All aircraft and ships had departed loaded with civilians, nurses and wounded, and after this desperate flotilla sailed off, those left behind could only await their fate.
In the last terrible days before Singapore capitulated on the 15th February 1942, trapping 80,000 Australian and British troops, a small Chinese junk braved the might of the Japanese air force and navy, and set off, crammed with wounded. Only soldiers who were too incapacitated to fight yet could somehow mobilise themselves, were given the opportunity for this one last chance of escape.
With a piece of his backbone shot away, and weakened from attacks of malaria, Dad somehow made it to the wharf on the 12 th February, 1942, with the clothes he stood up in. As they wended their way out of the Singapore harbour, littered with the smouldering debris of dying ships, a Japanese bomber dived low over them, but the pilot obviously had more important targets on his mind than a small, overcrowded boat.
After three weeks sailing around, convinced they were going to perish, the soldiers were eventually picked up by a passing hospital ship and taken to Columbo.
There were no scenes of mad revelry and jubilation when Dad arrived back in Australia.
This son of Wangaratta returned home, unhailed, except for those who loved him most. After his marriage, Dad shifted to the life of Melbourne suburbia and raised three children.
When he died the bugle played the last post, his coffin was draped with the Australian flag.
Old soldiers dropped red poppies into the open grave as a tribute to a fallen comrade. There were some who wondered what all the fuss was about. After all, he was just an ordinary man, wasn’t he?