=============  VICTORIA CROSS, New Zealand Troops who have won the =========

RESOURCE: ©1994 The Electric Book Company Ltd.


VICTORIA CROSS	
Victoria Cross is the highest British decoration awarded to members of the 
NZ armed forces for valour while on active service. The medal has been won 
by British servicemen in NZ during the New Zealand Wars, and by New 
Zealanders serving in the South African War, and World Wars One and Two. 

The total of NZ Victoria Cross winners is 21, with Captain Upham being the 
only combatant ever to receive a bar.


==================================================================== 1997 ==

Listed below are Victoria Cross winners who hail from New Zealand, or 
served with New Zealand regiments, with an explanation of their deeds on 
the following pages. 

R.C. Travis was also known as Dickson Cornelius Savage but he enlisted and 
served under the pseudonym - R.C. Travis.

* Posthumous award
- Killed in action
/ later taken Prisoner of War

============================================================================================================
Last name, First name	Year of birth/death		Actions Performed At			War
============================================================================================================
McKENNA, Colour-Sergeant				Alexandra Redoubt (Tuakau), 1863	NZ
HEAPHY, CHARLES 	(1820-81) b.London		Paterangi Pa - Feb. 1864		NZ
HARDHAM, William James 	(1876-1928) b.Wgtn		Naauwpoort - Jan. 1901			Sth African
BASSETT, Cyril Royston Guyton(1892-1983), b.Auck	Chunuk Bair Ridge, Gallipoli-7 Aug.1915	WWI 
SHOUT, Alfred John	(1882-1915) b. NZ		Lone Pine				WWI*
RHODES-MOORHOUSE, William Barnard (1887-1915) b. London	France - Apr. 1915			WWI*
COOKE, Thomas		(1881-1916) b. Kaikoura		Pozières, Somme - 24 Jul.1916		WWI*
BROWN, Donald Forrester (1890-1916), b.Dunedin.		Somme - 15 Sept.1916			WWI-
FREYBERG, Bernard Cyril (1889-1963) b. London		Somme - Nov. 1916			WWI
FRICKLETON, Samuel	(1891-1971) b. Scotland		Messines, Belgium - Jul.1917		WWI
ANDREW, Brigadier Leslie Wilton	(1897-1969) b. Manawatu	La Basseville, France in 1917		WWI
NICHOLAS, Henry James 	(1891-1918) b. Lincoln		Polderhoek, Western Front - Dec.1917	WWI-
SANDERS, William Edward	(1883-1917) b. Auckland		Cmdr of HMS Prize - 1917		WWI-
STORKEY, Percy Valentine (1891-1969) b. Napier		France - April 1918			WWI
+TRAVIS, Richard Charles (1884-1918) b.Opotiki		Rossignol Wood - Jul. 1918		WWI-
JUDSON, Reginald Stanley (1881-1972) b. Auckland	France - 24 August 1918			WWI
GRANT, John Gilroy 	(1889-1970) b. Hawera		Bancourt - Sept.1918			WWI
WEATHERS, Lawrence Carthage (1890-1918) b. Te Kopuru	Peronne, Western Front - Sept.1918	WWI*
LAURENT, Henry John	(1895-1987) b. Hawera		Western Front - Sept.1918		WWI
FORSYTH, Samuel	(1891-1918) b. Wellington		Bapaume - 1918				WWI*
CRICHTON, James 	(1879-1961) b.Ireland		Crevecoeur, France - 1918		WWI
HINTON, John Daniel 	(1908-97) b.Riverton		Kalamata, Greece - Apr.1941		WWII/
HULME, Alfred Clive	(1911-82) b.Dunedin		Crete - May. 1941			WWII
UPHAM, Charles Hazlitt	(1908- ), b Christchurch	Crete - May 1941, Egypt - July 1942	WWII
WARD, James Allen (Sgt.-Pilot)(1919-41) b. Wanganui	July 1941				WWII-
ELLIOTT, Keith		(1916- ) b.Apiti, Manawatu	Ruweisat Ridge, Wtrn Desert-15 Jul.1942	WWII
TRIGG, Lloyd Allan	(1914-1943) b.Houhora		Morocco - Aug. 1942			WWII-
NGARIMU, Moananui-a-Kiwi (1918-43) b. Ruatoria		Tebaga Gap, Tunis - Mar. 1943		WWII*
TRENT, Leonard Henry 	(1915-86) b.Nelson		Holland - May 1943			WWII/

============================================================================================================

ANDREW, Brigadier Leslie Wilton (1897-1969) b. Manawatu.
Won the Victoria Cross at La Basseville, France in 1917. In World War Two 
he commanded the 22nd Battalion of the Second NZEF, and led the victory 
contingent in London in 1946.


BASSETT, Cyril Royston Guyton (1892-1983), b.Auckland
Bassett was the first New Zealander to win the Victoria Cross in World War 
One.  Bassett was a corporal in the New Zealand Divisional Signals Company, 
and was one of the signallers in support of the attack by NZ, Gurkha and 
British soldiers on Chunuk Bair Ridge, Gallipoli. The New Zealanders 
achieved the ridge despite horrendous losses and after trying to hold it 
were dislodged. The VC was awarded on 7 August 1915, when he kept lines of 
communication open to the men beleaguered by intense enemy fire on the ridge
of Chunuk Bair.


BROWN, Donald Forrester (1890-1916), b.Dunedin.
A sergeant in the 2nd Otago Battalion of the New Zealand Division, won the 
Victoria Cross during the Somme Battle in World War One, on 15 September 
1916, and died in action a fortnight later.  He was a farmer before he 
went to the war.


COOKE, Thomas (1881-1916) b. Kaikoura.
Was a private in the 8th Infantry Battalion of the Australian Army in World
War One. He was awarded the Victoria Cross posthumously for extreme valour 
under fire as a machine-gunner at Pozières, in the Battle of the Somme, on 
24 July 1916.


CRICHTON, James (1879-1961) b.Ireland.
Served in the South African War with the Cameron Highland Regiment. In 
World War One, Crichton relinquished his rank of Warrant Officer to join a 
frontline regiment as private, and at the age of 39 was posted to the 
Auckland Regiment. He was awarded the Victoria Cross  four weeks from the 
end of World War One, at Crevecoeur, France.  He swam a river several times
and ran through enemy fire to communicate between company headquarters and 
a group of isolated comrades, and then under fire dismantled German 
explosive charges from a bridge to enable reinforcements to move forward.


ELLIOTT, Keith (1916- ) b.Apiti, Manawatu. 
Won the Victoria Cross at the Battle of Ruweisat Ridge in the Western Desert
on 15 July 1942.  Sergeant Elliott withdrew his platoon from a situation in 
which a substantial number of NZ troops had been taken prisoner by a group 
of retreating German tanks. In escaping past enemy positions, Elliott and 
his small band of men captured over 140 prisoners, killed or wounded more 
than 30 Germans and Italians and destroyed eight machine-gun posts. Elliott 
was badly wounded in four places.  In 1947, after going back to farming for 
a period, he became a clergyman and was for several years City Missioner in 
Wellington.


FORSYTH, Samuel (1891-1918) b. Wellington
Served in France during World War One with the Second Auckland Battalion, 
and won the Victoria Cross posthumously. Sergeant Forsyth was shot by a 
German sniper after directing an operation against machine-guns that 
enabled the NZ attack to continue during the battle for Bapaume.


FREYBERG, Bernard Cyril (1889-1963) b.London. First Baron of Wellington, 
New Zealand, and Munstead, Surrey. At the start of the 1914-18 war Freyberg
went to England, joined the 7th (Hood) Battalion of the Royal Naval Brigade
and went to the Belgian front. One night in April 1915 he swam ashore in 
the Gulf of Saros to divert the Turks' attention from the main landing at 
Gallipoli and escaped unharmed despite heavy fire. This earned him a 
Distinguished Service Order medal.

Freyberg served in France and won his Victoria Cross for action on the 
Somme in November 1916. The citation said, 'This single officer enabled the
lodgement (in the battle for Beaumont Village) of the corps to be 
permanently held, and on this point the line was eventually formed' for 
later attacks. He was carried away..on a stretcher after being wounded four 
times.

By the end of the war Freyberg was a Temporary Brigadier with two bars to 
his DSO, the Croix Militaire de Guerre (CMG) and had been six times 
mentioned in despatches. He was wounded nine times. Troops who served with 
him in World War Two say there was hardly a part of his body unmarked by 
scars.

He was recalled in 1939 and was invited by the NZ government to command the 
New Zealand Division in the Middle East in November. Briefly in 1941 he was
Allied Commander-in-Chief in Crete, controlling the evacuation, and he led 
the New Zealanders until the end of the war, for which he gained a third 
bar to his DSO.


FRICKLETON, Samuel (1891-1971) b. Scotland 
A coal miner from Blackball, in Westland, who won the Victoria Cross when 
he captured two German machine-gun nests single-handed and killed all the 
occupants in July 1917 at Messines, Belgium. Frickleton, a lance-corporal 
in the Third Battalion, New Zealand Rifle Brigade, was severely wounded in
the battle.


GRANT, John Gilroy (1889-1970) b. Hawera
Sergeant with the First Battalion, Wellington Regiment, in World War One. 
He won the Victoria Cross for attacking and capturing a group of German 
machine-gun nests near Bancourt in September 1918. He later settled in 
Auckland.


HARDHAM, William James (1876-1928) b.Wellington. 
The only New Zealander to win the Victoria Cross during the South African 
War and the first to win it overseas.  He won the VC near Naauwpoort in 
January 1901 when he rode to the rescue of a colleague whose horse had been 
shot from under him, and who had been injured as he fell to the ground. With
a group of Boer marksmen trying to cut him down, Hardham lifted him into his
saddle and ran to safety behind a rock outcrop pulling the horse behind him.


HEAPHY, CHARLES (1820-81) b.London
The first British colonial soldier to win the Victoria Cross.  Heaphy was 
awarded the VC for his 'total disregard for his own safety' during a 
surprise attack by Maori near Paterangi Pa, not far from Te Awamutu, in 
February 1864. Seven bullets hit him or went through his clothing from point
-blank range but he continued to go forwward to help two fellow soldiers. 
When he was finally forced back, he stayed in a commanding position to 
direct fire against the Maori, and prevent them from moving in to kill the 
soldiers and take their equipment.


HINTON, John (Jack) Daniel (1908-97) b.Riverton.
A sergeant of the 20th Battalion in World War Two, he won the Victoria 
Cross at Kalamata, in Greece, in April 1941.  For hand-to-hand fighting 
against the Germans in the last days of the Greek campaign, before he was 
wounded and captured by the Germans. His award was announced to him by the 
commandant of the camp in which he was held prisoner in Germany. Hinton 
settled in Auckland after the war and died in 1997.


HULME, Alfred Clive (1911-82) b.Dunedin 
Joined the 23rd Battalion as a sergeant and won the Victoria Cross for 
eight days of sustained fighting on Crete during May 1941. He stalked and 
killed 33 German snipers and once disguised himself as a German paratrooper
and killed a number of the enemy on the outskirts of Galatos.  After the 
war he settled in the Bay of Plenty.


JUDSON, Reginald Stanley (1881-1972) b. Auckland.
Won the three highest awards for gallantry open to a non-commissioned 
officer, within one six-week period during July and August 1918. This time 
is still a record.  He went overseas as a sergeant in the First Battalion, 
Auckland Regiment, in 1915. Serving in France, he won the Distinguished 
Conduct Medal on 24-25 July, the Military Medal on 16 August and the 
Victoria Cross on 24 August, when he single-handedly captured a machine-gun
 nest, 'a prompt and gallant action [which] not only saved lives but also 
enabled the advance to continue unopposed', according to the citation. He 
rose to the rank of lieutenant.  Judson settled in Auckland, served on the 
city council for ten years and on other local bodies, and farmed in 
Mangonui for some years before returning to Auckland where he died aged 91.


LAURENT, Henry John (1895-1987) b. Hawera.
Served in World War One with the Second Battalion of the New Zealand Rifle 
Brigade on the Western Front, and won the Victoria Cross in September 1918 
after Sergeant Laurent's section killed 30 of the enemy and captured 112, 
for the loss of one man. Laurent settled in Hastings after the war.


McKENNA, Colour-Sergeant
The Alexandra Redoubt (Tuakau) was attacked by the Ngati Maniapoto in 1863, 
and defended by the 65th Regiment, a member of which, Colour-Sergeant 
McKenna, earned the Victoria Cross for bravery during the battle. A monument
erected at Tuakau carries the names of the British troops who died in 
action during the Land Wars in the Waikato.


NGARIMU, Moananui-a-Kiwi (1918-43) b.Kokai Pa, near Whareponga, Ruatoria.
The only full Maori to have won the Victoria Cross of the Maori Battalion 
during World War Two. (Tebaga Gap in Tunis in March 1943) Over 24 hours, 
Second Lieutenant Ngarimu and his platoon attacked and held a hill which 
enabled the Germans to fire on other units of the New Zealand Division at 
Tebaga Gap. Greatly outnumbered, he and the few members of his platoon 
still able to fight, actually met a German attack by charging. He died 
firing his sub-machine gun from the hip, 'defiantly facing the enemy', 
said the citation, coming 'to rest almost on top of those of the enemy who 
had fallen to his gun just before he fell to theirs'.


NICHOLAS, Henry James (1891-1918) b. Lincoln
A private in the First Battalion of the Canterbury Regiment during World 
War One. He won the Victoria Cross near Polderhoek on the Western Front in 
December 1917, by single-handedly capturing a German pillbox, killing 12 of
the 16 enemy and wounding the other four. He was killed in action a year 
later, only 19 days before the armistice.


RHODES-MOORHOUSE, William Barnard (1887-1915) b. London, part-Maori
The first airman to win the Victoria Cross, he legally adopted the name 
Rhodes-Moorhouse.

After requesting to fly on active duty, Rhodes-Moorhouse was posted to 
France and in April 1915, in a B-E 26 biplane, attacked a key railway 
junction at Courtrai. He scored a direct hit with a 100-lb bomb after 
being hit in the stomach by a bullet during his approach, was hit again in 
the leg and the hand as he checked the extent of the damage, and flew back 
to his base through heavy ground fire aimed at his slow and low-flying 
aircraft, determined not to land behind German lines. He was cheered by 
Indian troops as he flew his battered biplane back behind the British front
line. He died of wounds the next day, and was awarded the VC posthumously 
for what the British Commander, General Sir John French, then called 'the 
most important bomb dropped in the war so far'.  Rhodes-Moorhouse left an 
infant son who died fighting in the Battle of Britain 23 years later. They 
are buried side by side on a hill near the family home in Dorset.


SHOUT, Alfred John (1882-1915) b. NZ
Served with the New Zealand Army in South Africa, then settled in Sydney in 
1905. He served as a captain in the first infantry battalion, Australian 
Imperial Forces, in World War One. He won the Military Cross during the 
Gallipoli landing, and became one of seven defenders of Lone Pine who were 
awarded the Victoria Cross. Shout died of wounds aboard a hospital ship two
days after being withdrawn, and the VC award was posthumous.


SANDERS, William Edward (1883-1917) b. Auckland
A merchant seaman. Within one year, during World War One, he rose from 
sub-lieutenant to lieutenant-commander and won both the DSO and Victoria 
Cross. Sanders received his medals for skill and daring as commander of 
HMS Prize, one of the Q-ships of World War One which acted as decoys to 
trap and sink German submarines. He was killed when the Prize went down 
with all hands, after being hit by a torpedo in August 1917.


STORKEY, Percy Valentine (1891-1969) b. Napier.
Served as a colour-sergeant with the Wellington Regiment while a law 
student, before World War One. He was with the 19th Battalion of the 
Australian Imperial Forces in France when he won the Victoria Cross in 
April 1918. Lieutenant Storkey led ten men in an attack on German 
machine-gun installations, killing or wounding about 30 and capturing 53.


TRAVIS, Richard Charles (1884-1918) b.Opotiki.
One of the most famous NZ soldiers of World War One, winning the Victoria 
Cross, the Croix de Guerre (Belgian), the Distinguished Conduct Medal and 
the Military Medal.  He served with the Second Battalion, Otago Regiment, 
on Gallipoli, and became famous for his forays into No-Man's-Land during two
years on the Western Front. He was described by one commentator as a 
'dangerously patient', courageous and cunning scout, sniper and raider. He 
prowled in No-Man's-Land during one period of 40 successive nights, seeking 
out changes in enemy positions and taking a prisoner back for interrogation.

He won his major award in July 1918 for conspicuous gallantry over a period
of many hours during action against the Germans near Rossignol Wood. 
Sergeant Travis was killed the following day and was buried with full 
military honours at the front among his comrades, the battalion diary 
recording that his death 'cast a gloom over the whole battalion.... never 
missed an operation... went over the top 15 times.' His true name was 
Dickson Cornelius Savage but he enlisted and served as R.C. Travis.


TRENT, Leonard Henry (1915-86) b.Nelson.
Joined the RAF in 1937 and was awarded the Victoria Cross for bravery and 
dedication to duty during a bombing raid on a power-house in Holland in May
1943. 

Squadron leader Trent was in one of ten Ventura bombers which set out on 
the raid but, because of a series of problems and bad luck, they were left
virtually at the mercy of anti-aircraft fire and enemy fighters during the
whole of their route over enemy territory. Trent's was the only one of the 
raiders to get to the target and, although his bombs overshot, blast damage
was done to the power-house. On the way back, his plane was shot down and 
he spent the rest of the war in captivity. 

He was one of the men who made a mass but unsuccessful breakout from Stalag
Luft III war prison in March 1944. This escape was the subject of Paul 
Brickhill's book, "The Great Escape".  Trent was in the RNZAF from 1944 to 
1947, and then with the RAF until his retirement in 1965.


TRIGG, Lloyd Allan (1914-1943) b.Houhora, Northland.
The only British combatant in either of the World Wars to be awarded a 
Victoria Cross on the basis of evidence given by the enemy he had engaged.

Trigg was commissioned a flying officer in 1942, after training in Canada. 
In August that same year, while operating in Liberator bombers from Morocco
against German submarines, he went in for the kill against U-468. Although 
the aircraft was hit early and was on fire from end to end, Trigg kept up 
the attack and sank the submarine with depth charges, before the aircraft 
finally crashed into the sea because Trigg, seriously wounded, could no 
longer control it.

Some of the submarine crew escaped using a dinghy from the Liberator and, 
when they were captured by the Royal Navy, told the story of Trigg's dogged
courage. He had completed 46 operational sorties by the time of his death.


UPHAM, Charles Hazlitt (1908- ), b Christchurch.
He is the only combat soldier ever to win the VC bar, although two medical 
officers achieved the honour during World War One. Upham volunteered for 
service at the outbreak of war and earned the Victoria Cross and Bar for 
outstanding gallantry and leadership in Crete in May 1941, and at Ruweisat 
Ridge, Egypt, in July 1942.  After being severely wounded at Ruweisat Ridge,
Upham was captured by the Germans and recuperated in an Italian hospital. 
He began a private war with his captors and ended the war in Colditz Castle
with other 'dangerous' allied prisoners. 


WARD, James Allen (1919-41) b. Wanganui, a school-teacher before the war.
Won the Victoria Cross, in World War Two, in July 1941. He climbed out 
along the wing of a Wellington bomber to push a canvas engine cover into a 
hole near an engine, to block petrol from keeping a fire going, thereby 
saving the crew from having to abandon the aircraft which was returning 
from a bombing raid.

Sergeant-Pilot Ward was killed in action two months later, after he had 
been given command of a 75 Squadron bomber. He was returning from a raid 
on Hamburg when he was shot down by anti-aircraft fire, keeping the plane 
aloft long enough for his crew to bail out but in the end crashing with it.


WEATHERS, Lawrence Carthage (1890-1918) b. Te Kopuru, near Dargaville. 
He moved to South Australia before joining the 43rd Infantry Battalion of 
the Australian Imperial Forces with whom he won the Victoria Cross 
(posthumously) in September 1918 at Peronne on the Western Front.


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