Adamstown
NSW

Herbert John Smith

Enlistment Date
22/01/1916
Age At Enlistment
21
Rank On Enlistment
Private
Regimental No.
556
Battalion
34th Battalion, B Company
Fate
Returned
Fate Date
31/12/1918
Occupation
Miner
Place of Birth
Adamstown, NSW
Religion
Methodist
Marital Status
Single
Embarkation Details
Embarked from Sydney, New South Wales, on board HMAT A20 Hororata on 2 May 1916

On 19 February 1919, the Newcastle Morning Herald reported that Herb Smith, one of Adamstown’s soccer soldiers, had returned during the past week and was looking well. What was not mentioned was Private Smith’s irregular wartime experience. One month after joining his battalion in the field in France in October 1916 he was diagnosed with trench foot and transferred to hospital in Etaples, France. By March 1917 as time was approaching for his redeployment to the front he went AWL on 6 March and was apprehended by the Military Police two days later. He was given 28 days Field Punishment. On 12 April 1917 he went AWL again. This time it took the Military Police three weeks to find him. Private Smith was sentenced to 12 months in military prison.

Upon his release in May 1918 he joined the 20th Battalion where he went AWL yet again from 18 July to 31 July. After his arrest he injured his wrist “accidentally” on 4 August and was transferred to England where he remained until the end of the war. He moved to Melbourne in 1919, married, and was father to five children. Herb Smith died in 1955, aged 61.