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Langford Wellman Colley Priest

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Years of service
  
1915–1919

Awards
  
Military Medal

Name
  
Langford Colley-Priest


Service number
  
6618

Rank
  
Private

Unit
  
8th Field Ambulance

Langford Wellman Colley-Priest

Allegiance
  
Australia/British Empire

Battles/wars
  
First World War Western Front: Battle of the Somme Battle of Racquinghem Battle of Polygon Wood Battle of Messines Second Battle of Villers-Bretonneux Battle of Mont Saint-Quentin

Died
  
February 1928, Balmoral, Sydney, Australia

Service/branch
  
First Australian Imperial Force

Battles and wars
  
Battle of Polygon Wood, Battle of Messines, Second Battle of Villers-Bretonneux, Battle of Mont Saint-Quentin

Langford Wellman Colley-Priest MM (September 1890 – 11/12 February 1928) was an Australian stretcher bearer during the First World War for the 8th Field Ambulance. He was awarded the Military Medal for conspicuous gallantry on the Western Front in 1917. He survived the war but later drowned in 1928, and his body is believed to have been eaten by a shark.

Contents

Langford Wellman Colley-Priest Langford Wellman ColleyPriest The Australian War Memorial

Early life

Colley-Priest was born in Glebe, New South Wales, in September 1890 to George and Rose Colley-Priest. Prior to his embarkation for Egypt and deployment on the Western Front he resided with his parents in Neutral Bay and worked as a warehouseman. Colley-Priest was an Anglican.

Service

Colley-Priest enlisted in the 8th Field Ambulance, part of the 8th Infantry Brigade of the Australian Imperial Force, on 19 May 1915 and embarked aboard the HMAT Ascanius on 9 November, bound for Egypt and the Western Front. While serving, he was deployed at the Somme, Racquinghem, Polygon Wood, Messines, Villers-Bretonneux and Mont Saint-Quentin. In 1917, Colley-Priest was awarded the Military Medal. The recommendation for the award noted that he displayed:

Colley-Priest returned to Australian in 1919, was discharged on 3 August and awarded the 1914–15 Star, British War Medal and Victory Medal. for his war service. He later wrote the official history of his unit. Notable for its first-hand accounts of the front from the perspective of medical staff, he sold his war diary to the State Library of New South Wales in 1919 as part of their European War Collecting Project.

Death

Colley-Priest went swimming on either 11 or 12 February 1928, at Balmoral Beach, Sydney and was reported as missing on 13 February. On 14 February, a search team comprising the Balmoral local police and the New South Wales Water police were unable to find any signs of Colley-Priest. After the police search, a man observed a floating body in the distance and alerted the police to its presence. However, as the police approached the body a "huge object heaved out of the sea, grabbed the body, and disappeared." Newspapers at the time suggested suicide and that the body had been eaten by a shark. On 27 February, an arm washed up on the beach near Dobroyd Point and was assumed to be Colley-Priest's. A suitcase with his clothes and a note stating "Colley-Priest gone mad" were found on Balmoral Wharf. Members of the Mosman and water police retrieved a portion of a shirt believed to have been worn by Colley-Priest.

References

Langford Wellman Colley-Priest Wikipedia