Tom Starcevich Explained

Tom Starcevich
Birth Name:Leslie Thomas Starcevich
Birth Date:5 September 1918
Birth Place:Subiaco, Western Australia
Death Place:Esperance, Western Australia
Allegiance:Australia
Branch:Second Australian Imperial Force
Serviceyears:1941–1946
Rank:Private
Battles:
Awards:Victoria Cross

Leslie Thomas Starcevich, VC (5 September 1918 – 17 November 1989) was an Australian recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest decoration for gallantry "in the face of the enemy" that can be awarded to members of British and Commonwealth armed forces. He received the award as member of the 2/43rd Battalion, during the Borneo campaign of the Second World War.

Early life

Leslie Thomas "Tom" Starcevich was born on 5 September 1918 at Subiaco, Western Australia, the son of immigrants: Gertrude May Starcevich (Waters; born, Dunkirk, Kent, England) and Josip Starčević (born, Croatia-Slavonia, Austro-Hungarian Empire). The couple were married in 1915 at Mount Magnet, Western Australia. Starcevich and his older brother, Joseph Frederick "Joe" Starcevich (20 August 1915 – 27 May 2007), grew up on a farm at Grass Patch, north of Esperance. Tom and Joe had eight siblings.

Military service

Following the outbreak of the Second World War, Tom and Joe Starcevich enlisted in the Second Australian Imperial Force: Joe on 23 October 1940, after which he was assigned to the 2/4th Machine Gun Battalion;[1] and Tom on 9 April 1941 (service number WX11519), becoming a member of the 2/43rd Infantry Battalion.[2] Joe Starcevich became a prisoner of war following the surrender of Singapore on 15 February 1942. He endured harsh conditions in captivity, including forced labour at Japanese prisoner of war camps at Changi Prison, the Burma-Thailand Railway and Nagasaki, Japan but survived the war.[3]

Tom Starcevich served with the 2/43rd Battalion in the North African campaign and was wounded in the thigh on 17 July 1942 at Ruin Ridge, Egypt during the First Battle of El Alamein.[4] [5] He also saw action the following year in the Huon Peninsula during the New Guinea campaign.

The 9th Division landed in Brunei Bay on 10 June 1945 with the 2/43rd Battalion landing at Labuan Island. Nine days later the battalion moved to the mainland and, on 28 June, during the capture of Beaufort, during fighting in North Borneo, the lead section of Starcevich's company came under fire from two Japanese machine-gun positions and suffered casualties. Starcevich, a Bren gunner, moved forward and assaulted each position in turn, killing five Japanese soldiers and causing the remainder of the machine guns' crews to retreat. Later that day, when the company was again held up by two machine gun positions, Starcevich adopted similar tactics and single-handedly captured both positions, killing seven members of their crews. For his actions, Starcevich was awarded the Victoria Cross. The citation for the award was published in the London Gazette on 6 November 1945, reading:

Starcevich was presented with the ribbon of the Victoria Cross by Brigadier Victor Windeyer, during a unit parade at Papar in North Borneo on 12 November 1945.[6] He was presented with the actual medal at Government House, Perth on 27 May 1947 by Sir James Mitchell, Lieutenant Governor of Western Australia.[7]

Starcevich held the rank of private throughout his military service and was discharged on 12 February 1946, as part of the prolonged demobilisation process that followed the end of hostilities. He reportedly wanted to re-enlist in the Australian Army during the Korean War, but his wife talked him out of it.[8]

Post-war life

Starcevich spent the first four years after the war as a motor vehicle sales representative in Perth. He married Kathleen Betty Warr (Hardy), at the Perth registry office on 19 December 1947.[9] The couple had three children but divorced in 1969.

From 1951, Tom and Joe Starcevich obtained and jointly worked a 4300acres soldier settlement wheat and sheep farm at Carnamah. In 1981, Tom Starcevich moved back to Grass Patch, where he had bought a small farm. He died at Esperance, Western Australia, on 17 November 1989, aged 71.

Memorials

The track in Borneo on which Starcevich's celebrated action occurred was later renamed Victoria Cross Road. He is also commemorated by Starcevich Monument.

Starcevich's VC is on display at the Army Museum of Western Australia, in Fremantle, Western Australia. A bronze statue of Starcevich was unveiled at Grass Patch in 1995. The Leslie Starcevich Ward at the former Repatriation General Hospital, Hollywood is named in his honour.

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.ww2roll.gov.au/Veteran.aspx?serviceId=A&veteranId=745042 World War Two Nominal Roll, 2002, "Starcevich, Joseph Frederick"
  2. http://www.ww2roll.gov.au/Veteran.aspx?serviceId=A&veteranId=845615 World War Two Nominal Roll, 2002, "Starcevich, Leslie Thomas"
  3. Joe Starcevich avoided the atomic bombing of Nagasaki in 1945 partly because he was hospitalised, after breaking his hip when a tunnel collapsed in a coalmine. A doctor who was also a prisoner of war set Starcevich's leg without anesthetic or antibiotics, and using the only metal pin available: a spoke from a bicycle wheel. The Hon. Peter Foss, 2004, "Anzac Day Amendment Bill 2004 Second Reading", Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), Parliament of Western Australia, 28 September 2004, p4.
  4. http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/starcevich-leslie-thomislav-thomas-15544 Australian Dictionary of Biography
  5. http://www.awm.gov.au/people/8377.asp Australian War Memorial (n.d.), "People profiles: Private Leslie Thomas Starcevich VC"
  6. Caption to AWM photograph 124957
  7. Dennis Pillinger and Anthony Staunton. Victoria Cross presentations and locations, 2000,
  8. https://archive.today/20130219165759/http://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/Parliamentary_Departments/Parliamentary_Library/pubs/BN/1011/Index/Starcevich Parliamentary Library [Commonwealth of Australia], 2012, "Leslie Thomas Starcevich"
  9. The Daily News (Perth), 19 December 1947, pg 1.