Returned serviceman Ernest Durham would have been amazed to find  that after his death in 1949 he would become the centre of a story so bizarre I hardly know where to start.  😎

Private Durham signed up in 1916 with the newly formed 34th Battalion. It was made up of volunteers from the Mailand area in NSW. Durham  was a 23 year old dairyman from Singleton. He is almost certainly among the men in the following photo, taken just before embarkation.

Ernest Durham's Battalion in 1916.

Source- Alchetron.com.

In the final months of the war Ernest  was fighting  on the Western Front. On September 29 he received gunshot wounds to his legs and neck,  and was admitted to a field hospital at Rouen.

Service record of Ernest George Durham

Source – National Archives of Australia.

The hospital was an enormous complex of buildings and tents at the Rouen Race Course, and received  British casualties as well.

Progress  letters were sent to Ernest’s mother;


As Private Durham’s  condition deteriorated  he was evacuated to England. His left leg was amputated at the Bath Military Hospital. After complications with the stump and many weeks in hospital he was returned to Australia.

Our story now shifts to a British  soldier,  Percy Bush-Cox, who enlisted with the Leicestershire Regiment when he was 19. Bush-Cox was born in the village of March, near Wimblington,  in Cambridgeshire.

He is pictured below in uniform, circa 1916

Percy Bush-Cox, who impersonated Ernest Durham,

In September/October  1918 Private Bush-Cox and his regiment were also fighting on the Western Front. According to one report, he was wounded in the arm and, like Ernest Durham, was admitted to the hospital at Rouen.

He was then reported as missing in action.   In 1919 the Bush-Cox  family were advised that Percy was presumed dead. His name was added to the war memorial in the churchyard at Wimblington.

 

ERNEST DURHAM – POST WAR

After the war, the disabled Ernest Durham found employment with the Repatriation Department in Sydney. He married, and became the father of two children.  He died quietly in 1949 and was buried with full military honours.

Burial details for Ernest Durham.

Source -findagrave.com


Five years later another Ernest Durham died… in  Cambridgeshire. This death occurred in tragic circumstances, and would create headlines in both Australia and England.

The death certificate states that the man died from gunshot wounds, self-inflicted while the balance of his mind was disturbed. And his name? It’s recorded as ‘Ernest Durham, otherwise Percy Bush Cox.

The shooting took place at the village of Sawston, about thirty miles from Wimblington. Ernest Durham, aka Percy Buch-Cox, died in his garden. He had rushed from the house in pursuit of his cleaning lady, who he shot and wounded before turning the gun on himself.   How on earth had all this come to pass? And how (and why)  did an English soldier assume the identity of an Aussie digger?

FOR THE SECOND PART OF THE STORY, CLICK HERE.

MY SINCERE THANKS TO DAVID EDWARDS, ARCHIVIST AT  THE MARCH & DISTRICT MUSEUM, FOR HIS  VALUABLE  ASSISTANCE .

INFORMATION ON THE 34TH BATTALION A.I.F.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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