- John Monash
Infobox Military Person
name=Sir John Monash
caption=
lived=27 June 1865 - death date and age|1931|10|8|1865|6|27|df=yes
placeofbirth=Melbourne, Victoria ,Australia
placeofdeath=Melbourne, Victoria ,Australia
allegiance=Australian Army
rank=General
unit=
family=
nickname=
enteredservice=
commands=Australian Corps
3rd Division
4th Brigade
13th Brigade
serviceyears=1884-1920
battles=World War I
*Gallipoli Campaign
*Battle of Messines
*Battle of Broodseinde
*First Battle of Passchendaele
*Battle of Hamel
*Battle of Amiens
*Battle of the Hindenburg Line
laterwork=Manager of Victoria's State Electricity Commission
awards=Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St GeorgeKnight Commander of the Order of the Bath Mention in Despatches (6)General Sir John MonashGCMG , KCB, VD (27 June 1865 –8 October 1931 ) was anAustralia n military commander of the First World War.Early life
Monash was born in Brown Street,cite web |url=http://gutenberg.net.au/dictbiog/0-dict-biogMa-Mo.html#monash1 |title=Monash, General Sir John |accessdate=2007-09-08 |author=
Percival Serle |work=Dictionary of Australian Biography |publisher=Angus & Robertson |year=1949] West Melbourne, Victoria, on27 June 1865 , the son of Louis Monash and his wife Bertha, née Manasse.cite web |url=http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A100533b.htm |title=Monash, Sir John (1865 - 1931) |accessdate=2007-09-08 |author=Geoffrey Serle |work=Australian Dictionary of Biography , Volume 10 |publisher=MUP |year=1986 |pages=pp 543-549] Both parents were ofPrussia n-Jew ish origin (the family name was originally spelt Monasch and pronounced with the emphasis on the 'ash' sound). In 1874 the family moved to the small town of Jerilderie in theRiverina region ofNew South Wales , where his father ran a store. The bushrangerNed Kelly once paid the young Monash a shilling for holding his horse during the robbery. This is a story which Monash neither confirmed or denied. Monash attended the public school and his intelligence was noted. The family was advised to move back to Melbourne to let John reach his full potential. They moved back in 1877 (Sam Aull). He was educated atScotch College, Melbourne underAlexander Morrison where he passed the matriculation examination when only 14 years of age, at 16 he was dux of the school. He graduated from theUniversity of Melbourne : B.A. in 1887,Master of Science incivil engineering in 1893, law in 1895 andDoctor of Engineering in 1921.On
8 April 1891 , Monash married Hannah Victoria Moss, and their only child, Bertha, was born in 1893. He worked as acivil engineer , introducingreinforced concrete to Australian engineering practice; he was the engineer of theMorrell Bridge /Anderson Street bridge over theYarra River , Melbourne, which opened in 1899. He took a leading part in his profession and became president of theVictorian Institute of Engineers and a member of theInstitution of Civil Engineers ,London .Monash joined the university company of the militia in 1884 and became a lieutenant in the North Melbourne battery militia unit in 1887. He was made captain in 1895, major in 1897 and in 1906 became a lieutenant-colonel in the intelligence corps. He was colonel commanding the 13th Infantry Brigade in 1912; on the outbreak of
World War I he was appointed chief censor in Australia.World War I
When war broke out in 1914, Monash became a full-time Army officer. Despite the anti-German hysteria of the time, there seems to have been no adverse comment on his German origins. When the Australian Imperial Force was formed, he was sent as commander of the 4th Infantry Brigade to
Egypt .In 1915 his brigade, as part of the
New Zealand and Australian Division under Major General Godley, participated in the disastrous Gallipoli campaign against the Ottoman Army. The brigade initially defended the line betweenPope's Hill andCourtney's Post , and the valley behind this line became known as "Monash Valley". There he made a name for himself with his independent decision-making and his organisational ability. He was promoted tobrigadier-general in July.During the August offensive, Monash's objective was the capture of Hill 971, the highest point on the Sari Bair range, but a failure to get his troops through poorly mapped mountainous terrain prior to the battle resulted in disaster for the last co-ordinated effort to defeat the Turkish forces on the
Gallipoli Peninsula. This marked the lowest point of his military career.He commanded the final significant assault of the Gallipoli fighting in the attack on Hill 60 on
August 21 , which was only partially successful. His war letters are full of accounts of the gallantry of the men he commanded. When orders came in December 1915 for the evacuation, he methodically supervised the exact course to be followed by members of his own command, and was in one of the last parties to leave.Great as the disappointment had been over the failure at Gallipoli, there was some comfort in the fact that the evacuation had been so successful. Forty-five thousand men, with mules, guns, stores, provisions and transport valued at several million pounds, had been withdrawn with scarcely a casualty, and without exciting the slightest suspicion in the enemy. Hours afterwards the Turks opened a furious bombardment on the empty trenches.
After a rest period in Egypt, by June 1917 Monash was in north-westFrance . In July, with the rank ofmajor-general , he was in charge of the new Australian 3rd Division. He trained the division in England with the minutest attention to detail, and led stage by stage to the nearest approach that could be improvised to the conditions of actual warfare. He was involved in many actions, including Messines, Broodseinde, and the First Battle of Passchendaele, with some successes, but with the usual heavy casualties. The British High Command was impressed by Monash's abilities and enthusiasm. In May 1918 he was promoted tolieutenant-general and made commander of theAustralian Corps , at the time the largest corps on theWestern Front .Fact|date=September 2007Lieutenant-General Sir
John Monash later described the recapture of the town ofVillers-Bretonneux on 25 April 1918 after the Germans had overrun the 8th British Division under GeneralWilliam Heneker as the turning-point of the war. SirThomas William Glasgow `s 13th Brigade, and Harold Elliott's 15th Brigade, recapturedVillers-Bretonneux . [ http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A090021b.htm ]Commander of the Australian Corps
Monash, not being a professionally trained officer, was free of the antiquated doctrines of many First World War officers. He believed in the co-ordinated use of
infantry ,aircraft ,artillery andtank s. He wrote::"The true role of infantry is not to expend itself upon heroic physical effort, not to wither away under merciless machine-gun fire, not to impale itself on hostile
bayonet s, but on the contrary, to advance under the maximum possible protection of the maximum possible array of mechanical resources, in the form of guns, machine-guns, tanks, mortars and aeroplanes; to advance with as little impediment as possible; to be relieved as far as possible of the obligation to fight their way forward."Charles Bean , the official Australian war historian, noted that Monash was more effective the higher he rose within the Army, where he had greater capacity to use his skill for meticulous planning and organisation, and to innovate in the area of technology and tactics. Bean had been no great admirer of Monash in his early career, in part due to a generalprejudice against Monash's Prussian-Jewish background, but more particularly because Monash did not fit Bean's concept of the quintessential Australian character that Bean was in the process of mythologising in his monumental work 'Australia in the War of 1914-1918'. (Both Bean and Monash, however, having seen the very worst excesses of British military doctrines and the waste of life on the Western Front, were determined that the role of the commander was to look after, and protect as far as possible, the troops under their command.) Bean, who had said of Monash "We do not want Australia represented by men mainly because of their ability, natural and inborn in Jews, to push themselves", conspired withKeith Murdoch to undermine Monash, and have him removed from the command of the Australian Corps. They misled Prime MinisterBilly Hughes into believing that senior officers were opposed to Monash. [Perry 2004, p. 346.] Hughes arrived at the front before theBattle of Hamel prepared to replace Monash, but after consulting with senior officers, and after seeing the superb power of planning and execution displayed by Monash, he changed his mind. [Perry 2004, p. 349.]At the Battle of Hamel on
4 July 1918 Monash applied his doctrine of "peaceful penetration", and led Australian Divisions, along with a small detachment of US troops, to win a decisive victory for the Allies. On8 August 1918 , theBattle of Amiens was launched. Australian troops under Monash and Canadian troops underArthur Currie attacked the Germans. The battle was a strong, significant victory for the Allies, causing the Germans to recognise that for them the War was lost. The defeated German leader,General Ludendorff , described it in the following words: "August 8th was the black day of the German Army in the history of the war". On12 August 1918 Monash was knighted as aKnight Commander of the Order of the Bath on the battlefield by King George V, [LondonGazette|issue=30450|date=28 December 1917|startpage=1|supp=yes|accessdaymonth=17 July|accessyear=2008] the first time a British monarch had honoured a commander in such a way in 200 years. [Monash was invested with knighhood with a sword belonging to Major Milne, deputy assistant quartermaster general, 1st Australian Corps Headquarters [http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A100510b.htm] , who by coincidence was also an engineer that worked on railways before the war] The Australians then achieved a series of victories against the Germans atChignes , Mont St Quentin,Peronne andHargicourt . Monash had 208,000 men under his command, including 50,000 inexperienced Americans. Monash planned the attack on the German defences in theBattle of the Hindenburg Line between16 September and5 October 1918 . The Allies eventually breached the Hindenburg Line by the 5th of October, and the war was essentially over. On 5 October, Prinz Max von Baden, on behalf of the German Government, asked for an immediatearmistice on land, water and in the air. [Perry 2004, p. 443.]By the end of the war Monash had acquired an outstanding reputation for intellect, personal magnetism, management and ingenuity. He also won the respect and loyalty of his troops: his motto was "Feed your troops on victory".
Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery later wrote: "I would name Sir John Monash as the best general on the western front in Europe".Impact
Monash's impact on Australian military thinking was significant in three areas. Firstly he was the first Australian overall commander of Australian forces and took, as subsequent Australian commanders did, a relatively independent line with his British superiors. Secondly, he promoted the concept of the commander's duty to ensure the safety and well-being of his troops to a pre-eminent position. And finally, he, along with the brilliant Staff Officer
Brudenell White forcefully demonstrated the benefit of thorough planning and integration of all arms of the forces available, and of all of the components supporting the front line forces, including logistical, medical and recreational services. Troops later recounted that one of the most extraordinary things about the Battle of Hamel was not the use of armoured cars, or simply the tremendous success of the operation, but the fact that in the midst of battle Monash had arranged delivery of hot meals up to the front line.After the war
Soon after the conclusion of hostilities Monash was placed in charge of a special department to carry out the repatriation of the Australian troops. He returned to Australia on
26 December 1919 to a tumultuous welcome.Later, Monash worked in prominent civilian positions, the most notable being head of the
State Electricity Commission of Victoria (SECV) from October 1920. He was also Vice-Chancellor of the University of Melbourne from 1923 until his death 8 years later. Monash was an active member of the Rotary Club of Melbourne, Australia's first Rotary Club, and served as its second President (1922-23).He was called upon by the Victorian Government of
Harry Lawson in 1923 to organise 'special constables' to restore order during the1923 Victorian Police strike . He was one of the principal organisers of the annual observance ofANZAC Day , and oversaw the planning for Melbourne's monumental war memorial, theShrine of Remembrance . Monash was honoured with numerous awards and decorations from universities and foreign governments. Monash was devastated in early 1929, when his eldest grandchild, John (who was 6 at the time), passed away after catching a rare influenza virus.He died in 1931 in Melbourne, where the
City of Monash ,Monash Medical Centre (the location of his bust, which originally resided in former SECV townYallourn ),Monash Freeway andMonash University are named after him. His face is on Australia's highest value currency note ($100). Also named in his honour isKfar Monash ("Monash village") inIsrael . Monash's success in part reflected the tolerance of Australian society, but to a larger degree his success - in the harshest experience the young nation had suffered - shaped that tolerance and demonstrated to Australians that the Australian character was diverse, multi-ethnic, and a blend of the traditions of the 'Bush' and the 'city'.In a final sign of humility, despite his achievements, honours and titles, he instructed that his tombstone simply bear the words "John Monash". He is buried in Brighton General Cemetery. [ [http://users.netconnect.com.au/~ianmac/travis.html A picture of Sir John and Lady Monash's tombstones] .]
References
Notes
Bibliography
*
Roland Perry , "Monash: The Outsider who Won A War",Random House , 2004
*P. A. Pedersen . "Monash as military commander",Melbourne University Press , 1985
*Geoffrey Serle , "John Monash: A biography",Melbourne University Press , 1982
*John Monash, "The Australian Victories in France in 1918", Hutchinson & Co, 1920
*External links
* [http://www.unsw.adfa.edu.au/~rmallett/Generals/monash.html General Officers of the 1st AIF: John Monash]
* [http://www.rba.gov.au/CurrencyNotes/NotesInCirculation/bio_sir_john_monash.html RBA: Sir John Monash Biographical Summary]
* [http://www.brightoncemetery.com/HistoricInterments/150Names/monashj.htm Sir John Monash (1865-1931)] Gravesite at Brighton General Cemetery (Vic)
* [http://www.monashforum.com/ Official Monash Forum]
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