NZDF personnel retrace footsteps of WWI soldiers
Twenty New Zealand Defence Force (NZDF) personnel will march over the Rimutaka Hill this weekend, retracing the
footsteps of soldiers who made the same journey on their way to war.
More than two hundred people are registered to take part in an event to commemorate the service and sacrifice of
thousands of soldiers who served in the First World War, particularly those who served on the Western Front.
Between 1915 and 1918, around 60,000 soldiers who trained at Featherston Military Camp, marched over the Rimutaka Hill
before embarking in ships berthed in Wellington Harbour, which were bound for the First World War. All soldiers who
trained in Featherston went on to serve on the Western Front in France and Belgium.
Colonel (COL) Paul Curry will be taking part in the re-enactment event as a direct descendant of soldiers who made the
same journey during the First World War.
Seven of his great-grand uncles served on the Western Front and two were killed as a result of wounds sustained at the
front. Private Charles James Lankey (10thReinforcements, 2nd Battalion, Canterbury Regiment), died in the United Kingdom
on 22 October 1916, of wounds received at the Somme and Private Albert Bert Curry (19thReinforcements, 2nd Battalion,
Wellington Infantry Regiment), died of wounds at Passchendaele on 17 October 1917.
COL Curry said the march was a great way to commemorate the service and sacrifice of his ancestors.
“The Western Front was a major and important part of New Zealand’s involvement in the First World War, and much of it
was fought in terrible conditions,” COL Curry said.
“The majority of New Zealand’s casualties during the First World War were suffered on the Western Front, including a
number of my relatives who were either wounded or killed.
“Marching over the Rimutaka Hill and taking part in something my ancestors did a century ago will be an incredibly
meaningful experience, something I am doing for them and for my family,” COL Curry said.
Private (PTE) Simon Adams will also be taking part in the event, and will be marching dressed in a First World War
replica uniform, provided by Wingnut Films.
PTE Adams said he wanted to participate in the event because he’s always been interested in military history.
“To march over the Rimutaka Hill as those soldiers before me did is important because it puts the original marches into
perspective,” PTE Adams said.
“These were young men marching to war, not just names on a wall.
“It is a privilege to be able to retrace their footsteps, especially wearing the same uniform they would have worn a
century ago,” PTE Adams said.
The re-enactment march will begin from Camp Road, north of Featherston, at 3am on Sunday 27 September 2015, and will
conclude at Griffin Field, Trentham, around midday.
ENDS