Raymond Leane

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Raymond Lionel Leane
File:Raymond Leane 1918 E03668.jpg
Portrait of Brigadier General R. E. Leane CMG DSO MC, General Officer Commanding, 12th Australian Infantry Brigade, and staff, 28 October 1918.
Nickname(s) Bull
Born 12 July 1878 (1878-07-12)
Prospect, South Australia
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Adelaide, South Australia
Allegiance Australian Army
Years of service 1905–1938
Rank Brigadier General
Battles/wars World War I World War II
Awards Knight Bachelor
Companion of the Order of the Bath
Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George
Distinguished Service Order & Bar
Military Cross
Mention in Despatches (8)
Croix de Guerre (France)
Other work Chief Commissioner of Police in South Australia

Brigadier General Sir Raymond Lionel Leane CB, CMG, DSO & Bar, MC (12 July 1878 – 25 June 1962) was an Australian Army officer who served in World War I, and later served as Chief Commissioner of Police in South Australia. The Leane family became famous for their extraordinary wartime service,[1] becoming known as the "Fighting Leanes of Prospect".[2]

Early life and career

Raymond Lionel Leane was born on 12 July 1878 in Prospect, South Australia, the son of a shoemaker, Thomas Leane, and his wife Alice. One of eight children, he was educated in the public school system at North Adelaide Public School until age 12, when he went to work for a retail and wholesale business, which sent him to Albany, Western Australia. He moved to Claremont where he was elected to the local council.[3] In June 1902, Leane married Edith Louise Laybourne.[2]

Leane was commissioned as a lieutenant in the 11th Infantry (Perth Rifles), a unit of the part-time Citizens Forces in 1905. In 1908, he bought a retail business in Kalgoorlie and transferred to the Goldfields Infantry Regiment. He was promoted to captain on 21 November 1910.[3]

World War I

On 25 August 1914, Leane joined the First Australian Imperial Force as a company commander in the 11th Infantry Battalion, with the rank of captain. Four of his brothers also served in World War I, as did nine of his nephews. The Leanes became one of the nation's most distinguished fighting families with two losing their lives.[4]

File:The fighting Leanes of Prospect 1915 P02136-001.jpg
"The Fighting Leanes of Prospect", 1915
Left to right: standing: Major Benjamin Bennett Leane (1889–1917), 48th Battalion; Lieutenant Colonel Raymond Lionel Leane MC (1878–1962), 11th Battalion; Warrant Officer 1 Ernest Albert Leane (1869–?), 27th Battalion.
Seated: Major Edwin Thomas Leane (1867–1928), AIF Ordnance Service, and Major Allan William Leane (1872–1917), 28th Battalion.

He embarked for overseas in October on HMAT Ascanius,[3] eventually arriving in Egypt. During the Gallipoli Campaign, Leane was one of the first men ashore at Anzac Cove, shortly after dawn on 25 April 1915, his company climbing Ari Burnu to Plugge's Plateau. On 4 May 1915, Leane was ordered to head a hazardous attempt to capture Gaba Tepe fort,[3] a prominent position just south of the Anzac perimeter. Landing from boats on the beach at the foot of Gaba Tepe, the force of over 110 men of the 11th Infantry Battalion and 3rd Field Company. The force was promptly pinned down on the beach by heavy fire. Leane signalled the Navy to remove his wounded from the beach, which they did with a steamboat towing a rowboat. Having determined that the withdrawal along the beach was impossible owing to belts of barbed wire, Leane then signalled the Royal Navy to remove the rest of his party. The Navy sent two picket boats towing two ships' boats. Destroyers laid down covering fire, but while the Turks had held their fire for the wounded, they laid down tremendous fire on one the withdrawing raiders. Many men were hit, including Leane, who was hit in the hand. The raid was a failure but Leane's leadership, courage and coolness under fire had impressed many and he was awarded the Military Cross.[5]

Leane was slightly wounded on 28 June 1915 during the 11th Infantry Battalion's attack on Silt Spur and Turkey Knoll, while supporting the 9th Battalion. During the attack on the enemy position on 31 July 1915, Leane was again wounded.[6] During the bombardment that followed the successful attack, he was speaking to an observer, when an enemy shell struck. The observer was decapitated and Leane was wounded in the head, but remained at his post. He was promoted to temporary major on 5 August, and commanded the 11th Infantry Battalion from 11 September. He was promoted to temporary lieutenant colonel on 8 October. Leane remained at Gallipoli until the evacuation in December. He was twice mentioned in dispatches and earned the nickname "Bull".[2]

On returning to Egypt, Leane was promoted to the rank of major on 26 February 1916 and appointed commander of the newly formed 48th Infantry Battalion, which was assigned to the 12th Brigade.[7] He was promoted to substantive lieutenant colonel on 12 March 1916. Like Leane himself, the 48th was both South Australian and Western Australian. Serving in the battalion were a number of Leane's relatives, including his brother, Major Benjamin Bennett Leane, as his adjutant, three of his nephews (Allan Edwin, Reuben Ernest and Geoffrey Paul Leane), and several other relatives. The 48th became known throughout the AIF as the "Joan of Arc Battalion" because it was "made of all Leanes" (Maid of Orleans).[2]

The 48th Battalion moved to France in June 1916, and was committed to the line at Pozières on the night of 5–6 August. Leane immediately reconnoitred the position with his company commanders, during which they were pinned down by a German barrage and two of them put out of action. Ordered by his brigade commander, Brigadier General Duncan Glasfurd, to place two companies north of Pozières, Leane realised that this would overcrowd the area and result in needless casualties. Glasfurd then gave Leane written orders to the effect, which Leane chose to disobey.[8] The two men were never again on good terms, but Leane's decision was fully justified. After a furious German bombardment of an intensity they never before or later experienced, the 48th met and turned back a full scale German counterattack. In just one day and two nights of battle, the 48th Battalion lost 598 men.[9]

Leane's brother, Major Benjamin Leane, was killed at Bullecourt on 10 April 1917 and his nephew, Captain Allan Leane, died of wounds received there on 2 May 1917.[1] The battalion suffered heavily in the failed attack, losing 436 men, but was back in action at Messines in June and Polygon Wood in September. Leane himself was wounded during the First Battle of Passchendaele on 12 October 1917. He was evacuated and returned in January 1918.[10] When he did, he found that his brigade had a new commander, Brigadier General John Gellibrand.[11]

On 19 April 1918, Leane, as senior battalion commander in the brigade, became acting commander while Gellibrand was away sick, with the temporary rank of colonel. On 1 June 1918, this became permanent. Leane was promoted to colonel and temporary brigadier general. He led the brigade at Villers-Bretonneux, Amiens and the Hindenburg Line.[4] For his services, Leane was Mentioned in Despatches eight times, awarded the Distinguished Service Order (DSO) & Bar,[12] was made a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG)[13] and a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB).[14]

Post war

After the war, Leane became Chief Commissioner of Police in South Australia in May 1920.[4] Leane crushed the Port Adelaide wharf strike in 1928, enrolling some 3,000 special constables, and he ruthlessly suppressed protests that he believed were communist inspired. He retired from the police force in 1944, and was knighted the year later for his service.[15]

Leane commanded the 3rd Infantry Brigade[4] in Adelaide from 1921 to 1926, when he was placed on the unattached list. He was moved to the retired list in 1938.[16] During World War II he commanded the Volunteer Defence Corps, the Australian version of the Home Guard, in South Australia.[4]

Leane lived in Adelaide until his death on 25 June 1962. He was buried in Centennial Park Cemetery, and was survived by wife, Edith, and six children: five sons and a daughter.[2]

See also

References

Citations
  1. 1.0 1.1 Gill 2004, pp. 209–210.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Hopkins 1986.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Gill 2004, p. 206.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 Hurst 2005, p. 203.
  5. London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 29438, page 590, 11 January 1916
  6. Gill 2004, pp. 206–207.
  7. Hurst 2005, pp. 202–203.
  8. Carlyon 2010, pp. 202–206.
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  10. Gill 2004, p. 208.
  11. Bourne 2002, p. 104.
  12. London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 30431, page 13179, 14 December 1917
  13. London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 30450, page 6, 28 December 1917
  14. London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 31370, page 6790, 30 May 1919
  15. London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 37119, page 2934, 8 June 1945
  16. Gill 2004, p. 209.
Bibliography
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External links