- Henry Normand MacLaurin
Infobox Military Person
name= Henry Normand MacLaurin
lived=31 October 1878 – Death date and age|1915|4|27|1878|10|31|df=yes
placeofbirth=Sydney ,New South Wales
placeofdeath=Anzac Cove
caption=
nickname=
allegiance=Australian Army
serviceyears= 1899 – 1915
rank=Brigadier General
commands=
unit=
battles=World War I
awards=
laterwork=Brigadier General Henry Normand MacLaurin (31 October 1878 -27 April 1915 ) was anAustralian Army Colonel who served inWorld War I . He was shot dead by a Turkish sniper, and posthumously promoted toBrigadier General .Early life and career
MacLaurin was born on 31 October 1878 in
Sydney ,Australia . He was the son ofSir Henry Normand MacLaurin , the chancellor of theUniversity of Sydney . He was educated atBlair Lodge School ,Polmont ,Scotland ;Sydney Grammar School ; and the University of Sydney, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts. MacLaurin was later admitted to the bar inNew South Wales and became a barrister.One of his brothers was Dr.
Charles MacLaurin , a lecturer in medicine at the University of Sydney and the author of "Postmortem" and other books.MacLaurin enlisted in the
New South Wales Scottish Rifles while still at university and was commissioned as aSecond Lieutenant in 1899 and was promoted toLieutenant in 1900, Captain in 1903 andMajor in 1908. On1 July 1913 , he took command of the26th Infantry Regiment .World War I
On
15 August 1915 , MacLaurin was appointed to theFirst Australian Imperial Force as a fullColonel and given command of the 1st Infantry Brigade.MacLaurin was the youngest of the three original brigade commanders of the 1st Division, and more than ten years younger than any of his four battalion commanders. For a brigade major, he was given a British regular officer, Captain Irvine of the
Royal Engineers .MacLaurin's brigade was the last to come ashore at Anzac. By this time a crisis was developing and
Major General Bridges was ordering units to fill gaps almost as soon as they arrived ashore.During the afternoon of
27 April 1915 , when a Turkish counterattack threatened, Major Irvine collected 200 stray men inMonash Valley and was about to send them forward when the news arrived that the need for them had passed. Irvine went up toSteele's Post , where he observed the positions. He was warned about Turkish snipers, but ignored the warnings and was quoted as saying "It's my business to be shot at". He was fatally wounded by a sniper.Less than ten minutes later, MacLaurin was standing on the slopes of the ridge that now bears his name. Unaware of Irvine's fate, MacLaurin was in the act of warning soldiers to keep under cover when he too was shot dead, from the same point, possibly by the very same Turkish sniper.
MacLaurin was buried by his men near where he fell in a grave marked with a simple wooden cross. In 1919, his remains were moved to the 4th Battalion Parade Ground Cemetery, on the slopes of
Braund's Hill . For his services atGallipoli he wasMentioned in Despatches . Some weeks after his death, brigade commanders were upgraded from colonels to brigadier generals and MacLaurin was posthumously promoted to brigadier general.ee also
*
List of Australian Generals
*Normand MacLaurin , his fatherReferences
* [http://www.unsw.adfa.edu.au/%7Ermallett/Generals/maclaurin.html Henry Norman MacLaurin Biography] in "General Officers of the First AIF" (This reference contains several errors. See )
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