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Redbank Army Camp Memorial Print Page Print this page

11-June-2015
11-June-2015

Photographs supplied by John Huth

The monument commemorates those who passed through the Redbank Army Camp in World War Two. It consists of a 1.6-metre wall and includes two story boards and a garden bed and path leading to the monument area. It also incorporates bricks from the original rifle range wall, which were made at Campbell's Brickworks in nearby Mine Street.

The Redbank Camp was home to the first Queensland fighting unit to be established for the Second Australian Infantry Force, the 2/9th Australian Infantry Battalion; with work starting on the camp in 1939 after war was declared. The camp could hold a maximum of 2500 men with this quota being reached a week after operation and little more than sixty houses being built by the Allied War Council  in a two week time frame to compensate for the growing ‘township’.  In the coming months mess rooms, kitchens, a hospital, a barber, a library and an entertainment area large enough to cater to 1000 men were also erected and used by troops.

The Redbank Camp represented all branches of the Army including: cavalry, artillery, machine gun, anti-tank, transport, medical staff and the Australian Lighthorse, as well as playing host to the American troops later on in the war. Thousands of men were said to have travelled through the camp to learn the basics of soldiering and later embarking on the local railway line to war, while many more men were sent here after returning from the frontline to be ‘de-mobbed’. After a number of months the camp had become a permanent fixture with sewerage, drainage, a water supply, a Post Office and a Commonwealth Bank being established within the camp, and a large area of the camp dedicated to resemble a battlefield, which included trenches and mounts for practice purposes.

After the war excess stores were dumped in surrounding mine shafts and two of the depots were transformed into a morgue when American military dead were repatriated after the war. Much of land was later sold to the Mines Department. While one storage hangar was said to be relocated no evidence has been found of its whereabouts and another was later destroyed in a fire.  Today not much remains of the Redbank Army Camp except a Stores depot, which stands to the south of the old encampment.



 

Location

Address:Bridge Street, Redbank, 4301
State:QLD
Area:AUS
GPS Coordinates:Lat: -27.599712
Long: 152.874965
Note: GPS Coordinates are approximate.
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Details

Monument Type:Monument
Monument Theme:Conflict
Sub-Theme:WW2
Actual Event Start Date:03-September-1939
Actual Event End Date:15-August-1945

Dedication

Actual Monument Dedication Date:Saturday 31st May, 2014
Front Inscription

Redbank Army Camp

Recognising the men and women who passed through Redbank Army Camp

Source: MA
Monument details supplied by Monument Australia - www.monumentaustralia.org.au