A charity or a right?: Repatriation of disabled ex-servicemen in Western Australia, post World War I

This chapter focuses on the troubled repatriation of disabled ex-servicemen in Western Australia, through a case study of Trooper Frank Leear Bolger who served with the 10th Light Horse in Gallipoli for nine months before being discharged as totally incapacitated and unfit for further service. Bolge...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Summers, Sue
Other Authors: Bobbie Oliver
Format: Book Chapter
Published: Black Swan Press 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36283
_version_ 1848754725381472256
author Summers, Sue
author2 Bobbie Oliver
author_facet Bobbie Oliver
Summers, Sue
author_sort Summers, Sue
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This chapter focuses on the troubled repatriation of disabled ex-servicemen in Western Australia, through a case study of Trooper Frank Leear Bolger who served with the 10th Light Horse in Gallipoli for nine months before being discharged as totally incapacitated and unfit for further service. Bolger is typical of many WWI soldiers who were promised much within the rolling recruitment campaigns across Western Australia that drew large numbers of men into the war effort. On their return they were confronted with a downturn of the economy and jobs shortages compounded by the vagaries and inconsistencies of the Repatriation Scheme in WA. As Bolger pointed out in a letter to the Department of Repatriation in Perth in 1921: “According to the terms I enlisted under in 1914 I don’t see why it [war pension] should be liable to suspension as it is not charity, but a right”. This and other rights – outlined in the rhetoric and enlistment policies of World War 1 – were all too often disregarded by the Repatriation Office in Perth, and often in contravention of instructions from its Melbourne headquarters. This chapter discusses Bolger and similar cases with a clear focus on the post-WWI repatriation policies and schemes for disabled ex-servicemen in WA, an often understudied aspect in the literature on returning soldiers.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T08:44:58Z
format Book Chapter
id curtin-20.500.11937-36283
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T08:44:58Z
publishDate 2014
publisher Black Swan Press
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-362832023-02-27T07:34:31Z A charity or a right?: Repatriation of disabled ex-servicemen in Western Australia, post World War I Summers, Sue Bobbie Oliver Sue Summers This chapter focuses on the troubled repatriation of disabled ex-servicemen in Western Australia, through a case study of Trooper Frank Leear Bolger who served with the 10th Light Horse in Gallipoli for nine months before being discharged as totally incapacitated and unfit for further service. Bolger is typical of many WWI soldiers who were promised much within the rolling recruitment campaigns across Western Australia that drew large numbers of men into the war effort. On their return they were confronted with a downturn of the economy and jobs shortages compounded by the vagaries and inconsistencies of the Repatriation Scheme in WA. As Bolger pointed out in a letter to the Department of Repatriation in Perth in 1921: “According to the terms I enlisted under in 1914 I don’t see why it [war pension] should be liable to suspension as it is not charity, but a right”. This and other rights – outlined in the rhetoric and enlistment policies of World War 1 – were all too often disregarded by the Repatriation Office in Perth, and often in contravention of instructions from its Melbourne headquarters. This chapter discusses Bolger and similar cases with a clear focus on the post-WWI repatriation policies and schemes for disabled ex-servicemen in WA, an often understudied aspect in the literature on returning soldiers. 2014 Book Chapter http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36283 Black Swan Press restricted
spellingShingle Summers, Sue
A charity or a right?: Repatriation of disabled ex-servicemen in Western Australia, post World War I
title A charity or a right?: Repatriation of disabled ex-servicemen in Western Australia, post World War I
title_full A charity or a right?: Repatriation of disabled ex-servicemen in Western Australia, post World War I
title_fullStr A charity or a right?: Repatriation of disabled ex-servicemen in Western Australia, post World War I
title_full_unstemmed A charity or a right?: Repatriation of disabled ex-servicemen in Western Australia, post World War I
title_short A charity or a right?: Repatriation of disabled ex-servicemen in Western Australia, post World War I
title_sort charity or a right?: repatriation of disabled ex-servicemen in western australia, post world war i
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36283