Norman Winning

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NicknameRed Steer
Born(1906-05-27)27 May 1906
Died3 December 1950(1950-12-03) (aged 43)
Buried
Subang, Java
6°33′27″S 107°45′28″E / 6.55750°S 107.75778°E / -6.55750; 107.75778
Norman Isaac Winning
NicknameRed Steer
Born(1906-05-27)27 May 1906
Died3 December 1950(1950-12-03) (aged 43)
Buried
Subang, Java
6°33′27″S 107°45′28″E / 6.55750°S 107.75778°E / -6.55750; 107.75778
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
Service years1940–1945
RankMajor
Unit2/8th Commando Squadron
Conflicts
AwardsMember of the Order of the British Empire
Mentioned in Despatches (2)
SpouseGeorgie Nell Morris Taylor
RelationsIsaac Winning (father); Eliza Clark Greenlees (mother)
Other workPlanter (Java), owned by Pamanoekan en Tjiasemlanden

Norman Isaac Winning, MBE (27 May 1906 – 2/3 December 1950) was a British-Australian soldier best known for leading the Salamaua Raid during World War II. He migrated to Java as a young man to work on a plantation. After the outbreak of war, he enlisted in the Australian forces in 1940 and fought against the Japanese in the New Guinea and Bougainville campaigns. After the war, he returned to Java, where he continued to manage one of the plantations. He was murdered there by anti-European rebels in 1950.

Born at Oban in Argyll on 27 May 1906, Norman Winning was the second child of Isaac Winning, a school teacher, and his wife Eliza Clark (née Greenlees). His father served in the Highland Light Infantry in World War I from 28 May 1915 to 9 August 1916, when he was discharged due to illness.[1] Winning was educated in Troon, Ayshire, and apprenticed at a shipping company.[2] In 1926, at age 19, he travelled to Batavia, planning to settle in the Dutch East Indies.[3] As a young man, Winning managed an estate owned by the Anglo-Dutch firm Pamanoekan en Tjiasemlanden in Java.[2][4][Note 1]

Military service

Personal life

Notes and citations

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