Private Alexander Pollock

Private Alexander Pollock

Alexander Pollock was born on 17th April 1893 in Bendigo, Victoria, Australia. The oldest of eight children, his parents were David and Annie. There is little information about his early life, but when he completed his schooling, he found work as a general labourer.

When war broke out, Alexander – who was better known as Ike – stepped up to play his part. He enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) on 12th July 1915, just four months after his father had passed away. Private Pollock’s service records show that he was 5ft 6ins (1.68m) tall and weighed in at 13st 4lbs (84.4kg). He had dark brown hair, blue eyes and a fresh complexion, with a scar on his left bicep.

Private Pollock’s unit – the 57th Battalion – left Australia at the start of 1916, arriving in Egypt towards the end of February. They spent the next couple of months training at the Tell el Kebir camp, to the north of Cairo, before setting off to France, arriving in Marseilles on 23rd June.

Ike’s first taste of battle came within a matter of weeks, when his unit acted as a back-up force during the Battle of Fromelles. Described as the worst day in Australia’s history, the AIF suffered more than 5,000 casualties. The 57th Battalion, held in reserve, did not incur as many losses as other units and, as a result, Private Pollock would have remained entrenched on the Front Line after the worst hit battalions pulled back.

The next few years would see Ike remain on the Western Front. His service papers suggest that he did not see any leave until March 1918, but he was soon back in the action.

After the Armistice was declared, Private Pollock remained in France. He had a second period of leave from 22nd December 1918, spending the festivities in Britain. Back in France on 13th January 1919, he was moved to a training camp in Le Havre. By this point, however, his health was suffering, and he was moved back to Britain weeks after arriving.

Billeted at the ANZAC base in Codford, Wiltshire, Ike came down with influenza and pneumonia. He was admitted to the New Zealand General Hospital not far from the base, but the conditions were to prove fatal. He died on 21st February 1919, at the age of 25 years old.

Thousands of miles from home, and with his mother having also passed the previous year, the body of Alexander ‘Ike’ Pollock was laid to rest in the graveyard extension to St Mary’s Church, Codford.


Private Alexander Pollock
(from findagrave.com)

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