Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeAnzac CentenaryLittle Digger's flight of fancy

Little Digger’s flight of fancy

Anzac100 Years 375x120

 

ON CHRISTMAS night 1918, an orphaned boy wandered into the No 4 Squadron of the Australian Flying Corps at Biggendorf in Germany, begging for food.
The young boy had lost his father, a French soldier who was killed in action, and then his mother and sister when their family home was shelled soon after.
Luckily for the boy, who was named Little Digger by the squadron, he and Private Timothy William Tovell, an air mechanic, took an instant liking to each other and Tim, along with his brother Ted, “borrowed” a couple of army coats to make a uniform for the young boy.
The medical section calculated his age as 11 and 25 December 1918 was set as his birthday.
Donning his handmade uniform, Little Digger, or Henri as he was later known, moved with the squadron in February 1919 to France, and then on to England, where he was smuggled on board the ship in a modified oat sack.
Tim decided to “adopt” Digger and when the squadron embarked from England for Australia on 6 May 1919, Little Digger was smuggled on board in a sporting equipment hamper.
The ship’s captain discovered he was on board, but let him stay and with the aid of the Queensland Premier Tom Ryan, who was also on board, special permission was granted for him to land in Sydney and move with Tim to his family home in Cooroy to join Tim’s wife, Gertie, daughter Nancy and son Timmy.
Eventually the French Consul agreed that Digger could be adopted by Tim Tovell, but he could not be naturalised until he was 21.
In 1926, when he was 18, Digger left for Melbourne to work for the RAAF as a civilian member at Point Cook, obtaining an apprenticeship as a fitter and turner.
Sadly, on 24 May 1928 Little Digger died from injuries received when his motorcycle collided with a taxi the night before.

Previous article
Next article
Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Noosa Surf Club rebuild moves ahead

Noosa Surf Life Saving Club announced it is moving forward with plans to demolish the existing surf club which investigations have shown to have...

Pirates on the move

More News

Dawn ceremony marks rite of passage

More than 100 Year 9 students from Good Shepherd Lutheran College stood barefoot at the edge of the Noosa River Mouth at dawn last...

Clarinet meets guitar

Two outstanding musicians Sacha Gibbs-McPhee and Owen Thompson will follow the history of the guitar when they meet on stage at the...

Tragic loss of 18-year-old surf lifesaver Joe Tolano

The sudden and devastating death of 18-year-old surf lifesaver Joe Tolano has sent shockwaves through the Sunshine Coast and broader surf life saving communities,...

Swimmers on the rise

Two rising Sunshine Coast swimmers have been selected for a prestigious national training camp after strong performances at the Australian championships. Sunshine Coast Grammar School...

Community focused care arrives in Sunrise Beach

Sunrise Beach and the wider Sunshine Coast community will soon welcome a new era of healthcare with the opening of Sunrise Beach Surgery on...

Free repair days

Noosa residents will soon have the chance to give broken household items a second life through a new series of free community Repair Days. Hosted...

Go wild in Canada and Alaska

Snow-dusted peaks. Sapphire lakes. Iconic wildlife roaming the land and cruising the sea. Cities that hum in two languages. Canada and Alaska do not...

Iconic property sold for $15.3m

The property housing one of Noosa’s most iconic beachfront restaurants has changed hands for $15.3 million. The 460sqm commercial property at 75 Hastings Street –...

Community update

From singing and bush care to service clubs and art, there is a wide variety of groups in Noosa. QCWA TEWANTIN NOOSA Everyone is welcome to...

Surf fest might be blessed

A week is a long time in swell prediction terms, but as I write, five days out from the Noosa Festival of Surfing, what...