MacDONALD, Graham Osborn
(Service number 25920)
| First Rank | Rifleman | Last Rank | Rifleman |
|---|
Birth
| Date | 08/06/1898 | Place of Birth | Johannesburg, South Africa |
|---|
Enlistment Information
| Date | 30 May 1916 | Age | 17 years 11 months |
|---|---|---|---|
| Address at Enlistment | C/o D. J. Crabbe, Marton | ||
| Occupation | Farm labourer | ||
| Previous Military Experience | NZ Territorials - serving | ||
| Marital Status | Single | ||
| Next of Kin | Peter MacDONALD (father), 34 Beverley Street, Timaru | ||
Military Service
| Served with | NZ Armed Forces | Served in | Army |
|---|
Embarkation Information
| Body on Embarkation | New Zealand Rifle Brigade | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Unit, Squadron, or Ship | 11th Reinforcements, 1st Battalion, E Company | ||
| Date | 25 September 1916 | ||
| Transport | Devon | ||
| Embarked From | Destination | Devonport, Devon, England | |
| Other Units Served With | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Last Unit Served With | Rifle Brigade | ||
Military Awards
| Campaigns | Western European | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Service Medals | British War Medal; Victory Medal | ||
Award Circumstances and Date
No information
Prisoner of War Information
| Date of Capture | |
|---|---|
| Where Captured and by Whom | |
| Actions Prior to Capture | |
| PoW Serial Number | |
| PoW Camps | |
| Days Interned | |
| Liberation Date |
Death
| Date | 15 April 1934 | Age | 35 years |
|---|---|---|---|
| Place of Death | Auckland | ||
| Cause | Traumatic epilepsy caused by an old injury to brain, through accidental gunshot wound of head. Two pellets lodged in brain - Spastic paraplegia 3 years | ||
| Memorial or Cemetery | Waikumete Cemetery, Auckland | ||
| New Zealand Memorials | |||
Biographical Notes
Graham Osborn Macdonald was born on 8 June 1898 at Johannesburg, South Africa, the younger son of Peter Peterson and Mary Elizabeth (née Osborn) Macdonald. Although 1894 is given as his date of birth in his military file, the school admission gives 1898, which corresponds to his registered age at death. Presumably he put his age up to enlist.
Graham's parents, Peter (born in Scotland) and Mary (born in England), married at Johannesburg in 1893. Two sons and two daughters were born in South Africa. In July 1909, Graham, his brother Peter and his sister Emily entered Kaikorai School, Dunedin, having come from Bournemouth, England. All left Kaikorai for South Canterbury in December 1909. Graham received a General Excellence award at Hunter School in 1910. Mr P. P. Macdonald, of Dunedin, had acquired 370 acres freehold, orchard and grazing land, at Hunter in the Waimate district, in November 1909. Jessie Macdonald, the second daughter, probably attended Waimate School in 1914-1915 and Strathmore School, Timaru, in 1917. Jessie married in 1925 at Chalmers Church, Timaru. The eldest daughter, Emily Macdonald, probably returned to Dunedin for further education at Braemar House School. In 1929 she left her parents’ Timaru residence to take up a scholarship in post-graduate kindergarten work in the USA. Emily married at Timaru’s Chalmers Church in 1932. Another daughter, Mary Joyce Macdonald, was born to Peter and Mary in 1910 at Timaru. Known as Joyce, she transferred from a private school to Waimataitai School in 1919 and went on to the Girls’ High School in 1923.
When Graham Macdonald enlisted on 30 May 1916 at Trentham, he was working as a farm labourer at Marton, single and Presbyterian. He named his father as next-of-kin – Peter Macdonald, of 34 Beverley Street, Timaru. He was still serving with the New Zealand Territorials. Rifleman G Macdonald embarked with the New Zealand Rifle Brigade of the 11th Reinforcements, leaving for Devonport, England per the “Devon” on 25 September 1916. He embarked for the return to New Zealand per the “Northumberland” on 28 March 1919, arriving home on 10 May. The Northumberland’s draft (No. 243) brought home 1336 of all ranks.
Graham was discharged on 8 June 1919, on the termination of his term of engagement. For his service in Western Europe, he was awarded the British War Medal and the Victory Medal. Graham Osborn Macdonald died on 15 April 1934 at Auckland, aged 39 years. He was buried in the Soldiers’ section of Waikumete Cemetery, Auckland. His death was the result of traumatic epilepsy caused by an old injury to the brain, through an accidental gunshot wound to the head. Two pellets had lodged in his brain, leaving him with spastic paraplegia for three years. His parents were still living in Chalmers Street, Timaru.
Graham’s older brother, Peter Peterson Macdonald, also served in World War One with the New Zealand Forces. Their youngest sister, Mary Joyce Macdonald (afterwards Mrs Guthrie) served as a nurse in World War Two. Peter Peterson Macdonald, senior, died in 1950 at a daughter’s residence at Palmerston South, while Elizabeth Mary Macdonald died in 1952 at Port Chalmers. Both are buried at Timaru.
Sources
Auckland War Memorial Museum Cenotaph Database [05 December 2022]; School Admission records (Dunedin & South Canterbury branches NZSG) [05 December 2022]; Waikumete Cemetery record [05 December 2022]; Timaru Herald, 20 November 1909, 16 April 1934, Waimate Daily Advertiser, 28 December 1910, Auckland Star, 16 April 1934, Press, 21 April 1934, Star, 21 April 1934 (Papers Past) [05 December 2022]
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Researched and Written by
Teresa Scott, SC Genealogy Society
Currently Assigned to
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Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License unless otherwise stated.
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