Through Mud and Blood to Victory, Geoffrey Hamlyn-Harris, 1944
Courtesy Robyn Murray.
Geoffrey Hamlyn-Harris spent 5 years in the army and was one of the remnant of twelve still in action, out of an infantry battalion of about one thousand men, after the Owen Stanley, Kokoda and Gona campaigns. After the war he lived in Stanthorpe for a few years where he was engaged in orcharding, and started to write. He moved to Caloudra but returned to Stanthorpe in his later years.
Courtesy Robyn Murray.
Geoffrey Hamlyn-Harris spent 5 years in the army and was one of the remnant of twelve still in action, out of an infantry battalion of about one thousand men, after the Owen Stanley, Kokoda and Gona campaigns. After the war he lived in Stanthorpe for a few years where he was engaged in orcharding, and started to write. He moved to Caloudra but returned to Stanthorpe in his later years.
Courtesy Robyn Murray.
Geoffrey Hamlyn-Harris spent 5 years in the army and was one of the remnant of twelve still in action, out of an infantry battalion of about one thousand men, after the Owen Stanley, Kokoda and Gona campaigns. After the war he lived in Stanthorpe for a few years where he was engaged in orcharding, and started to write. He moved to Caloudra but returned to Stanthorpe in his later years.