Edmund Herring
Repatriated to Australia
Early life
Edmund Francis Herring was born in Maryborough, Victoria, on 2 September 1892. He was also known as ‘Ned’.
Edmund began his secondary education at Maryborough High School. Then he received a scholarship to Melbourne Church of England Grammar School, where he was named dux of his year.
After school, Edmund studied at the University of Melbourne. In 1912, he received a Rhodes scholarship to study at Oxford University in England. His studies were interrupted by World War I.
World War I service
In 1913, Edmund enlisted in the King Edward's Horse, a British Army cavalry regiment. Then, in December 1914, he transferred to the Royal Field Artillery and was commissioned as a second lieutenant.
Edmund served in France and then Macedonia, where he captained an artillery battery. He earned the Military Cross (MC) in 1917 for his bravery in directing artillery fire from the front in the midst of heavy shelling.
In an odd twist of fate, shortly after Edmund was relieved from duty, his replacement was killed.
Although Edmund experienced heavy fighting in Macedonia, he was also struck by the area's natural beauty, writing of:
snow-capped peaks, of glassy lakes and glorious hills and glorious valleys, studded with quaint and attractive villages … for it is a wonderful country, and in springtime this year it was hard to pick a more beautiful scenery … with all its drawbacks, its unhealthy summer with its myriad of flies, Macedonia has treated us well.
Edmund nevertheless suffered, along with others, the debilitating side-effects of the powerful and very painful intramuscular anti-malarial quinine injections. He ended the war as a temporary major and his brigade's commanding officer.
Military Cross citation
For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty. As Forward Artillery Observer throughout the operations he carried on in very exposed positions under heavy shellfire. His information proved of the utmost value.
Interwar years
After the war, Edmund completed his studies at Oxford and returned to Australia in 1920.
Back in Melbourne, Edmund had successful legal career and took an active role in politics. He also continued to serve as a senior officer in the part-time Citizen Forces.
Edmund married Mary Lyle, a clinical researcher and talented tennis player, in the Toorak Presbyterian Church on 6 April 1922. Mary was the daughter of Professor Thomas Ranken Lyle, a mathematical physicist who was scientific advisor to the Naval Board during World War I.
In the 1930s, Edmund joined the secret anti-communist organisation, the White Guard, which comprised former soldiers willing to act to suppress communist subversion.
World War II service
During World War II, Edmund held several senior command positions in the Australian Imperial Force (AIF). He was an artillery brigade commander in North Africa and Greece, the scene of much of his World War I service. He ended his service as a lieutenant general and corps commander.
Life after service
After leaving the Army, Edmund became a Victorian chief justice in February 1944. His career in law had been interrupted by war but flourished in the post-1945 period, alongside his extensive community work.
Edmund died in Melbourne on 5 January 1982. A private service was held at the Springvale Crematorium on 11 January 1982. It was followed by a State Funeral at St Paul's Cathedral for the former Lieutenant-Governor of Victoria (1945-72) and former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria (1944-1964).