Albury Grammar School Vietnam Honour Roll and Tobruk Shield Middle Image Image Image Image Image 0 / 0 - Prev Next Description / Background Vietnam Honour Roll Timber honour roll with names and dedication in gold lettering. The Tobruk Shield The Albury Grammar School, one of Scots School’s founding schools, had a very close association with the 2/23rd Battalion. Early in 1940, what was to become the Battalion began mobilising at the old Albury Showgrounds. At the time the showgrounds were adjacent to the school and are now the school’s playing field. Being next door neighbours required much cooperation on both sides. Members of Albury Grammar School Cadet Corps assisted the recruits during the initial training exercises and loaned the rifles to mount the first guard. Bayonet practice was held in the school grounds, now Wilson Oval, much to the delight of the boys. They also watched parades and route marches with envy as many of them were near fighting age. Six Albury Grammar boys later joined the Battalion. When the Battalion returned to Albury in 1947 to reclaim the Regimental Colours, they presented the corps with a valued memento of their service overseas, The Tobruk Shield. The shield was passed on to the corps in appreciation of the cadet's assistance. It is housed in a special display in the school’s entrance foyer. The shield was made by the Pioneer Platoon of the Battalion after it came out of Tobruk and moved into camp in Palestine. The manufacture of the shield was a team effort and was at the request of the Battalion Commander, Lieut-Colonel Evans. The metal alloy is from a German Stuka shot down in Tobruk and the wood backing was obtained from a Jewish community near Julis. The shield was awarded weekly to the particular company who had turned in the best results in terms of cleanliness of company lines, discipline and bearing. Probably the most important factor was the turn-out, drill and bearing of the guard mounted each night for the next 24 hours. The guard moved on a rotational basis between the four rival companies – “A”, “B”, “C” and “D”. The shield stayed with the Battalion throughout its campaigns at El Alamein, New Guinea and Tarakan. Every year from 1947, a platoon from each House in the corps competed for the shield on a drill basis as part of the ‘Passing-Out Parade’ until the corps was disbanded in 1982. Inscription Honour Roll [School Crest] Albury Grammar School In Honour of those who served our country in the Vietnam War Honour Roll [Names] Lest We Forget Tobruk Sheild Best Guard T Albury's Own 2/23 Batt Presented to the Best Platoon 1978 Top Platoon (No.2) C.U.O Cl Huddle 1979 No. 5 Platoon C. U. O. M. M. Lowing 1980 No. 2 Platoon C.U.O M. M. Lowing 1981 No. 1 Platoon C.U.O D. R. Hedge 1982 No 3. Platoon C.U.O A. L. McKenzie Veterans listed on this memorial Veterans listed on this memorial Sort by Family nameGiven nameWar Order AscDesc Items per page 1050100- All - Apply Last held rank Given name Family name Conflict/s Service No. Service Campaign Read more Gregory John Rixon 2787073 Army view Peter Russell Scott 2791298 Army view Peter Lawrence Simpson 2790965 Army view Peter Francis Uebergang 3795736 Army view Gregory John Whitla 3798938 Army view Simon Anthony Willis 3797687 Army view Pagination « First First page ‹ Previous Previous page 1 2 Do you know more about this war Memorial? Click here to learn how you can contribute Sidebar Address The Scots School Cnr Young and Perry Streets Albury NSW 2640 Local Government Area Albury, City of Setting Building – inside Memorial type Board/roll/plaque/tablet Recorded by Noelle Oke Honorary Archivist The Scots School Albury. Megan Perry. Conflict/s Second World War, 1939–45 Vietnam War, 1962–75