Summary

Newspaper cutting announcing the donation of a 'very handsome blackwood pulpit' to 'the parish church' by Mr and Mrs J.R. Talbot 'in memory of their only son, Gunner J. C. Talbot, who was killed in action on Sept. 22, 1917.'

The pulpit is still located at the Birregurra Church of England. It is inscribed '...in loving memory of our beloved son and brother, James Clive Talbot, killed in action September 22nd, 1917, aged 22 years. He has fought a good fight, he has finished his work; he has kept the faith.'

From a collection of material associated with the World War I service of Gunner James Clive Talbot.

James Clive Talbot was a 20-year-old grazier and wool classer from 'Yeo Vale', Birregurra, Victoria, when he enlisted to fight in World War I on 2 April 1915 (service #1350). As part of the 24th Battalion he served in Gallipoli and on the Western Front. He was killed in action aged 22, on 22 September 1917 in Belgium (during in the Third Battle of Ypres). His parents took the unusual step of visiting his grave in 1919 - out of the reach of many bereaved in Australia.

Physical Description

Newspaper cutting, roughly cut at edges. Paper is browed, with some foxing.

Significance

The James Talbot mourning collection is of particular significance since it documents a set of personal effects from a son lost at war, including a tiny photograph and engraved medal presented to his bereaved parents, and his colour patch, buttons and badges. Importantly, it also includes a large certificate from Ypres Reservoir British Cemetery, Belgium, including cemetery images and Talbot's details pasted into a box at the centre. (Further research may link this to his father's visit to the cemetery.) It provides an important insight into the ways Australians memorialized the distant graves of their loved ones (discussed by Bart Ziino in A Distant Grief, and others).

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