General Sir
Thomas A. Blamey GBE KCB CMG DSO
ED.
|
A
general who attracted controversy but retained the confidence of
prime ministers, who upheld Australia’s interests against
British and American demands, and under whom the Australian Army
was developed for the vital battles of the war in the Pacific. |
Thomas Albert Blamey was born in Wagga
Wagga, New South Wales on 24 January 1884, the seventh of ten children
of Richard Blamey, a Cornish butcher who had emigrated to Australia at
age 16 and worked as a drover and overseer. Tom was educated at the
Superior Public School, Wagga Wagga, and Wagga Wagga Grammar School. He
passed the New South Wales Education Department's entrance examination
and became a pupil-teacher at lake Albert School in 1899. He 1901 he
moved to South Wagga Public School. In 1903 he moved to Western
Australia where he became a teaching assistant at Fremantle Boy's
School.
Blamey served in the school cadet unit
in Wagga and became a cadet officer in November 1904. In 1906 he sat the
examination for a commission in the Administrative and Instructional
Staff of the cadets. Only five of the twelve candidates passed; the top
mark went to Captain T. H. Dodds, while Blamey came in third. The top
candidates from Queensland, South Australia and Tasmania were appointed,
but not Blamey, there being no vacancies in Western Australia. There was
however, an unfilled vacancy in Victoria and Blamey wrote to the Deputy
Assistant Adjutant General (DAAG) in Melbourne, Major J. H. Bruche,
stating that he was willing to move to Victoria and that the Victorian
vacancy should be offered to him. Bruche was impressed by Blamey's
letter and in November 1906, Blamey arrived in Melbourne, commissioned
as a lieutenant.
In April 1910, Blamey transferred to
the Administrative and Instructional Staff of the Citizen Military
Forces (CMF), with seniority back dated to 1 July 1906. On 1 December
1910 he was promoted to captain. In 1911, Blamey sat the entrance
examination for the staff college and became the first Australian to
actually pass, previous entrants including Captains C. B. B. White and
C. H. Foott having had the requirements waived. Blamey commenced the
course at Quetta, India in 1912 and graduated the next year. While in
India he spent short periods on attachment to the British and Indian
Armies.
Blamey then sailed for Britain in May
1914, visiting Turkey (including the Dardanelles), Germany and Belgium
en route. On arrival he spent a brief time on attachment to the 4th
Dragoon Guards and then took up duties on the staff of the Wessex
Division, at that time entering its annual camp. On 1 July 1914, he was
promoted to major. When war broke out on 4 August 1914, Blamey was one
of four officers stationed in the United Kingdom, the other three being
Colonel H. G. Chauvel, Major C. H. Foott and Captain J. D. Lavarack. All
four were soon deployed on duties at the War Office.
On 28 November 1914, Chauvel and
Blamey sailed for Egypt where Blamey became part of the 1st Division
Headquarters, as General Staff Officer, Grade 3 (GSO3), in charge of
intelligence. As such, he landed at Anzac Cove along with Major General
W. T. Bridges, Lieutenant Colonel C. B. B. White and Lieutenant R. G.
Casey at around 7:30am on 25 April 1915. In the early afternoon, Bridges
sent Blamey to Colonel J. W. McCay's 2nd Brigade to evaluate the
situation. Blamey telephoned headquarters at 3:30pm and informed them
that reinforcements were urgently required. An hour later McCay again
requested reinforcements, and Blamey added his opinion that they were
urgently required. A battalion was sent.
On the night of 13 May 1915, Blamey,
in his capacity as intelligence officer, led a patrol consisting of
himself, Sergeant J. H. Will and Bombardier A. A. Orchard, behind the
Turkish lines in an effort to locate the Olive Grove guns that had been
harassing the beach. Near Pine Ridge, an enemy party of eight Turks
approached and one of them went to bayonet Orchard, so Blamey shot him
with his revolver. In the fire fight that followed, six Turks were
killed. Blamey withdrew his patrol back to the Australian lines without
locating the guns. Later, examination of the fuse setting on a dud round
revealed that the guns were much further to the south than had been
realised.
Blamey was always interested in
technical innovation. He was instrumental in the adoption of the
periscope rifle, an instrument which he saw on an inspection of the
front line. He arranged for the inventor, Lance Corporal Beech, to be
seconded to division headquarters to progress the idea. Within a few
days, the pattern was perfected and periscope rifles began to be used
throughout the Australian trenches.
In July 1915, Major General J. G.
Legge began forming a headquarters for the new 2nd Division and he
selected Blamey as GSO2. But when Legge's first choice for Assistant
Adjutant and Quartermaster General (AA & QMG), Colonel T. H. Dodds,
was turned down by the Australian government, he chose Blamey for the
post, as he was determined that it should be occupied by an Australian,
for he felt that an Australian officer would take better care of the
troops. Blamey was promoted to lieutenant colonel on 26 July, the day he
left Anzac to take up the post in Egypt. The 2nd Division Headquarters
embarked for Gallipoli on 29 August 1915 but Blamey was forced to remain
in Egypt for as he had just had an operation for haemorrhoids. He
finally returned to Anzac on 25 October, remaining for the rest of the
campaign.
Blamey accompanied the 2nd Division to
France in March 1916 but on 5 July, as a result of a shuffle of senior
staff posts, he moved to the 1st Division as GSO1, replacing Lieutenant
Colonel A. H. Bridges (a cousin of the general), who became GSO1 of the
2nd Division. He was immediately plunged into the planning for the
attack on Pozieres. Blamey visited British divisions in order to learn
as much as possible from their recent experiences, which he summarised
in memoranda circulated widely through the division. Although mistakes
were made, the attack was a tactical success. For his part, Blamey was
awarded the Distinguished Service Order (DSO) in the 1917 New Year's
list.
At this time, Birdwood had Blamey
under consideration for appointment as a brigade commander. As a
preliminary step, Blamey was appointed to command the 2nd Infantry
Battalion on 3 December 1916. Then on 28 December, Blamey, as senior
ranking battalion commander, took over acting command of the 1st
Infantry Brigade. On 9 January 1917, he went on leave, handing over
acting command to Lieutenant Colonel I. G. Mackay. By the time Blamey
got back, the plan had been scuttled. GHQ BEF had noticed that Blamey
was a Staff College graduate and directed that such qualified staff
officers were not to be used as battalion commanders unless they had
failed as staff officers. Blamey had not failed, so back to the GSO1 job
he went. Birdwood did, however, promote Blamey to full colonel,
backdated to 1 December 1916, thereby making him technically senior to
recently promoted Brigadier Generals E. A. Wisdom, H. G. Bennett and J.
Heane, and his division commander, Major General H. B. Walker, had
Blamey mentioned in dispatches for his period of battalion and brigade
command, although the battalion had spent most of the period out of the
line and there had been no significant engagements.
Blamey was also acting commander of
the 2nd Brigade during a rest period from 27 August to 4 September 1917.
On 13 September he was admitted to hospital and was eventually evacuated
to England and did not return until 8 November 1917. In his absence,
Colonel J. G. Dill and Lieutenant Colonel J. D. Lavarack acted as GSO1
in his absence. Blamey was made a Companion of St Michael and St George
(CMG) in the 1918 New Year's list.
On 1 June 1918 Blamey was finally
promoted, becoming Brigadier General General Staff (BGGS) of the
Australian Corps under its new commander, Lieutenant General Sir J.
Monash. The two men soon built up an excellent working relationship.
Monash later wrote:
No reference to the staff work of the
Australian Corps during the period of my command would be complete
without a tribute to the work and personality of Brigadier General T.
A. Blamey, my Chief of Staff. He possessed a mind cultured far above
the average, widely informed, alert and prehensile. He had an infinite
capacity for taking pains. A Staff College graduate, but not on that
account a pedant, he was thoroughly versed in the technique of staff
work, and in the minutiae of all procedures.
He served me with exemplary loyalty,
for which I owe him a debt of gratitude which cannot be repaid. Our
temperaments adapted themselves to each other in a manner which was
ideal. He had an extraordinary capability for self-effacement, posing
always and conscientiously as the instrument to give effect to my
policies and decisions. Really helpful whenever his advice was
invited, he never intruded his own opinions, although I know that he
did not always agree with me.
Some day the orders which he drafted
for the long series of history making operations on which we
collaborated will become a model for Staff Colleges and Schools for
military instruction. They were accurate, lucid in language, perfect
in detail, and always an exact interpretation of my intention. It was
seldom that I thought that my orders or instructions could have been
better expressed, and no commander could have been more exacting than
I was in the matter of the use of clear language to express thought.
Blamey was a man of inexhaustible
industry and accepted every task with placid readiness. Nothing was
ever too much trouble. He worked late and early, and set a high
standard for the remainder of the Corps Staff of which he was the
head. The personal support which he accorded to me was of a nature of
which I could always feel the real substance. I was able to lean on
him in times of trouble, stress and difficulty, to a degree which was
an inexpressible comfort to me.
The prediction that Blamey's orders
would be studied at staff colleges did indeed come to pass.
Blamey remained interested in
technological innovation. He was impressed the capabilities of the new
models of tanks and pressed for their use at Hamel. He noted the wide
use that the Germans made of their Mustard gas and took extraordinary
steps to arrange for a supply of mustard gas shells for the assault on
the Hindenburg Line. For his services as Corps Chief of Staff, Blamey
was made a Companion of the Bath (CB). In all, he had been mentioned in
dispatches seven times.
Blamey finally returned to Australia
on 20 October 1919, after more than six years overseas and was posted to
army Headquarters in Melbourne as Director of Military Operations. In
May 1920, he became Deputy Chief of the General Staff. His first major
task was the creation of the RAAF, working with Lieutenant Colonel R.
Williams of the Flying Corps as the Army representatives. On 1 November
1922, Blamey left for London where he was posted as the Australian
Representative at the Imperial General Staff. Most of his work was
connected with the establishment of a naval base at Singapore and the
development of the RAAF.
On the retirement of the Chief of the
General Staff (CGS), Major General Sir C. B. B. White, in 1923, Blamey
expected to become CGS. However, his ambition was thwarted by Major
General V. C. M. Sellheim, who wrote to the Minister of Defence,
protesting his supersession, and that of other senior permanent officers
including Major Generals J. H. Bruche and C. H. Brand and Brigadier
Generals W. A. Coxen, T. H. Dodds, and C. H. Foott. Instead, the post
was given to General H. G. Chauvel, the Inspector General, while Blamey
became 2nd CGS.
On 1 September 1925, Blamey resigned
from the permanent forces and became Chief Commissioner of Police in
Victoria. Almost immediately he became embroiled in a scandal when on 21
October 1925, police raided a brothel and apart from finding alcohol
being sold without a liquor licence, discovered a man in possession of
Blamey's police badge. Apparently, Blamey had loaned his badge to a
friend. Blamey modernised the force, improved and increased recruiting,
raised the number of women in the force, overhauled the promotion system
and established the Licensing Branch. He was created a knight bachelor
in 1935 but was forced to resign on 9 July 1936 for issuing an untrue
statement in order to protect the reputations of two ladies who were
innocent victims of an armed hold up.
After leaving the regular army, Blamey
had transferred to the militia. On 1 May 1926 he took command of the
10th Infantry Brigade, succeeding Brigadier General J. C. Stewart. The
brigade was part of the 3rd Division, which was commanded by Major
General G. J. Johnston from 1922 to 1927 and then by Major General H. E.
Elliott. Following Elliott's death on 23 March 1931, Blamey took command
of the division and was promoted to major general, one of only four
militia officers promoted to this rank between 1929 and 1939, the others
being H. G. Bennett in 1930, I. G. Mackay in 1937 and E. A.
Drake-Brockman, who succeeded Blamey as 3rd Division commander in 1937,
when he moved to the unattached list.
At this point, where the biographies
of most Great War generals end, that of Blamey usually begins.
In September 1938, with the prospect
of another war looming, the government established a Manpower Committee
at the Department of Defence and Blamey took its chairmanship over from
Major General Sir C. H. Jess in November. Over the next weeks, Blamey
and his staff drew up lists of reserved occupations, selected district
manpower officers and made arrangements for a future full mobilisation.
When war broke in September 1939,
Blamey was the army's second most senior officer on the active list,
ranking after Major General H. G. Bennett and ahead of the CGS, Major
General J. D. Lavarack, both vocal critics of the government's defence
policies. The others had their supporters in Cabinet, but Blamey was
well known to the Prime Minister, R. G. Menzies, who had been Attorney
General in the Victorian Government when Blamey was Chief Commissioner,
and the Treasurer, R. G. Casey, who had served under Blamey on the 1st
Division and Australian Corps staff.
On 28 September 1939, Blamey was
appointed to command the Second AIF and its new 6th Division. He began
selecting his staff on 1 October. For GSO1 he selected Colonel S.F.
Rowell; for GSO2, Major R. G. H. Irving (the son of Major General G. G.
H. Irving); for AA & QMG, Lieutenant Colonel G. A. Vasey, all
regular officers. For brigade commanders he selected Brigadier A. S.
Allen who had commanded the 45th Battalion in the First AIF, Brigadier
L. J. Moreshead, who had commanded the 33rd, and Brigadier S. G. Savige,
who had commanded a small independent force in Kurdistan in 1918, and
later the 37th and 24th Battalions and 10th Brigade under Blamey in the
3rd Division. For an artillery commander, he chose Brigadier E. F.
Herring, commander of the 3rd Division Artillery, a King's Council and
Rhodes Scholar. All four brigadiers were militia officers, on orders
from Menzies.
Blamey was promoted to lieutenant
general on 13 October 1939.On 28 February the War Cabinet decided to
raise another division and Blamey was given command of I Corps. Major
General I. G. Mackay took over the 6th Division and Lieutenant General
J. D. Lavarack dropped in rank to major general command the 7th
Division. Blamey took Rowell with him as Brigadier General Staff (BGS)
and appointed Major General H. D. Wynter as Deputy Adjutant and
Quartermaster General (DA & QMG).
Already the 16th Brigade and other
elements of the 6th Division had arrived in Palestine. The 17th followed
in April, and then the 18th, although it was diverted to the United
Kingdom due to the deteriorating military situation in France. On 12
June 1940, Blamey left for Palestine with Rowell and others on a Qantas
flying boat in civilian clothes as they were passing through neutral
countries. They landed on Lake Tiberias on 20 June 1940 and on 22 June
Blamey reported to his new superior, the Companion in Chief Middle East,
General Sir A. P. Wavell in Cairo. The two men had similar backgrounds,
having both been corps BGGS during the Great War.
In December 1940, Wavell launched a
surprise offensive against the Italians in Libya. By this time the 6th
and 7th Divisions were in the Middle East and more or less complete and
Blamey agreed to temporarily attach the 6th Division to the Western
Desert Force, with which it participated in the attack on Bardia and the
drive to Benghazi. Wavell agreed that I Corps would take over at first
opportunity and this it did on 15 February 1941.
Yet within days Blamey was alerted for
another operation. Wavell had been ordered to send troops to Greece and
wanted I Corps to go. Wavell misled Blamey into believing that the
project had been approved by Menzies, while informing Menzies that
Blamey approved. In reality Blamey thought that the expedition to Greece
had a poor chances of success, and was concerned about the ability of
the man appointed to command the expedition, Lieutenant General Sir H.
M. Wilson. Blamey has been strongly criticised for failing to make the
Australian government aware of his doubts about the project. He learned
his lesson and never again failed to keep the Australian government
fully informed.
Soon after he arrived in Greece,
Blamey scouted the likely evacuation beaches with his aide. While Wavell
had proposed to send the 7th Division, followed by the 6th, Blamey
reversed the order, so that his most experienced division would be
available. Unfortunately, this resulted in the inexperienced 9th
Division, under Major General L. J. Moreshead, finding itself in the
path of the German advance when Rommel counterattacked in Libya.
Meanwhile Blamey conducted a skilled withdrawal in Greece, culminating
in the evacuation he had foreseen. The campaign ended ignominiously when
Wavell ordered Blamey out of Greece, an order he protested to no avail.
Blamey flew out with Rowell and other staff officers, including his son,
Major T. R. Blamey.
Blamey returned to Cairo to find that
he had been appointed Deputy Companion in Chief Middle East as a result
of the political fall out of the Greek campaign, and that the AIF had
been scattered about the theatre. His first concern was Crete, where
German paratroops landed on 20 May 1941. As acting theatre commander,
Blamey was unable to salvage the situation but took action to ensure
that as many Australians were evacuated as possible. In Syria, where the
7th Division was the principal force, Blamey acquiesced with the British
command arrangements, whereby Wilson directed operations from a hotel in
Jerusalem, because he was reluctant to appoint another as corps
commander while still uncertain how secure his job as Deputy C-in-C was.
When it became clear that Wilson could not adequately control the
operation, Blamey took belated but decisive action, appointing Lavarack
as I Corps commander, and interposing his headquarters between Wilson
and the 7th Division, which he appointed Allen to command.
As Blamey was the second most senior
officer in the theatre, the British government promoted Wilson to full
general in June. Later that month Wavell was relieved, replaced by
General Sir C. Auchinleck. Blamey and Auchinleck soon clashed. After
Syria, Blamey's concerns focused on the 9th Division, besieged in
Tobruk. Concerns about Tobruk receded after Morehead twice defeated
Rommel in April but Blamey and the Australian government pressed for its
relief. The Australian government strongly backed Blamey and promoted
him to full general on 24 September 1941. Blamey became only the fourth
Australian to reach this rank, after H. G. Chauvel, J. Monash and C. B.
B. White. The division was eventually withdrawn from Tobruk in October
1941. For his services, particularly in Greece, Blamey was created a
Knight Commander of the Bath (KCB) in the 1942 New Year's List.
Blamey's stance over the relief of the
9th Division had British Prime Minister W. S. Churchill ready to ask the
Australian government for Blamey's relief but the outbreak of war with
Japan on 8 December 1941 completely changed the situation. On 11 March
1942 Blamey was appointed C-in-C of the Australian Military Forces and
returned to Australia to take command of the army in its greatest
crisis. On 26 March 1942 he arrived in Melbourne and was informed that
he would also be C-in-C Allied Land Forces under the new C-in-C of the
South West Pacific Area (SWPA) theatre, General D. MacArthur who became
the Australian government's chief advisor on strategic matters, although
Blamey had direct access to the Prime Minister.
Blamey established his headquarters,
which became known as Land Headquarters (LHQ), in Melbourne. He
appointed Major General G. A. Vasey as his chief of staff, Lieutenant
General H. D. Wynter as Lieutenant General Administration (LGA), Major
General V. P. H. Stantke as Adjutant General and Major General J. H.
Cannan as Quartermaster General. There were few Americans at LHQ, just
as (in spite of orders to the contrary from Washington), there were few
Australians at MacArthur's GHQ. Blamey initiated a sweeping
reorganisation of the defence of Australia that saw Lieutenant General
J. D. Lavarack appointed to command the First Army in Queensland,
Lieutenant General I. G. Mackay, the Second Army in Victoria and
Lieutenant General H. G. Bennett, the III Corps in Western Australia.
Lieutenant General S. F. Rowell was given I Corps and Lieutenant General
J. Northcott, II Corps. These formations (which became active on 15
April 1942) soon controlled eleven Australian divisions and two American
divisions.
The Battle of the Coral Sea on 7-8 May
1942 ended the possibility of a Japanese seaborne attack on Port Moresby
but within a fortnight the code breakers in Melbourne reported that the
Japanese intended to make an overland attempt over the Kokoda Trail.
MacArthur decided to establish a base on the eastern tip of New Guinea
at Milne Bay and Blamey sent the 7th Brigade to defend it and the 14th
Brigade to Port Moresby. The 30th Brigade was already there. Blamey has
been strongly criticised for sending the militia instead of the veteran
AIF troops of 7th Division, which he was keeping for projected offensive
operations. Once the Japanese offensive developed, Blamey ordered Rowell
to take command in New Guinea, and sent the 7th Division. There was soon
heavy fighting, both at Milne Bay and on the Kokoda Trail.
By the end of August, the Japanese had
been defeated at Milne Bay but as Rowell's troops made a fighting
withdrawal along the Kokoda Trail over the Owen Stanley Range, some of
the most rugged and daunting terrain in the world, MacArthur became
increasingly alarmed at what looked like another Malaya style retreat.
MacArthur told Prime Minister J. Curtin that the Australian commanders
had confidence in their ability to deal with the situation which he did
not share and recommended that Blamey be sent to New Guinea to take
personal command. Much against his wish and better judgement, Blamey
complied with the Curtin's and MacArthur's order.
Blamey arrived in Port Moresby on 23
September 1942. He found Rowell petulant and uncooperative and relieved
him of his command on 28 September, replacing him with Lieutenant
General E. F. Herring. Blamey made sure that MacArthur was kept fully
informed on progress back in Brisbane as the 7th Division pushed the
Japanese back over the Kokoda Trail. In response to constant calls from
MacArthur for a faster advance, Blamey relieved Brigadier A. W. Potts of
the 21st Brigade on 9 October and then Major General A. S. Allen of the
7th Division on 27 October, replacing him with Major General G. A.
Vasey.
Having pursued the Japanese across the
Owen Stanleys, the diggers confronted an enemy ensconced in a vast
complex of bunkers in the swamps surrounding Buna and Sanananda. Joining
them was the US 32nd Division. MacArthur's hopes for a quick victory
were soon dashed and the performance of the American troops was
profoundly embarrassing in the light of his criticism of the
Australians. MacArthur sent the US I Corps, under Major General Robert
L. Eichelberger, with orders to take Buna or not come back alive. For
the first time since the Great War, an American Corps fought under an
Australian Corps. Eichelberger soon established a good working
relationship with the Australians. On 5 January, Blamey flew across the
mountains and visited the forward units. Looking at the bunkers that had
been captured thus far, Blamey declared that the GIs and diggers who had
fought through the fetid swamps and captured the bunkers had performed
nothing less than a miracle. For his part, Blamey was created a Knight
Grand Cross of the British Empire (GBE) on 29 May 1943.
The Official Historian wrote of
Blamey's role in Papua:
At the very peak of this leadership
development was General Blamey himself. His greatness was demonstrated
almost daily by a knowledge unparalleled in Australia of how an Army
should be formed and put to work; by his exercise of the vital field
command at the same time as he kept within his grasp a vastly detailed
control of the Australian Army as a whole; by his sagacity and
strength in meeting the rapidly changing demands of a difficult
political situation; by his ability speedily to encompass the
requirements of the new war and plan far ahead of the events of the
day as he controlled them; by his generally unappreciated humanity.
Blamey's next campaign in New Guinea
was an entirely different affair. One again, Blamey took over personal
command of New Guinea Force. His conception involved a gigantic double
envelopment of the Japanese forces. American paratroops would seize the
airfield around Nadzab, enabling the 7th Division to fly in and attack
Lae from the west while the 9th Division -- back from the Middle East
and retrained for jungle warfare and combined operations -- would land
on the beaches east of Lae and attack it from the opposite side.
Blamey's plan involved imaginative use of the latest innovations in air
and sea power in a manner worthy of Monash, and one of the most
brilliant of the war. Launched in September 1943, it took the enemy by
surprise and the capture of Lae followed rapidly. The 7th Division then
turned around 180° and drove up the Markham and Ramu Valleys while the
9th Division moved along the coast to Finschafen. After much fighting,
the whole New Guinea coast from Milne Bay to Madang was in Allied hands.
It was a major victory at low cost, and a vindication not just of Blamey
as a field commander, but of his training policies as well.
This was Blamey's last campaign as an
operational commander. The Australians had been the spearhead of the
Allied effort in the South west pacific for two years. Now that role was
taken over by the Americans of Alamo Force, Lieutenant General W.
Krueger's US Sixth Army, operating under MacArthur's direct command,
while Blamey's divisions were withdrawn to Australia to rest. In April
1944, Blamey travelled to the United States with Curtin. In Washington
Blamey was warmly received by the US Joint Chiefs of Staff and met with
the Combined Chiefs. Curtin and Blamey flew on to London where they met
with the British Chiefs of Staff and discussed British plans for the war
in the Pacific. He met with the Supreme Companion, General D. D.
Eisenhower and with General B. L. Montgomery, the Allied land commander,
who gave Blamey a detailed briefing on the Normandy invasion plan.
Blamey also took the opportunity to speak to Australian Army officers
involved in the operation.
Because the militia could not be
employed north of the equator, MacArthur resolved to have Australians
relieve the American garrisons in New Guinea and the Islands, thereby
freeing up American troops for the upcoming campaign in the Philippines.
Far from withering on the vine, these bypassed Japanese were still tying
up large numbers of Australian and American troops. Blamey believed
strongly that it was politically vital for Australia to participate in
the invasion of Japan, and only the AIF could do it. Therefore the
Japanese had to go. For the first time, an Australian general led an
Australian Army on operations in pursuit of Australian political
objectives. It would be the Australian Army's major effort of the war.
Lieutenant General V. A. H. Sturdee of the First Army directed
operations from Lae. The 5th Division tightened the noose on Rabaul;
Savige's II Corps, with the 3rd and 11th Divisions, began a long
campaign to wipe out the Japanese on Bougainville; while the 6th
Division cleared New Guinea, capturing the main Japanese base at Wewak
and driving the survivors across the mountains. Lieutenant General Sir
L. J. Moorehead's I Corps, with the 7th and 9th Divisions, was under
MacArthur's command in case he needed the AIF in the Philippines.
Eventually MacArthur used them to capture the oilfields of Borneo.
Blamey received a lot of criticism
over these campaigns, both their rationale and their conduct. He was
accused of cronyism and sidelining rival generals such as Lieutenant
General J. D. Lavarack, Lieutenant General H. G. Bennett and Major
General H. C. H. Robertson. He was charged with having an excessive
number of generals in the army (in the British army there was one
general for every 8,333 men, in the America, 1 per 6,450, in the
Australia, 1 per 14,953). He was accused of maintaining an Army that was
too large. These accusations had little substance, but Blamey's
relations with the government soured.
On 2 September 1945, Blamey stood
beside MacArthur on the deck of the USS Missouri and signed the Japanese
surrender document on behalf of Australia as an equal partner. He then
flew to Moratai where he personally accepted the surrender of the
remaining Japanese in the South West Pacific. By this time nine out of
every ten Japanese who had set foot on New Guinea had died.
Then on 14 November 1945, Blamey was
abruptly dismissed by the government. He was formally discharged on 31
January 1946, after 39 years of service. Asked if he wanted any honours
for himself, Blamey declined, instead requesting knighthoods for
Generals J. Northcott, J. H. Cannan, J. E. S. Stevens and G. F. Wootten.
His request was refused. But in December 1949, the government changed an
Menzies again became Prime Minister. Blamey wrote to him recommending
knighthoods for J. Northcott, S. G. Savige, V. A. H. Sturdee, F. H.
Berryman, S. R. Burston, J. H. Cannan, C. S. Steele, J. E. S. Stevens
and G. F. Wootten. All were accepted except Cannan.
On 8 June 1950, Blamey was promoted to
field marshal, the first and only Australian to reach the rank. Gravely
ill, he was presented with his baton in a ceremony at the Heidelberg Repatriation
General Hospital on 16 September 1950. Blamey never removed from his
illness and died of a stroke on 27 May 1951. A state funeral was held in
Melbourne. An escort of 4,000 troops accompanied the gun carriage with
his coffin along a route from the Shrine of Remembrance to Faulkner
Crematorium lined by 300,000 people. For pall bearers he had ten of his
lieutenant generals: J. Northcott, L. J. Moreshead, I. G. Mackay, E. F.
Herring, V. A. H. Sturdee, S. G. Savige, S. F. Rowell, F. H. Berryman,
W. Bridgeford and H. Wells.
A statue of Blamey stands in the
King's Domain in Melbourne, near the Shrine of Remembrance. The square
at the heart of the Department of Defence complex in Canberra was named
Sir Thomas Blamey Square and a bas relief likeness was unveiled in 1984.
On 27 May 2001, the square was renamed Field Marshal Sir Thomas Blamey
Square. The baton of the nation's only field marshal is on display in
the War Memorial.
"I have always felt", wrote
MacArthur in 1954, "that his services in the Second World War were
not sufficiently recognized. What he did cannot be overestimated, and
his contribution to the defeat of Japan marked him as one of the great
soldiers of our time. Australia and, indeed, the whole free world owes
him a debt of gratitude."
Wording by Ross Mallett
Sources: Horner, David, Blamey: The Companion in Chief;
C. E.
W. Bean, The Official History of Australia in the War of 1914-1918.
Volume I: The Story of Anzac, pp. 400-401; Volume II: The Story
of Anzac, pp. 176-177; Monash, John, The Australian Victories in
France in 1918, p. 296; Long, Gavin, To Benghazi, pp. 43-50;
McCarthy, Dudley, South West Pacific Area -- First Year, pp.
236-242, 591 |