2/6th Battalion Bren gun carrier on manoeuvres in the desert. Sergeant F. B. Kelly is visible at rear of carrier. AWM.
Mortars from the Australian 2/6th Infantry Battalion firing in New Guinea, August 1943. AWM.

Private Donald Christie

Podcasts about Australians in the Mediterranean during WWII

Did my Relative Serve in these Battles?

Hundreds of thousands of Australians served in the Mediterranean during the Second World War. Some families know what their relative experienced during this often very important part of their life, but many do not. If you have a relative who served in the Australian armed forces during WWII and would like to know if they served in the Mediterranean please fill in the form below. We have had a lot of interest in this service and have quite a backlog or research to get through! If you fill in this form we will add you to a waitlist, and will carry out the research when we are able.


You will be added to a waitlist for History Guild volunteers to research your relative’s service history and let you know what they find. As this is a free service provided by volunteers the timeframe may vary.

Articles you may also like

Inventing Special Forces: Operation Jaywick

Reading time: 11 minutes
Modern special forces are capable of astonishing feats of arms, from crippling their opponents’ infrastructure to derailing entire campaigns. While soldiers have been detailed for highly specialised and dangerous tasks since before history began, the first true forbears to today’s special forces were first established in the midst of the Second World War, when the Axis powers seemed poised to seize victory at any moment.

Read More

What Vietnam and Iraq should teach Canberra

Reading time: 7 minutes
If we learn more from losses than wins, then the Canberra system has much to gain from examining its lousy performance in the processes that took Australia to war in Vietnam and Iraq. For Australia, both wars were all about the alliance with the United States. Both were wars of choice, although the regional implications Canberra read into Vietnam meant it was closer to a war of necessity than Iraq.

Both wars exemplify the Prime Minister’s most profound prerogative and Parliament’s lack of power. The entry to both showed the Canberra system performing below its best, revealing again the truth that artifice and farce often attend the most serious of moments of government.

Read More
Copyright Info

The text of this article was commissioned by History Guild as part of our work to improve historical literacy. If you would like to reproduce it please get in touch via this form.