*** Welcome to piglix ***

New Guinea Volunteer Rifles

New Guinea Volunteer Rifles
NGVR (P01283-006).jpg
The Salamaua platoon of the NGVR on parade in April 1940.
Active 1939–43
1951–73
Country Australia
Branch Australian Army
Type Militia
Role Infantry
Size One battalion
~300–850 men
Part of 8th Military District (1939–43)
Northern Command (1951–65)
Papua New Guinea Command (1965–73)
Garrison/HQ Rabaul (1939–41)
Lae (1941–43)
Port Moresby (1951–68)
Lae (1968–73)
Motto(s) Per Angusta Ad Augusta
(Through Trial to Triumph)
Colours Cream over Red, under Green bar
March Imperial Echoes
Engagements

Second World War

Decorations US Distinguished Unit Citation
Battle honours Rabaul, Wau, South West Pacific 1942–43
Insignia
Unit Colour Patch NGVR colour patch.PNG
Regimental Flower Flame of the Forest

Second World War

The New Guinea Volunteer Rifles (NGVR) was an infantry battalion of the Australian Army. It was initially raised as a unit of the Militia from white Australian and European expatriates in New Guinea upon the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939, before being activated for full-time service following the Japanese landings in early 1942. NGVR personnel then helped rescue survivors of Lark Force from Rabaul in February and March 1942. Between March and May, the NGVR monitored the Japanese bases which had been established in the Huon Gulf region, being the only Allied force in the area until the arrival of Kanga Force at Wau in May. The battalion subsequently established observation posts overlooking the main approaches and reported on Japanese movements.

Later, it inflicted significant casualties on the Japanese in a series of raids, and led them to believe that they faced a much larger opposing force. On 29 June, the NGVR and the newly arrived 2/5th Independent Company carried out a highly successful attack on the Japanese garrison in Salamaua, killing at least 113 men. When the focus shifted to the Milne Bay and Kokoda Track battles of August and September, the NGVR continued to man its posts overlooking the Japanese base areas. The Japanese were subsequently defeated in the Battle of Wau in January and February 1943, relieving the pressure on the NGVR. The battalion was disbanded in April 1943 due to attrition.

In the years immediately following the war the Australian Army considered re-establishing a military presence in Papua New Guinea (PNG), although there was some opposition among white settlers to the raising of native units. As an interim measure, the re-establishment of the NGVR was approved in July 1949. The unit reformed as the Papua New Guinea Volunteer Rifles (PNGVR) on 16 March 1951, initially as a whites-only reserve unit of the Citizen Military Forces (CMF). In March 1951 a PNGVR detachment assisted in relief operations following the eruption of Mount Lamington, which killed 3,466 people and left more than 5,000 homeless. Between 1951 and 1953 PNGVR elements were established in all the main centres of Papua New Guinea.


...
Wikipedia

...