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12/699 Lewen Maughan Barnett, NZEF

1914/15 Star to 12/699 Barnett, KiA 25th April 1915

SKU: ZM300
$350.00Price
  • The 1914/15 Star issued to the next-of-kin of Lewin Barnett, who was killed during the Battle of the Landing at Gallipoli on 25th April 1915.

     

    Lewin Barnett’s military record says he was born in Auckland but his birth is not officially recorded anywhere in New Zealand. His parents were Harriet Frances and John Maughan Barnett of 212 Remuera Road. They had arrived in New Zealand from Yorkshire via Hobart Cathedral, Tasmania in 1893, with J. Maughan Barnett already a well-known virtuoso pianist, organist, choral and orchestral conductor, and composer. For some years after his arrival in Auckland in 1912, Maughan Barnett was organist and choirmaster at St. Mark’s Church, Remuera. Lewin was farming at Piopio when he enlisted at Te Kuiti one week after New Zealand declared war on Germany in August 1914. He joined 16th (Waikato) Company, Auckland Infantry Battalion, giving his age as 21. He embarked from Auckland on 16 October 1914 with the Main Body of the N Z Expeditionary Force sailing to Alexandria in Egypt, arriving 3 December 1914, where the NZEF combined with the Australian Imperial Force to form the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC).

    Lewin embarked for the Dardanelles on 12 April 1915 and was part of the ANZAC landing near Ari Burnu in the bay now known as Anzac Cove. In May 1915 he was listed as wounded and then missing in August 1915. His father Maughan, by then the first City Organist at Auckland, said his son had been reported as missing. ”There is every reason to believe that he is confined in one or other of the military hospitals or convalescent homes. This assumption is based on the receipt of a cable message received from a friend of the young man’s, stating that Mr. Barnett had been wounded in the right arm and had gone away in a hospital ship. So far Mr. Maughan Barnett, has not been able to trace his son, nor, has he heard front him, but in respect to that the injured man might have refrained from cabling under the impression that his case had been reported on in the ordinary war. The injury to his right arm might have prevented his writing. It was also hoped that he might be a prisoner in Constantinople, but then as a result of a Board of Enquiry at Moascar Camp at Ismailia in Egypt in January 1916 Lewin was believed to have died on the 25 April 1915 at Anzac Cove.

     

    The star is correctly impressed 12/699 PTE. L.M. BARNETT. N.Z.E.F.

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