Milton Public Library

Missing in action, Australia's World War I Grave Services, an astonishing story of misconduct, fraud and hoaxing, Marianne Van Velzen

Label
Missing in action, Australia's World War I Grave Services, an astonishing story of misconduct, fraud and hoaxing, Marianne Van Velzen
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Missing in action
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Marianne Van Velzen
Sub title
Australia's World War I Grave Services, an astonishing story of misconduct, fraud and hoaxing
Summary
By the end of World War I, 45,000 Australians had died on the Western Front. Some bodies had been hastily buried mid-battle in massed graves; others were mutilated beyond recognition. Often men were simply listed as 'Missing in Action' because nobody knew for sure. Lieutenant Robert Burns was one of the missing, and now that the guns had fallen silent his father wanted to know what had become of his son. He wasn't the only one looking for answers. A loud clamor arose from Australia for information and the need for the dead to be buried respectfully. Many of the Australians charged with the grizzly task of finding and reburying the dead were deeply flawed. Each had his own reasons for preferring to remain in France instead of returning home. In the end there was a great scandal, with allegations of 'body hoaxing' and gross misappropriation of money and army possessions leading to two highly secretive inquiries. Untold until now, Missing in Action is the compelling and unexpected story of those dark days and darker deeds and a father's desperate search for his son's remains
Target audience
adult
Classification
Contributor
Content