Description

Title: The Coo-ee March, Gilgandra – Sydney, 1915

Author: Meredith, John

Condition: Very Good – Binding a little slack

Edition: 2nd Edition

ISBN: 0864170726

Publication Date: 1986

Cover: Soft Cover without Dust Jacket – 96 pages

Comments: A detailed account of the Gilgandra to Sydney Australian Imperial Force (AIF) recruitment march that occured in 1915.

Following the disaster of Gallipoli and the heavy casualties in France in the latter half of 1915, recruiting figures for enlistment in World War I had dwindled.  Numerous recruiting rallies became increasingly ineffective. 

 It was at this dark hour that Gilgandra’s butcher, R.G. Hitchen and his brother Bill, (the local plumber) had the idea of organizing a route march of volunteers to Sydney, enlisting recruits as they marched.  The idea caught the imagination of the public, and the Coo-ees (as the volunteers were known) became national heroes. 

The action of “Hitchen’s Own”  and the subsequent marches which followed were responsible for a dramatic upturn in recruitment figures.  26 men left the little western town on that Castlereagh River.  They were feted at each town on the route, and the stirring story of their march has become part of the official war history of Australia. 

Recruitment meetings were held in each centre and their number increased to 263 by the time they reached Sydney.  The story of that great march is recorded step by step – told first hand from the lips of the last survivors.

Ex Library copy and as such has a library stamp on the back of the title page. Label removed from the illustrated front end paper and this has liftet a section of the top layer of paper from this page, measuring approx 5cm x 2cm. Binding loose and is priced accordingly.