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Where
do I find the service record
for a relation of mine who served in the Australian Forces?
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How
do I find out about the unit,
such as the battalion or regiment, my relation served with?
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I
do not understand many of the acronyms
and abbreviations used on my relation’s service
record. Where can I find a list of such acronyms and abbreviations?
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Where
do I find the service record for a relation of mine who served
in the Australian Forces?
Please apply
to:
National Archives of Australia
PO Box 7425
Canberra Mail Centre ACT 2610
Phone: 1300 886 881
Fax: 1300 886 882
Email
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- Information
about medal entitlements is available from the Directorate
of Honours and Awards: visit the web
site.
You will need to send a copy of the World War I service record
to the Army Medals Section of the Directorate if you are inquiring
about World War I medals entitlements.
- An online
database regarding Australian ANZACs in the Great War has been
developed as part of The
AIF Project: visit the web
site.
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How do
I find out about the unit, such as the battalion or regiment,
my relation served with?
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For
more information, the diaries maintained by the units during
hostilities can also be accessed at the Australian War Memorial.
These are a concise, accurate, day-to-day operational account
of the unit, but can vary considerably in quality and diaries
unfortunately do not exist for every unit that served. A microfilm
copy of the diaries can be viewed in the reading room of the
Research
Centre of the Australian War Memorial. If you are unable
to view a copy of the unit diaries yourself, you may wish to
engage a research agent to undertake research on your behalf.
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A
further source of information is the official history of the
relevant conflict, such as C. E. W. Bean’s The official
history of Australia in the war of 1914–1918 (Sydney:
Angus and Robertson, 1937).
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I
do not understand many of the acronyms and abbreviations used on
my relation’s service record. Where can I find a list of such
acronyms and abbreviations?
- The National
Archives of Australia has produced a fact sheet ‘Abbreviations
used in World War I and II Service Records’. It can be accessed
via the NAA
web site: take
a look.
- Volume I
of C. E. W. Bean’s The official history of Australia in
the war of 1914–1918, also contains a useful glossary. This
can be accessed via the Australian
War Memorial web site: take
a look.
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