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Private Joseph Edward Baylis
Monument

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Private Joseph Edward Baylis Veteran

Birth
Death
6 Oct 1917 (aged 37)
Belgium
Monument
Ypres, Arrondissement Ieper, West Flanders, Belgium Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Speech transcript
6234 Private Joseph Edward Baylis, 3rd Australian Infantry Battalion, AIF
KIA 6 October 1917

Today we remember and pay tribute to Private Joseph Edward Baylis.

Joseph Baylis was born on 21 December 1879, the third son of Joseph Edward and Emma Baylis of the Sydney suburb of Newtown. Known to his family and friends as "Joe", he worked as a labourer. Baylis married Bessie Margaret Sloyan in 1913, and the couple had two daughters.

In April 1916, Baylis enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force. He chose to allot four-fifths of his pay to his wife and daughters, more than the required three-fifths. After several months of training in Australia, he embarked on the transport ship Euripides from Sydney in early September. While training for a boxing tournament on board ship, Baylis slipped and broke his left forearm, so when the ship docked in England, he went straight to hospital. By mid-November he had recovered and returned to training. In early February 1917, he sailed to the British military camp at Étaples on the French coast.

In France, Baylis joined his unit, the 3rd Australian Infantry Battalion, which was made up mainly of men from his home state of New South Wales. The unit was still in the grip of winter, and the field diary notes that snow and cold temperatures continued into March. Baylis and the men of the 3rd Battalion spent time at the front line and in reserve areas.

Based in the Somme sector in France, the unit undertook further training with rifles, grenades, and gas masks. In the first half of the year, German forces withdrew to the Hindenburg defensive line, and the 3rd Battalion engaged in mobile operations seeking to take advantage of this withdrawal.

By the beginning of August, 1917, the 3rd Battalion had moved north to the border of France and Belgium, and were preparing for a major offensive. British commanders hoped to push the Germans out of Flanders altogether. Fighting out of the Belgian town of Ypres, the Australian, British, and New Zealand troops advanced the front line further east. By early October, the 3rd Battalion was fighting to take the village of Passchendaele and the ridge of high ground behind it.

On 6 October 1917, during an assault on a German position, Baylis was struck by a shell and killed instantly. He was 38 years old.

Baylis was buried by his comrades where he fell, but during the fierce fighting, many of these graves were lost. He is now commemorated on the Menin Gate Memorial in Ypres, alongside 6,000 other Australians who died in Flanders and who have no known grave.

In Australia, Baylis was survived by his wife Bessie, and his daughters Margaret and Irene. His grieving wife had the following poem printed in the paper:
I prayed and longed for the meeting
I thought so near at hand
But God wanted another soldier
With Him in the better land.

Four of Baylis's brothers – Samuel, Walter, George and Bowman – also served in the First World War. All of them returned to Australia at the end of the war.
Private Joseph Edward Baylis is listed on the Roll of Honour on my right, among more than 60,000 Australians who died while serving in the First World War.

This is but one of the many stories of service and sacrifice told here at the Australian War Memorial. We now remember Private Joseph Edward Baylis, who gave his life for us, for our freedoms, and in the hope of a better world.

Thomas Rogers
Historian, Military History Section
Contributor: David W. Rixon (47255631)

Service Number: 6234
Last Rank: Private
Last Unit: 3rd Infantry Battalion
Home Town: Newtown, Inner West, New South Wales
Died: Killed in action, Belgium, 6 October 1917
Speech transcript
6234 Private Joseph Edward Baylis, 3rd Australian Infantry Battalion, AIF
KIA 6 October 1917

Today we remember and pay tribute to Private Joseph Edward Baylis.

Joseph Baylis was born on 21 December 1879, the third son of Joseph Edward and Emma Baylis of the Sydney suburb of Newtown. Known to his family and friends as "Joe", he worked as a labourer. Baylis married Bessie Margaret Sloyan in 1913, and the couple had two daughters.

In April 1916, Baylis enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force. He chose to allot four-fifths of his pay to his wife and daughters, more than the required three-fifths. After several months of training in Australia, he embarked on the transport ship Euripides from Sydney in early September. While training for a boxing tournament on board ship, Baylis slipped and broke his left forearm, so when the ship docked in England, he went straight to hospital. By mid-November he had recovered and returned to training. In early February 1917, he sailed to the British military camp at Étaples on the French coast.

In France, Baylis joined his unit, the 3rd Australian Infantry Battalion, which was made up mainly of men from his home state of New South Wales. The unit was still in the grip of winter, and the field diary notes that snow and cold temperatures continued into March. Baylis and the men of the 3rd Battalion spent time at the front line and in reserve areas.

Based in the Somme sector in France, the unit undertook further training with rifles, grenades, and gas masks. In the first half of the year, German forces withdrew to the Hindenburg defensive line, and the 3rd Battalion engaged in mobile operations seeking to take advantage of this withdrawal.

By the beginning of August, 1917, the 3rd Battalion had moved north to the border of France and Belgium, and were preparing for a major offensive. British commanders hoped to push the Germans out of Flanders altogether. Fighting out of the Belgian town of Ypres, the Australian, British, and New Zealand troops advanced the front line further east. By early October, the 3rd Battalion was fighting to take the village of Passchendaele and the ridge of high ground behind it.

On 6 October 1917, during an assault on a German position, Baylis was struck by a shell and killed instantly. He was 38 years old.

Baylis was buried by his comrades where he fell, but during the fierce fighting, many of these graves were lost. He is now commemorated on the Menin Gate Memorial in Ypres, alongside 6,000 other Australians who died in Flanders and who have no known grave.

In Australia, Baylis was survived by his wife Bessie, and his daughters Margaret and Irene. His grieving wife had the following poem printed in the paper:
I prayed and longed for the meeting
I thought so near at hand
But God wanted another soldier
With Him in the better land.

Four of Baylis's brothers – Samuel, Walter, George and Bowman – also served in the First World War. All of them returned to Australia at the end of the war.
Private Joseph Edward Baylis is listed on the Roll of Honour on my right, among more than 60,000 Australians who died while serving in the First World War.

This is but one of the many stories of service and sacrifice told here at the Australian War Memorial. We now remember Private Joseph Edward Baylis, who gave his life for us, for our freedoms, and in the hope of a better world.

Thomas Rogers
Historian, Military History Section
Contributor: David W. Rixon (47255631)

Service Number: 6234
Last Rank: Private
Last Unit: 3rd Infantry Battalion
Home Town: Newtown, Inner West, New South Wales
Died: Killed in action, Belgium, 6 October 1917

Gravesite Details

Note from GN: 6234. 3rd Bn. Australian Infantry



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