- William Scurry
William Charles Scurry MC, DCM (
30 October 1895 –28 December 1963 ) was anAustralia n soldier who during theGallipoli campaign invented the "self-firing" rifle.Scurry was born in
Carlton ,Melbourne and joined theAustralian Imperial Force in 1915. He arrived at Gallipoli just in time for the evacuation in late December. He and a friend, 'Buntie' Lawrence ["An ANZAC's Story", Roy Kyle and Bryce Courtney, Penguin Books, 2003 p. 184.] developed the self-firing rifle which worked simply by having water from onebully beef tin drip into a lower tin. When the water in the lower tin, which was attached to the trigger of the rifle, reached a certain weight, the rifle was fired. This ruse led to the Turkish defenders believing that there were still troops opposing them, even after the soldiers had been evacuated.Scurry was awarded the
Distinguished Conduct Medal and later theMilitary Cross . In 1916, when inPetillon ,France he was badly wounded when inspecting a new kind of fuse on an unexploded bomb. He was evacuated toEngland . He lost the sight in one eye. He returned to the front in 1918. On arriving back in Australia in 1919 he became engaged to Doris Barry, an Army nurse, who he married in 1920.During
World War II he served as commandant of theTatura Internment Camp , then with the rank of Major. He died on 28 December 1963.References
External links
* [http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A110569b.htm Australian Dictionary of Biography with photo]
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