John Ryan. V.C.. Inspired
Diggers To Hang On 10 May 1941 The Argus (Melbourne, Vic) |
Story Of An Epic Deed That
Helped To Smash The Famous Hindenburg Line in 1918 By Keith Attiwill "You
can talk of your generals and your colonels and your majors," said the Digger, looking aggressively round
the table at our Friday luncheon club, "but where would they be without
the rank and file to do the job?" Don't look at me in that tone of
voice," pleaded the Major, "because I rather agree with you." Who doesn't'"
asked the Skipper "I'm a seafaring man, but I've read and heard enough
about warfare to know that if you can't rely on the private soldier, all the
brain work and organisation of the Higher Command
goes for nothing." All the
same, "growled the Digger, "it's not everybody that will give the
rank and file their due " Look
here," put in the Signals Officer". "I think you've got a
story or something". "Have you been reading about some super
private who saved the situation and won a peerage?" "Not
a peerage'" said the Digger "The VC." Then you
have got a story!" The Signals Officer looked triumphant "What
about giving him the floor, Skipper?" "He s
got it" said the Skipper, ordering the same again. John Ryan
was born at Tumut (NSW) in February 1890, said the
Digger. He enlisted at Wagga in December, 1915, and
went overseas with the 55th Battalion He gained the Victoria Cross on
September 30, 1918, the day after we began our assault on the Hindenburg
Line. He won his award as a private soldier, and as a private soldier he
performed prodigious feats of arms that almost put him in a class by himself. You know
how we battered ourselves against the Hindenburg Line, until Foch decided
that every sacrifice must be made to overthrow the German defences
there before 1918 ended. Ryan's
crowd was in it from the word "Go." Remember the artillery bombardment
of Jerry's lines? It began on September 26, as a curtain-raiser to an attack
by two American and three Australian divisions, plus Corps troops - about
200,000 men. Remember how the Americans went on, and the Germans popped up
from their underground "hideouts" along the canal and held up the
Aussies in the second phase of the operations? The Allied
plans miscarried. There could be no methodical advance covered by a coordinated
artillery barrage. Progress depended on the tenacity and leading of the front line of the troops. It was bomb and bayonet
business for the Diggers. Sir John Monash labelled it "a private soldiers' battle." Day after
the hop-over there was some pretty tough hand-to-hand fighting in that tangle
of trenches, but it wasn't till October 1 that the Germans yielded and the
Hindenburg Line began the "pack up" that ended the war. Now listen
to what Jack Ryan did on that second day of the assault. He was one of the
first men in his company to reach their objective trench. He went into action
with such dash and used his bayonet in such an inspired fashion that his cobbers seemed ready to follow him anywhere. They took a
terrible belting from German artillery and machine guns, but they gained the
trench, and with Ryan's example to sustain them, hung on to the death. Then
they found there was a big gap between the left of Ryan's unit and the unit
on the flank. Before there was time to do anything about it the Fritzes
counter-attacked. Some of them got through the gap and bombed our lads from
the rear. Something had to be done - and done quickly. Ryan summed
up the situation instantly. All the officers and N.C.O.'s had become
casualties. Somebody had to take charge. Quickly Jack Ryan got together a few
men. With bayonet and bomb they rushed the Germans. They ran right into a
hail of bombs. Ryan reached the enemy position with only three men. The
quartet of Diggers was outnumbered, but by skilful bayonet work they killed
three Germans, and rushed the remainder with bombs. At that moment Ryan fell,
wounded in the shoulder. But his dashing assault had driven off the Germans,
and those who had not been killed or wounded by his bombs were picked off by
our Lewis gunners as they panicked across No Man's Land. For two
days Ryan's battalion and another fought skilfully
and bravely in the position won by his amazing courage and resourcefulness.
Inspired by the thought of what he had done, the men fought like demons and
kept the Germans at bay during one of the critical stages of the assault on
the Hindenburg Line. Yes, it
was a private soldiers' war, all right; and when an officer of the calibre of Sir John Monash
admits that the position couldn't have been taken but for the work of the
humble infantryman, who's to contradict him? |