HE HEARD THE DISTANT "COOEE"
OF HIS MATES ACROSS THE SEA

PRIVATE WILLIAM CHARLES DURRANT

AUSTRALIAN INFANTRY

17TH JULY 1918 AGE 40

BURIED: ADELAIDE CEMETERY VILLERS BRETONNEUX, FRANCE


There's a famous Australian recruiting poster that shows an Australian soldier with his legs bestriding the Dardanelles and his hands cupped round his mouth shouting, "Coo-ee- Won't you come?" to the men back home. Mrs Gladys Powell had this in mind when she chose her brother's inscription.
Durrant, a saddler from Rockhampton, Queensland, enlisted in October 1917. This was a year after the Australians had voted against the introduction of conscription by a majority of 72,476, and two months before a second vote rejected it by 166,588. He served in France with the 25th Battalion Australian Infantry and was killed in action on 17 July in an attack designed to "shorten and straighten our line" {Battalion War Dairy'.