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  • Gallipoli and the Anzacs
    • Why did Anzacs land at Gallipoli?
      • Who were the Anzacs and the Australian Imperial Force?
        • General-Birdwood: the 'soul of Anzac'
      • 18 March 1915
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    • The battle of the landing
      • A description of the landing
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        • Military censorship at Gallipoli
        • The Gallipoli letter to Asquith PM
        • War diary: 24 April–25 July
        • Biography: Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett (1881–1931)
      • War correspondent Charles Bean
        • Biography: C.E.W Bean 1879–1968
    • North Beach and the Sari Bair Range
      • The landings at North Beach, 25 April 1915
      • The Anzac outposts, April–July 1915
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      • The development of the North Beach base (September–November 1915)
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      • Remembering Anzac
    • Submarines in the Dardanelles, 1915
      • Lieutenant Commander Henry Stoker and HMAS Submarine AE2
      • AE2 documents
      • Submarines in the Dardanelles gallery
      • Lieutenant Norman Holbrook VC and the HMS Submarine B11
      • An illustrated voyage of the AE2
    • The 'first to fall', 25 April 1915
      • Australian 'first to fall' burial sites
      • The 59 men killed from 11th Battalion
    • Digging in, fighting back
      • The second Battle of Krithia, 8 May 1915
      • The Turkish Attack, 19 May 1915
      • The August Offensive and the Battle of Lone Pine, 6–10 August 1915
      • Hill 60, 21–28 August 1915
    • Bravery awards at Gallipoli
      • The Battle of Lone Pine
        • Gallery: the Battle of Lone Pine
        • Gallery: Lone Pine today
      • Corporal Alexander Burton, Corporal William Dunstan and Lieutenant Frederick Tubb
        • Biography of Alexander Burton (1893-1915)
        • Biography of William Dunstan (1895-1957)
        • Biography of Frederick Tubb (1881–1917)
      • Private John Hamilton
        • Biography of John Hamilton (1896-1961)
        • John Wren collage 1920
      • Lance Corporal Leonard Keysor
        • Biography: Leonard Keysor (1885-1951)
      • Captain Alfred Shout
        • Biography: Alfred Shout (1881–1915)
      • Lieutenant William Symons
        • Biography: William Symons (1889–1948)
      • Lance Corporal Albert Jacka
        • Biography: Albert Jacka (1893–1932)
      • Second–Lieutenant Hugo Throssell
        • Biography: Hugo Throssell (1884–1933)
        • Documents: Hugo Throssell VC
      • Corporal Cyril Bassett
        • Biography: Cyril Bassett (1892–1983)
      • Lance-Corporal Walter Parker
    • Nurses at Gallipoli
      • The nurses' experience of Gallipoli from their letters
      • Life on Lemnos: excerpts from Lance Corporal Archibald Barwick's diary
      • Pictures of life on Lemnos
    • Leaving Gallipoli
      • Remembering Anzac
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      • August–December 1914
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  • Locations
    • A walk around Anzac battlefield sites
      • North Beach Anzac commemorative battlefield site
      • Ari Burnu Cemetery battlefield site
      • Anzac Cove battlefield site
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      • Shrapnel Valley Cemetery battlefield site
      • Brighton Beach – Coast Road battlefield site
      • Artillery Road – Shell Green battlefield site
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      • Overlooking North Beach at Walker's Ridge
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    • Explore Helles area sites
      • Kilitbahir Fort and Corporal Seyit Memorial, Kilitbahir
      • Seddülbahir Fort, V Beach and Yahya Çavuş Memorial, Seddülbahir
      • Charles Doughty-Wylie's Grave, Seddülbahir
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      • Morto Bay French Cemetery
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      • The Nusret, Çanakkale
      • Fort Dardanos
      • Kumkale
    • Explore Turkish Memorials
      • The Nusret, Çanakkale Strait Commandery Military Museum
      • Dur Yolcu Memorial, Kilitbahir
      • Kilitbahir and the Ramparts
      • Seddülbahir Fort and Ertuğrul Cove
      • Çanakkale Sehitleri Aniti (Çanakkale Martyrs Memorial), Morto Bay
      • Atatürk Evi (Atatürk’s House), Bigali, Gallipoli
      • Kanlisirt Aniti (Kanlisirt Memorial), Anzac
      • Conkbayiri Atatürk Aniti (Atatürk Memorial), Conkbayiri
    • Explore northern war cemeteries
      • 4th Battalion Parade Ground Cemetery
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      • Embarkation Pier Cemetery
      • Green Hill Cemetery
      • Hill 10 Cemetery
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      • Lala Baba Cemetery
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      • No.2 Outpost Cemetery
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    • Explore southern war cemeteries
      • Twelve Tree Copse Cemetery and Twelve Tree Copse (New Zealand) Memorial
      • The French War Cemetery and Çanakkale Martyrs Memorial
      • Helles Memorial
      • Lancashire Landing Cemetery
      • Pink Farm Cemetery
      • Redoubt Cemetery
      • Skew Bridge Cemetery
      • V Beach Cemetery
      • Wylie Grove
    • North Beach Anzac commemorative site
      • Panel 1: The Dardanelles
      • Panel 2: The landing
      • Panel 3: Krithia
      • Panel 4: Turkish counter-attack
      • Panel 5: Sick and wounded
      • Panel 6: Lone Pine and the Nek
      • Panel 7: Chunuk Bair
      • Panel 8: Evacuation
      • Panel 9: Defence of Turkey
      • Panel 10: Anzac
    • A landscape of war uncovered
  • Resources
    • Strategic maps of Gallipoli
    • An artist at the Landing—Signaller Silas
      • Biography: Ellis Silas (1885–1972)
      • Silas' drawings: "Crusading at Anzac A.D. 1915"
      • Diary of Ellis Silas
        • Diary extract: May 1915
    • An artist at Gallipoli – Major Hore
      • Biography: L. F. S. Hore MC (1870–1935)
    • Anzac: a national heirloom
    • Teaching about Gallipoli
      • Operation CLICK: Anzac to Kokoda
      • Letters and diaries: two soldiers from an Australian country town – Yass, NSW
      • The Curlewis brothers
    • Anzac Day Services at Gallipoli, Turkey
      • Australian Peace Ambassadors (March 2008)
        • Ailsa Hawkins' Story
        • Emma Slack-Smith's Story
        • Jo Hardy's Story
        • Karen Throssell's Story

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  • Explore 25 northern war cemeteries

Hill 10 Cemetery

Cemetery at Hill 10

The cemetery at Hill 10 was constructed after the war by the concentration of graves from a number of British cemeteries in the area, and from isolated graves. Located close to the sea inland from Suvla Bay on the north side of the Salt Lake, north of the Anzac area, Hill 10 is a low isolated mound taken in the early morning of 7 August 1915 by British soldiers. The hill takes its name from its height, just 10 metres above sea level.

Of the 699 burials in this cemetery 549 are identified with the remainder commemorated by Special Memorials. There are only two Australian graves here - that of a Lighthorseman, and a man from the Royal Australian Naval Bridging Train. The Bridging Train was sent to Suvla Bay to construct and run a harbour for British forces fighting in the area after the Suvla landings of 6-7 August 1915.

West Beach, Suvla, Gallipoli. The 1st R.A.N.B.T place an old hulk ashore in position for outer breakwater to Boat Docks.
The burst of a Turkish High Exxplosive 8.2 inch shell alongside a dugout and right amongst our stores at Suvla. Note the tramway rails blown on end.
The 'Wardroom', a sandbagged dugout used by the officers of the 1st Royal Australian Naval Bridging Train, Kangaroo Beach, Suvla Bay, Gallipoli, September 1915.
A Turkish shell which missed New Pier and our lighters & hit the water at Suvla
West Beach, Suvla, Gallipoli. After 1st RANBT had made a Boat Harbour. Hundreds of thousands of sandbags were used in facing the docks.
British soldiers can be seen on the shore, with the ordnance dump and pier in the distance behind them.
Outside Naval Officers Dug Out at Kangaroo Beach Suvla. From left to right Staff Surgeon Morris RANR; Lieut Commander LS Bracegirdle RAN (Commanding); Lieut Bond RANR; Captain McRitchie RE; Major R Jellicoe RE (Legion of Honour) cousin of Admiral Jellicoe
Hill 10 Cemetery, Suvla Bay, Gallipoli.
Hill 10 Cemetery, Suvla Bay, Gallipoli.

Outdoor group portrait of members of the 1st Royal Australian Naval Bridging Train. Identified back row, second from the right, is 256 Chief Petty Officer (CPO) Artificer Farrier Edward Charles Perkins, of Essendon, Vic.

Members of the 1st Royal Australian Naval Bridging train. Chief Petty Officer Edward Perkins is shown, second from right in the back row. [AWM P06855.001]

Chief Petty Officer Edward Charles Perkins

Royal Australian Naval Bridging Train AIF, Special Memorial 47

Twenty-one year old Edward Charles Perkins, the fourth and last fatality of the Royal Australian Naval Bridging Train on Gallipoli, was the only one to be buried on the peninsula, the other deaths in the unit having occurred at sea or on Lemnos Island, Greece.

Special memorial of Chief Petty Officer Edward Perkins, Royal Australian Naval Bridging Train, killed in action, on 6 September 1915, Hill 10 Cemetery, Suvla Bay.

Special memorial of Chief Petty Officer Edward Perkins, Royal Australian Naval Bridging Train, killed in action, on 6 September 1915, Hill 10 Cemetery, Suvla Bay. [Commonwealth War Graves Commission]

The personnel of the Bridging Train received five days instruction in the use of pontoon piers before landing under the command of Commander Leighton Bracegirdle at Suvla Bay, Gallipoli, on 7 August 1915. Two days later, under heavy Turkish shellfire, a detachment rowed pontoons two miles to Old 'A' Beach where it constructed 120 metres of pier. Within five minutes of its completion, the British were evacuating their wounded from the pier. On 15 August, a member of the unit recorded in his diary:

Very heavy fighting has been going on all week and our casualties are heavy. We have passed 965 wounded through our hands one day and 956 the next.

[Sergeant Alfred Ernest Miles, Diary, PR00806, AWM]

Their work over the next four months was frequently carried out under heavy fire with more than sixty of the unit being wounded, injured or evacuated suffering from illness. On 6 September 1915, Chief Petty Officer Perkins, of Essendon, Victoria, was killed instantly – his head being blown clean off - by the direct hit of a Turkish shell on the dugout he was sheltering in. The exact position of his grave in Hill 10 Cemetery is unknown and he is commemorated by a special memorial.

Chief Petty Officer Edward Perkins, Royal Australian Naval Bridging Train, extreme left, top row.

Chief Petty Officer Edward Perkins, Royal Australian Naval Bridging Train, extreme left, top row. [The Argus, 19 October 1915]

The men of the RAN Bridging Train at Suvla Bay were the last Australians to evacuate the peninsula on 20 December 1915 at 4.30am, the last Australians having left the Anzac area at 4.10 am.

Lance Corporal Herbert John Peters

8th Light Horse Regiment AIF, Plot 1, Row 1, Grave 18

Grave of Lance Corporal Herbert Peters, 8th Australian Light Horse Regiment, Hill 10 Cemetery, Suvla Bay

Grave of Lance Corporal Herbert Peters, 8th Australian Light Horse Regiment, Hill 10 Cemetery, Suvla Bay. [Commonwealth War Graves Commission]

Lance Corporal Harold John Peters was the youngest child of John and Jane Peters, of Glenorchy, Victoria, and was described by his brother James on his Australian War Memorial Honour Roll Circular as 'a prominent member of the Stratford Rifle Club'.

The 8th Light Horse Regiment suffered enormous losses on 7 August when the men of the unit were ordered to charge in the first two waves of attacks on The Nek. The depleted force also fought at Hill 60, north of Anzac, later that month and on 30 August 1915 Lance Corporal Peters, aged 39 years, was killed. His family chose his epitaph:

Duty Nobly Done
For God, King And Country

In his home town of Digby, Victoria, his memory is preserved in the Avenue of Honour where a Miss Shaw planted tree number 13 in his memory. Peters' grave in this cemetery, well to the north of the old Anzac area, must qualify as one of the most isolated Australian graves at Gallipoli.

Official CWGC grave listings for Hill 10 Cemetery.

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