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Roland Griffiths Marsh

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Allegiance
  
Australia

Other work
  
Author

Battles and wars
  
World War II

Years of service
  
1940 - 1945

Name
  
Roland Griffiths-Marsh

Rank
  
Corporal

Service number
  
VX16310

Role
  
Author

Service/branch
  
Australian Army

Battles/wars
  
Second World War

Awards
  
Military Medal


Roland Griffiths-Marsh httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
22 April 1923 Penang, Malaya (
1923-04-22
)

Unit
  
2/8th Battalion Z Special Unit

Died
  
December 29, 2012, Queensland, Australia

Books
  
The Sixpenny Soldier, I was Only Sixteen

Roland Griffiths-Marsh, MM (22 April 1923 – 29 December 2012) was an Australian soldier and author.

Contents

Early life

Griffiths-Marsh was born in Penang, then part of the British Straits Settlements, on 22 April 1923 and grew up in Hai Phong, Indochina. On 29 February 1940, at the age of sixteen, he enlisted with the Second Australian Imperial Force, taking his older brother's name and date of birth to ensure entry.

Second World War

Griffiths-Marsh served in the 2/8th Battalion in North Africa and New Guinea, before being recruited to Z Special Unit, a specialist reconnaissance and sabotage unit that operated behind Japanese lines in South-East Asia. He served in the Semut I operation in North Borneo, and was parachuted behind enemy lines to conduct guerrilla warfare with the assistance of local fighters in early June 1945. He was awarded the Military Medal for his service with Z Special Unit, the award was gazetted on 6 March 1946, dated 2 November 1945. The original recommendation for the award states:

...he quickly formed a small guerilla [sic] force to harass the Japs escaping through the area. He showed a quick grasp of native mentality and a real ability to lead native troops... In this area he killed 34 Japanese and captured 4. In August he took charge of blocking the track from SAPONG estate west to MAHAMAN in conjunction with 9th Aust Div which he carried out with marked success, killing a further 4 Japs and capturing valuable intelligence reports and maps. During these experiences, Griffiths lived wholly on native food and covered large distances on foot through dangerous country. At all times his bearing and conduct were of a very high standard.

Later life

Griffiths-Marsh wrote about his wartime experiences in his 1990 book Sixpenny Soldier. That same year the book was awarded both the The Nettie Palmer Prize for Non-fiction (one of the Victorian Premier's Literary Awards), and the Colin Roderick Award, awarded annually for "the best book published in Australia which deals with any aspect of Australian life" along with the H.T. Priestley Memorial Medal. This book was republished under the title I was Only Sixteen in 1995.

Papers by Griffiths-Marsh about the training of his native guerrilla force and service in North Borneo are held at the Australian War Memorial.

Griffith-Marsh died on 29 December 2012 aged 89.

Book details

  • Sixpenny Soldier 1990 Australia: Collins-Angus & Robertson. Republished as
  • I Was Only Sixteen 1995 Australia, Potts Point, N.S.W.: ETT Imprint. ISBN 1-875892-09-5 (pbk.)
  • References

    Roland Griffiths-Marsh Wikipedia