William Leahy (Australian Army soldier)
William Leahy (27 March 1893 – 11 August 1918) was an Australian recipient of the Distinguished Conduct Medal for an act of "great courage" during the First World War.
Early life
Leahy was born in Kilmore, Victoria to Thomas and Elizabeth Leahy on 27 March 1893. He had at least one sibling, a brother named John Francis who also served during the First World War.
First World War
Enlistment and training
Leahy volunteered with the Australian Imperial Force at Cootamundra on 24 July 1915 and embarked for training in Egypt aboard the HMAT Thermistocles on 5 October.
After serving with the 14th Training Battalion Pte Leahy embarked for Marseille aboard the Franconia on 8 August 1916 and proceeded to England where he was assigned to the 5th Training Battalion and 2nd Australian Divisional Base Depot (ADBD) before being transferred to the 45th Battalion Reinforcements.
Western Front
Pte Leahy only served with the 45th Battalion for 36 days before being transferred to the 19th Battalion while in France on 4 December 1916.
Distinguished Conduct Medal
The GOC 5th Australian Infantry Brigade recommended Pte Leahy for the Distinguished Conduct Medal on 13 May 1917 for actions which he conducted during what would become known as the Second Battle of Bullecourt:
The citation for Leahy's DCM appeared in the London Gazette on 18 July 1917. It was much less detailed:
Troublemaker
Before joining the AIF, Leahy had been convicted at Culcairn for "ritous" [sic] behaviour. Based on his service record, it seems such behaviour was almost routine with numerous military convictions recorded both before and after receiving his DCM:
- {| class="wikitable"
|- ! Date ! Offence ! Punishment |- | 8 February 1916 | Drunkenness; An Act and Conduct to the prejudice of good order and discipline | 3 months FP No 2 |- | 28-30 July 1916 | Absent Without Leave; Resisting a military escort | 7 days FP No 2
3 days pay |- | 5-8 October 1916 | Absent Without Leave | 96 hours detention
28 days pay |- | 24 January 1917 | Drunkenness; Striking a soldier | 14 days FP No 2 |- | 5 August 1917 | Drunkenness | 14 days FP No 2 |- | 4-5 September 1917 | Absent Without Leave | 7 days FP No 2 |- | 22 January 1918 | Unproperly dressed while in Bailleul; Absent Without Leave | 14 days FP No 2 |- | 16 February 1918 | Wilfully damaging property of a French civilian | 14 days FP No 2 |- |}
In total Pte Leahy was sentenced to over five months of Field Punishment No 2 (essentially heavy labour), four days of detention and fined an additional 31 days of pay.
Killed in Action
Pte Leahy was one of twenty members of the 19th Battalion who were listed as Killed or Missing in Action during an attack on German lines near Framerville on 11 August 1918—he was 25 years old. Pte Leahy is now buried in grave I.F.14 at the Heath Cemetery in Harbonnieres, France.