Home » Themes » Conflict » World War Two
2nd / 40th Infantry BattalionPrint Page
The monument commemorates the members of the 2nd / 40th Infantry Battalion who served in World War Two. Buried under the monument is a scroll with the names of all the 919 members of the battalion, of which 271 died in combat or as prisoners of war.
The 2nd / 40th Infantry Battalion was the only battalion in the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) recruited almost entirely from Tasmania. After months of training at Brighton Army Camp, it joined a detachment called Sparrow Force, sent on an impossible mission to defend the island of Timor from imminent Japanese invasion.In February 1942 they were confronted by a force of 23,000 Japanese troops. After four days of heavy fighting, cut off, low on supplies and completely outnumbered, most of Sparrow Force had to surrender. Most of the battalion were confined in a prisoner of war camp in Java.
Location
Address: | Davies Avenue, Queens Domain, Hobart, 7000 |
---|---|
State: | TAS |
Area: | AUS |
GPS Coordinates: | Lat: -42.875842 Long: 147.333375 Note: GPS Coordinates are approximate. |
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 23rd February, 2013 |
---|
2 / 40th Battalion
Sparrow Force
In memory of the officers and men of the 2 / 40th Battalion A.I.F. formed in Tasmania - and attached units of "Sparrow Force".
On 23 February 1942 this small unsupported force on Timor were forced to capitulate to a massive Japanese invasion force. After four days of intensive fighting 48 were killed in action and 130 wounded.
In September 1942 "Sparrow Force" were shipped to Java. In early January 1943, about 450 were sent to Singapore mostly to work on the infamous Burma Railway and then on to Japan to work in the coal mines. On the way, 87 from the Battalion were drowned when the Tamahoke Maru was torpedoed approaching Nagasaki by the U.S.S. Tang.
We left 242 of our comrades behind.
Lest We Forget
Unveiled on 23 February 2013
Lest We Forget
Lest We Forget