THE HON. GREG COMBET MP
Minister for Defence Personnel, Materiel and Science
Thursday, 12 November 2009
098/2009
WORLD WAR II DIGGERS TO BE LAID TO REST IN PNG
Greg Combet, Minister for Defence Personnel, Materiel and Science, today announced
that recently identified human remains of Australian soldiers killed during World War II
will soon be laid to rest in Bomana War Cemetery in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea
(PNG).
The remains were recovered from the battlefields around Buna, Sanananda and
Popondetta and have been identified by an Army investigation team, Mr Combet said.
An Army team positively identified two of the men from archived Army records. They
were Lieutenant Talbot Tim Logan of the 2/12 Australian Infantry Battalion, and Lance
Sergeant James Garrard Wheeler of the 2/1 Field Regiment, Royal Australian Artillery.
Lieutenant Logan was killed near Buna on 1 January 1943 and Lance Sergeant
Wheeler was killed near Sanananda on 1 December 1942.
Lieutenant Logan and Lance Sergeant Wheeler will be buried, with full military honours
at Bomana War Cemetery in Port Moresby, PNG on 1 December 2009.
The bodies of both men lay buried in temporary battlefield graves until discovered. The
Army investigation team undertook painstaking research over several months before the
identities of the two men were able to be determined.
The families of both men have been informed of their identification and are now
receiving support from the extended Army family through the Defence Community
Organisation.
The Army teams findings are the result of painstaking investigation, including the use
of DNA, and represent almost a years work. I thank them for their hard work and
dedication, said Mr Combet.
These men can now be laid to rest alongside their mates and their burial places
formally registered after all these years.
There were two further sets of remains which the team has been unable to identify. They
will also be respectfully buried alongside Lieutenant Logan and Lance Sergeant Wheeler
with a headstone marked Known Unto God.
A further four sets of remains currently in the custody of the Australian High Commission
in Port Moresby are believed to be those of Japanese soldiers who died of unknown
causes during World War II. Arrangements are currently being made to hand these
remains to the Japanese Embassy in Port Moresby so they can also be afforded a
dignified reinterment.
Media contacts:
Rod Hilton (Greg Combet):
02 6277 7620 or 0458 276 619
Defence Media Liaison:
02 6127 1999 or 0408 498 664
FUTHER BACKGROUND
Lance Sergeant James Garrard Wheeler
In January 1943 Lance Sergeant James Garrard Wheeler (23 years old) was part
of a two man Australian Artillery Forward Observation Party in support of 'I'
Company, 126th Infantry Regiment. Lance Sergeant Wheeler was the Forward
Observer Assistant to an Australian Forward Observer (Lieutenant T Daniels)
from 2/1 Field Regiment Royal Australian Artillery which were supporting a US
infantry unit operating near Huggins Roadblock. While attempting to retrieve the
body of Lieutenant Daniels who had been hit by a Japanese sniper, Lance
Sergeant Wheeler was shot and killed.
Lance Sergeant Wheeler was born on 29 August 1919 at Narrabri, New South
Wales. He enlisted in the Australian Army at Narrabri on 29 October 1939.
Lieutenant Talbot Tim Logan
Lieutenant Talbot Tim Logan (29 years old) was shot by a Japanese sniper just
short of the beach at Buna between the mouth of the Simema Creek an Giropa
Point on 1 January 1943. He was in command of 9 Platoon, 2/12 Battalion during
the attack to capture Buna Mission.
Lieutenant Logan was born on 10 February 1913 at Kuambu in Kenya. He
enlisted in the Australian Army on 20 October 1939 at Hughenden, Queensland.
PERSONAL STATEMENT RELEASED ON BEHALF OF
THE FAMILIES OF LIEUTENANT TALBOT TIM LOGAN
AND LANCE SERGEANT JAMES GARRARD WHEELER
Statement from the family of Lieutenant Logan:
"The family wishes to thank all those whose efforts now culminate in the
opportunity to bury our beloved father, grandfather, and great
grandfather.....Lieutenant Tim Logan. He served so that we may be free."
Statement from the family of Lance Sergeant Wheeler:
"The family is extremely grateful that Army has persevered in identifying of Jim.
It is extraordinary and fitting that Jim's burial in Bomana co-incides with the 67th
anniversary of his death. It is wonderful to know, that Jim will be at rest at last,
surrounded by his mates."
Media Note:
Both families have requested their privacy is respected.