Royce Woodhead – a soldier in the making

North Kalgoorlie School Cadets –  1911

North Kalgoorlie School Cadets, winners of the best shooting school cadets. Taken in 1909. Back row ? SMITH, Jack BACKHOUSE, Captain Lionel JEFFRIES, E STRANGER, Eric LEAN Front Row:  Royce WOODHEAD, Tom CLEMENTS,
B CAPLE,  Sid KINGS.

Young Royce Woodhead would have been 14 yrs old in this photograph although he look younger. The shooting was to be training for them just a few short years later with the start of WWI.  Royce was one of the first to enlist at the age of 16yrs and he was to die, killed in action, in Egypt on 11th April 1918 aged 21 yrs, in the final year of the war. He left behind his grieving parents in Kalgoorlie. His mother Clara and his  father, William Woodhead, master printer who had his business premises in Cassidy Street, Kalgoorlie.  As in the article below it would seem that his skill in the cadets with the rifle would play a part in his death, as he was singled out to be a sniper because of his marksmanship.

Woodhead Family – 1906

Woodhead Family – 1906

This photos show the family in happier times in 1906, when Royce was only 8 yrs old, his sister from left to right are Daphne, Doris Mabel who died in 1908 two years after this photograph was taken, Gwendoline and Maisie. There was also a younger brother yet to be born, Geoffrey, born in 1910.  We can only imagine the tragedy of this one family, sadly this was the fate for many many families who would loose their sons to the great war and their children to illness and accident. Royce’s mother Clara only survived her son by just over a  year and died in Oct 1919 and is buried in the Kalgoorlie cemetery. The family lived at 68 Ward Street Lamington, only a few houses away from my own home.

Royce Woodhead age 20yrs

 

Kalgoorlie Miner : 26 April 1918

Kalgoorlie Miner : 2nd May 1918

 

 

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My name is Moya Sharp, I live in Kalgoorlie Western Australia and have worked most of my adult life in the history/museum industry. I have been passionate about history for as long as I can remember and in particular the history of my adopted home the Eastern Goldfields of Western Australia. Through my website I am committed to providing as many records and photographs free to any one who is interested in the family and local history of the region.

Comments

  1. Very interesting story, Moya.

  2. Lance William Woodhead says

    Royce Woodhead was my uncle. much older than my father, Geoffrey William Woodhead who served in WW!!
    Royce died whilst serving in the Camel Corps.
    My grand father died a few hours before Geoffrey retuned by train from Sydney, so didn’t see either of his sons return from a war.
    Thank you for the posting.

    Regards, Lance Woodhead

  3. Mark Pope says

    Thank you Moya. You are doing a great job.
    Is Norm Sharp your brother?

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