Elders Emms Mooney – Above

Cowra Library: Last Of The Cavalrymen: Memoirs Of Major-general Robert Harley Wordsworth

Written by: The Cowra Phoenix

page_2_image_0_1747122008.jpg
THE NATIONALS MEMBER FOR RIVERINAAuthorised M. McCormack, National Party of Australia, Suite 2, 11-15 Fitzmaurice St, Wagga Wagga, NSW 2650. Parkes Office opening hours: 9am to 5pm Monday to Friday 02 6921 4600 or 02 6862 4560 michael.mccormack.mp@aph.gov.auRM8404778Lic. No. EC6204Lic. No. EC6204RM6934997 THE NATIONALS MEMBER FOR RIVERINAAuthorised M. McCormack, National Party of Australia, Suite 2, 11-15 Fitzmaurice St, Wagga Wagga, NSW 2650. Parkes Office opening hours: 9am to 5pm Monday to Friday 02 6921 4600 or 02 6862 4560 michael.mccormack.mp@aph.gov.auRM8404778Lic. No. EC6204Lic. No. EC6204RM6934997 IMAGE: Ana Scarf with the Last of the Cavalrymen book.

Meet author Ana Scarf when she launches the book Last of the Cavalrymen: Memoirs of Major General Robert Harley Wordsworth at Cowra Library on Friday 6 June at 10am.

“There I was [in the British Indian Army] commanding a regiment of cavalry as obsolete as the bow and arrow!”With these words, Robert Harley Wordsworth recalled his reaction to news of the outbreak of World War II in Europe in 1939, twenty-five years after he had enlisted, as a nineteen-year-old, in the 1st Light Horse and embarked for the Middle East in the first convoy of ships to depart Australia in 1914.

Born in Cowra in the latter part of the nineteenth century, he was to go on to lead an extraordinary life – as a military man, firstly in the Australian Army, before transferring to the (British) Indian Army where he progressed through the ranks to the rank of major-general in command of the 1st Armoured Division in the Middle East.

Later he would enter politics.

In all, he spent 25 years in India, fully immersed in the last days of the British Raj and all that entailed, living a gilded life against the backdrop of increasing political tension and social unrest.

At the end of the war, he retired to Tasmania, initially taking up farming before being persuaded to enter politics.

He served as a senator representing the island state for ten years, which he described candidly as ‘the unhappiest of my professional life’, declaring that a soldier is trained to ‘act quickly and decisively’ whereas a politician ‘must be nice to everyone and must tolerate many foolish, ignorant and rude people’.After suffering defeat in the election of 1958, he was offered the job of administrator of Norfolk Island, his final professional role before retirement.

Wordsworth’s daughter Ana, and granddaughter Charlotte, are to be congratulated for having painstakingly assembled Wordsworth’s story from audio tapes recorded over a four-year period, supplemented by detailed research to fill in the gaps.

The result is a refreshing, candid and highly readable account of a life well lived. It paints a picture of a loyal subject of his time, a man of service and courage and someone who grasped opportunities when they came his way. Here is the link to book your place:
https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/1340516012479 or call Cowra Library on 6340 2180.

AGRI

Stay Connected

    Subscribe
    Get in Contact

Cowra News to your inbox

Sign up now for the latest news from the Cowra Area direct to your inbox.

NSW Service