John Wilson Crawford
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Paddington, New South Wales, Australia
Freshwater Gorge, near Cairns, Australia
John Wilson Crawford | |
|---|---|
Crawford, then a lieutenant colonel, at Tobruk, September 1941 | |
| Nickname(s) | "Cake Eater" |
| Born | 8 July 1899 Paddington, New South Wales, Australia |
| Died | 7 March 1943 (aged 43) Freshwater Gorge, near Cairns, Australia |
| Buried | Cairns war cemetery, Cairns |
| Allegiance | Australia |
| Branch | Australian Army |
| Years of service | 1922–1943 |
| Rank | Brigadier |
| Service number | NX378 |
| Commands | York Force (1942–43) 11th Brigade (1942–43) 2/17th Battalion (1940–42) 4th Battalion (1939–40) Sydney University Regiment (1933–37) |
| Battles / wars | |
| Awards | Distinguished Service Order Mentioned in Despatches (2) Efficiency Decoration |
Brigadier John Wilson Crawford, DSO, ED (8 July 1899 – 7 March 1943) served in the Australian Army during the Second World War. Prior to the war, he was a solicitor and an officer in the Citizen Military Forces. Called up to the army following the outbreak of hostilities in 1939, he commanded the 2/17th Battalion during the Siege of Tobruk. From April 1942, he commanded the 11th Brigade and York Force. He was killed in an aircraft crash near Cairns on 7 March 1943.
Crawford was born on 8 July 1899 in Paddington, a suburb of Sydney, to Irish immigrants. He had an interest in the military from an early age, joining his school's cadet unit and later, the Sydney University Scouts. After completing his university education, he qualified as a solicitor. During the Great Depression, he was associated with the Old Guard, a paramilitary group organized in order to prevent a hypothesized socialist revolution. Crawford was group clerk for quota 1 headquarters of the Old Guard's Pacific Highway nucleus. He was also active in the Citizen Military Forces, and by 1933 was in command of the Sydney University Regiment with the rank of lieutenant colonel.[1]