Draft:Edward John Howells
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Edward John (EJ) Howells M.C. (1882-1959) was an Australian army officer (ANZAC) during World War I.
He served at the Gallipoli campaign and in the Sinai Campaign[1] with the Desert Mounted Corps, and between the wars, as a Wing Commander in the RAAF[2]. Howells is notable for forcing the first bridge over the River Jordan during WWI, an accomplishment that earned him the Military Cross.
Early life
[edit]Edward John Howells, known as EJ, was born on 20 May 1882[3] in Barrow-in-Furness, England. As a child, he immigrated with his father, John Howells, and mother, Anna Roderick Howells, to Australia in May, 1887. They settled in Camberwell, Victoria, a suburb of Melbourne. He was their only child. Young Howells demonstrated a talent for mechanics,[4] worked at the Vulcan Foundry and later with Humble & Nicholson of Geelong[5]. His technical abilities led to his acceptance into the prestigious Gordon School[6] where he excelled in engineering and drafting. Upon graduation, he became an instructor at the school[7] before employment as the Commonwealth’s Deputy Examiner of Patents in Melbourne in July 1910.[8][9]. His expertise in mechanics and engineering laid the foundation for his future contributions to the military.
Military service
[edit](Howells military records[10] )
World War I - Gallipoli Campaign
At the outbreak of World War I, Howells, a former member of the Victoria Cadets, volunteered for the Australian Imperial Force and initially assigned to the 23rd Infantry Battalion as a 33 year old 2nd Lieutenant. He sailed aboard the TSS Euripides[11] in May 1915 for Egypt. While stationed in Heliopolis, he was transferred to the Engineer Corps, and soon after landed at ANZAC Cove, Gallipoli, on September 13th 1915 aboard the TSS[12]Knights Templar[13].
At Gallipoli, Howells served with the 5th Field Company, Australian Engineers, commanded by Major Vernon Sturdee primarily involved in tunnel digging and the laying of explosives under Turkish trenches. On 29 September 1915, Howells was overcome by gas during a mine explosion but was saved by Corporal John Henry Precious.[14]. Howells was evacuated to Lamos island, then to Malta to be treated for "neurasthenia", then to England for recovery. During convalescence in England, he missed the birth of his daughter and death of his father[15].
World War I, Sinai and Palestine Campaign
[edit]After a brief recuperation in Australia, Howells returned to duty in Egypt, formed a bridging[16] company and joined the Desert Mounted Corps under General Sir Edmund Allenby. As a Captain of Engineers, he was responsible for critical logistical tasks, including repairing wells and constructing makeshift bridges for the advancing Allied units to capture Jerusalem, Beersheba, Jericho and Damascus.
One of Howells' most significant accomplishments came during the campaign to cross the River Jordan. Allied forces wanted to sever the Turkish railway lines east of the Jordan River[19] and link up with the Arab Army, advised by T.E. Lawrence. While larger British bridging units failed due to swift water and Turkish fire, Howells’ unit, D Field Troop, Australian Engineers, with labor from 3rd Light Horse Regiment and 23rd Battalion Londoners[20] successfully bridged the flooded river under heavy Turkish fire, on the night of 21-22 March 1918. This allowed mounted troops to cross and secure the east bank so more bridges could be constructed. For his heroism, Howells was awarded the Military Cross[21]. Several of his men were also recognized for their bravery, including Sapper S. Dawson MM[22], the first to swim across the river to secure ropes to the eastern bank, "Lance-Corporal F. Bell: of the engineers, repeatedly swam down stream under heavy fire, bearing the cables which were to hold the bridge in position"[23], and Batman H.R.Y. McGuigan DCM, who accompanied Howells on nightly reconnaissance to to the river to locate a site to attempt the crossing.[24]
Howells and his unit repaired and constructed bridges throughout the campaign, including innovative “barrel bridges” for which he was Mentioned in Dispatches to King George. Late in the campaign, he like many others where hospitalized with malaria and dysentery. After the Turkish surrender in October 1918, Howells was selected as Officer Commanding War Records Section, tasked with collecting war diaries and historical trophies, much of which became the initial collection of the Australian War Memorial Museum. A pontoon from his bridge was located and returned to Australia in 1953 and is on permanent display in the War Memorial in Canberra.[25].
Post-war life
[edit]Upon returning to Australia in 1919[26], Howells resumed his position at the Patent Office and enrolled in University of Melbourne[27] to study law. His marriage had become strained, partly due to his absence during the war, and correspondence[28] with a German woman named Lydia Imberger, whom he had met and socialized with at the German Colony, Jerusalem during the war. She corresponded, with him in German until his death.[29]
In 1921, Howells sought to return to military service[30] and was appointed to the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF). His duties involved traveling across Australia[31] to test and recruit candidates for technical positions in the fledgling Air Force[32]. Promoted to Wing Commander, Howells returned to Melbourne, but his ongoing mental health struggles led to him seek medical retirement in 1938.[33]
Personal life
[edit]Howells married Beatrice Anne Marks, on 26 October 1905 in Melbourne. The couple had two daughters: Lorna Howells, born about 1912. She married Melbourne lawyer John M. Gray. Dorothy Elaine Howells (3 December 1915–1985), was born while Howells was hospitalized in England. She dropped Dorothy and used the byline Elaine Howells while reporting from London during the war for Sir Keith Murdoch’s Melbourne Herald, and other Australian papers[34]. She wrote a daily journal[35] traveling from Australia thru Europe in 1939, reaching London before war was declared. While reporting from London, she met and later married an American Eagle Squadron pilot, Hubert L. Stewart.[36] They later settled in California.
Following his retirement in 1938, Howells quickly left for England and lived in Cambridge in 1938-39. His fluency in German and his travels to Denmark at the outbreak of World War II led to speculation of his involvement in British intelligence operations, though no unclassified records confirm this. Other officers operating at boarders with Germany were kidnapped by the Nazis at the same time.[37]
Howells' later years were marked by continued estrangement from his wife.[38] He traveled to Paris then alone to America[39] twice and visited his daughter’s family in California. He ended up in an old soldiers' home in Heidelberg[40], outside Melbourne, where he died on 2 June 1959, age 77. His body was unclaimed, cremated, and his ashes scattered in the home’s rose garden.
Recognition
[edit]Edward John Howells MC is remembered for his 28 1/2 years of military service[41] and contributions to the engineering efforts of the Australian forces in World War I. His achievements, particularly his role in the first bridging of the River Jordan, remain a significant part of Australia's military history.[42]
References
[edit]- ^ Veterans Affairs https://anzacportal.dva.gov.au/wars-and-missions/ww1/where-australians-served/sinai-and-palestine with maps
- ^ www.airforce.gov.au
- ^ England & Wales General Register Office, Birth: 1882 J Quarter in Barrow in Furness Volume 08E Page 902.
- ^ Geelong Advertiser (Vic. : 1859 - 1924), Thursday 29 September 1898, page 3
- ^ Lives of the Engineers, tomm.com.au/free-to-read/humble-nicholson
- ^ www.thegordon.edu.au
- ^ Geelong Advertiser 6 February 1909, page 3, 4
- ^ House of Representatives 15 July 1910 4th Parliament· 1st Session
- ^ Geelong Advertiser 27 Jun 1910 - https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/149156805?searchTerm=%22EJ%20Howells%22
- ^ Nat. Archives https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Gallery151/dist/JGalleryViewer.aspx?B=5257190&S=1&N=35&R=0#/SearchNRetrieve/NAAMedia/ShowImage.aspx?B=5257190&T=P&S=2
- ^ AWM . PB0662"Josiah Barnes collection of First World War negatives and prints".
- ^ "Twin-screw steamer".
- ^ Knights_Templar.htm "HMS Knights Templar, commissioned escort ship - British warships of World War 1".
- ^ The Official History of Australia in the war of 1914 – 1918. The Story of Anzac. Volume 2. C. E. W. Bean. University of Queensland Press, page 823.
- ^ Geelong Advertiser (Vic. : 1859 - 1924), Saturday 27 July 1918, page 3
- ^ www.awm.gov.au/collection/LIB13633 pg 112-113
- ^ Sydney Mail, Wed 17 Jul 1918 Page 9 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/page/16892347
- ^ Who's Who - Sir Philip Chetwode .firstworldwar.com/bio/chetwode.htm#google_vignette
- ^ A Brief Record of the Advance of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force under the command of General Sir Edmund H.H. Allenby, July 1917 to October 1918 Allenby, E. H. H.; H. Pirie-Gordon; Army of Great Britain; Egyptian Expeditionary Force (1919) (2 ed.). London: H.M. Stationery Office. OCLC 17017063.
- ^ https://w.wiki/CSKv
- ^ MC Commonwealth of Australia Gazette 23 May 1919 pg 890 position 68. London Gazette 1 January 1919 pg 57 position 6
- ^ "Late Mr. S. J. Dawson". Mercury. 20 February 1931.
- ^ First World War Official Histories - Volume VII - The Australian Imperial Force in Sinai and Palestine, 1914-1918 Chapter XXXIII – The Raid to Amman (10th edition, 1941, pg 554)
- ^ London Gazette Jan. 1919 Honors DCM
- ^ "Steel pontoon, Jordan River Crossing : Desert Mounted Corps Bridging Train".
- ^ www.awm.gov.au/collection/R2433430
- ^ https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Gallery151/dist/JGalleryViewer.aspx?B=5257190&S=1&N=35&R=0#/SearchNRetrieve/NAAMedia/ShowImage.aspx?B=5257190&T=P&S=2 pg5
- ^ "Letters of Edward John Howells, Edward John Howells et al, 1915 to 1923".
- ^ National Archives of Australia, 1948-1952 Eppinger Lydia, B78 4133185 RSL Melbourne, Letters from German woman in Jerusalem, to Captain E.F. (sic) Howells. Translated by M. Ramsay.
- ^ Nat. Archives https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Gallery151/dist/JGalleryViewer.aspx?B=5257190&S=1&N=35&R=0#/SearchNRetrieve/NAAMedia/ShowImage.aspx?B=5257190&T=P&S=2 pg 32.
- ^ The Argus (Melbourne, Vic. : 1848 - 1957) Wed 12 Aug 1936 Page 6 PERSONAL
- ^ The Advertiser Sat 11 Jul 1936 Page 8 Many Apply To Be R.A.A.F. Tradesmen
- ^ Nat. Archives https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Gallery151/dist/JGalleryViewer.aspx?B=5257190&S=1&N=35&R=0#/SearchNRetrieve/NAAMedia/ShowImage.aspx?B=5257190&T=P&S=2 pg 19
- ^ "London, England. 1943-03-09. 402575 Flight Lieutenant L. P. Oliver, Marrickville, NSW, Being".
- ^ Elaine's Words - 1939 Journal by Elaine Howells & RA Stewart State Lib. of Victoria. 1939-01-12 https://archive.org/details/elaines-journal-final
- ^ The Eagle Squadrons : Yanks in the RAF, 1940-1942 Haugland, Vern Ziff-Davis Publishing, 1979 pg 101
- ^ The Scotsman, 25 November 1939, p. 13
- ^ State Lib.of Victoria, Election Rolls, Hawthorne pg 84 1943
- ^ Ships log "SS Veedam, Southhampton to US 1st Class non-immigrants, 29 March 1947 visa issued Paris on 1/30/47 Ocupation: Retired Air Force Officer"
- ^ https://www.mhhv.org.au/the-heidelberg-repatriation-hospital/
- ^ Nat. Archives https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Gallery151/dist/JGalleryViewer.aspx?B=5257190&S=1&N=35&R=0#/SearchNRetrieve/NAAMedia/ShowImage.aspx?B=5257190&T=P&S=2 pg 23
- ^ Who's Who in Australia Bib ID:1687417 Journal, Adelaide : F. Johns, 1927- ISSN: 0810-8226 1933/34 - page 168, 1935 page 244, 1938 page 260, 1944 page 444.