Lawrence Carthage Weathers VC

b. 14/05/1890 Te Kopuru, NZ. d. 29/09/1918 Peronne, France.

Lawrence Carthage Weathers (1890-1918) was born on 14th May 1890 at Te Kopuru, near Dargaville, New Zealand, son of John Joseph Weathers, labourer, and his wife Ellen Frances, née McCormack, both Adelaide born. Aged 7, he sailed with his parents to Adelaide; the family settled in rural South Australia and Lawrence was sent to Snowtown Public School. By 1913 he had become an undertaker and may have sensed—if he did not understand—where paths of glory lead. On 10th September he married a 23-year-old, Melbourne-born domestic servant, Annie Elizabeth Watson, at her father’s home in the Adelaide suburb of Unley; the young couple lived nearby at Parkside and were to have two children.

Lawrence C Weathers VC

Enlisting in the Australian Imperial Force on 3rd February 1916, Weathers embarked with the 43rd Battalion in June. After further training on Salisbury Plain, England, in November he was taken with units of the 3rd Division to the Western Front. Sickness confined him to hospital from January to April 1917. On the night of 10th June, during an operation at Messines, Belgium, he was wounded and was away from his battalion until 3rd December. Promoted lance-corporal on 21st March 1918, he was gassed on 26th May at Bois L’Abbé in the Villers-Bretonneux sector, France, but rejoined his unit within a month.

After the capture of Mont St Quentin, the duty of clearing a small area criss-crossed with barbed wire entanglements north of Péronne fell to the 43rd Battalion on 2nd September. The major objective was Scutari trench. The unit went forward at 5.35 that morning, but was halted by scything fire. From the vanguard Weathers attacked the enemy garrison and killed its leader. Replenishing his stock of bombs, with three others he went back into the fray. Given cover by a comrade’s Lewis-gun, Weathers seemed oblivious to danger as he scaled the German parapet and hurled his bombs into the trench below. By 7 a.m. resistance ceased. He took three machine-guns and 180 prisoners back to his lines. His uniform caked in mud, with blood streaming down his face and five days stubble, Weathers looked quite a ‘card’ to his mates when he returned with souvenired German binoculars and pistols festooning him like a Christmas tree. The strain and the release of nerves showed in his chatter of how he had ‘put the wind up’ the enemy. He was recommended for the Victoria Cross.

Promoted temporary corporal on 10th September 1918 (his fifth wedding anniversary), Weathers received a short respite from action before moving with his battalion to attack the Hindenburg line between Rosnoy and Bony. At dawn on the 29th the engagement commenced; wounded by shell-fire, Weathers died before dusk. He never knew of his V.C. which was gazetted on Christmas Eve, 1918. Buried in Unicorn Cemetery, Vendhuille, France, he was survived by his wife and sons. His elder brother Private Thomas Francis Weathers, 9th Light Horse Regiment, had died from wounds on 15th June 1915 at Gallipoli.

Lawrence Weathers’ Victoria Cross was presented to his widow, Annie Elizabeth Weathers, by General Sir William Birdwood in Adelaide on the 6th March 1920. The Victoria Cross, on its own without the two campaign medals, awarded to T / Corporal Lawrence Weathers, 43rd Bn, Australian Imperial Force was sold at auction at Noble Numistatics in Sydney on 8th April 2016 for AUS$500,000 (£268,000). The identity of the purchaser was not revealed, but the buyer did decide to donate the medal to the Australian War Memorial on 21st October 2016.

 

LOCATION OF MEDAL: AUSTRALIAN WAR MEMORIAL, CANBERRA. 

BURIAL PLACE: UNICORN CEMETERY, VENDHUILE, FRANCE.

PLOT III, ROW C, GRAVE 5

Acknowledgement:

Kevin Brazier – Cemetery Map.