Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Teddy Sheean


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News Report:

Australian  hero Teddy Sheean will be awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross following an expert panel's review. His nephew Gary Ivory has spent decades fighting for the World War II sailor to receive the highest military honour. Prime Minister Scott Morrison established an independent panel earlier this year after Sheean was denied the prestigious award.  The panel found the Tasmanian was wronged and deserved the recognition.  According to the PM:  “Sheean was done a substantial injustice in consideration of his actions in the original decision-making period in 1942 to 1943.”  He is confident that the recommendation to Her Maj will be accepted and that the Victoria Cross will be awarded. 

htps://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8611999/War-hero-Teddy-Sheean-saved-49-lives-ship-sank-awarded-Victoria-Cross-78-years-later.html

More about Teddy Sheean a little later.

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By way of background:


The Victoria Cross is the highest and most prestigious award of the British honours system. It is awarded for valour "in the presence of the enemy" to members of the British Armed Forces and may be awarded posthumously. It was previously awarded to Commonwealth countries, most of which have established their own honours systems and no longer recommend British honours. It may be awarded to a person of any military rank in any service. 

The VC was introduced on 29 January 1856 by Queen Victoria to honour acts of valour during the Crimean War.

Australia was the first Commonwealth realm to create its own VC, on 15 January 1991. Although it is a separate award, its appearance is identical to its British counterpart.

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It was gratifying to read that Teddy Sheean will more than likely receive the Victoria Cross that he so richly deserves.

I had posted an item about him on 26 April, 2011, the day after Anzac Day. Back then the blog allowed reader comments to be posted, now it can only be done by email responses from subscribers.  I received some heartwarming responses to the post, both the items and the responses are reposted below.

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Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Teddy Sheean


The following item would have been appropriate for an Anzac Day posting but came to my attention only after that day had passed. Nonetheless, I will post it because it has a significance that goes beyond Anzac Day.

Some time ago, I read about a young sailor, Edward Sheean, who had been killed in action in 1942.

I came across his name again yesterday when I saw an item in the previous week's Sunday newspaper that I was throwing out. The news item that caught my eye was that eleven sailors and two soldiers are being considered for posthumous Victoria Cross awards for acts of bravery and gallantry. Not one sailor has ever been awarded the Victoria Cross. Included in the list of persons being considered are Edward Sheean and Private John Simpson Kirkpatrick, who is today remembered for collecting the wounded from the Gallipoli battlefields with his famous donkey.

Edward Sheean with his family, c1941.
Back row: Edward (Teddy); Frederick.
Front row: James (father); Mary (mother); William.

Edward “Teddy” Sheean was born on 28 December 1923 in Barrington, Tasmania. In 1941 he enlisted in the Royal Australian navy as an Ordinary Seaman. Upon completion of his training he was posted to the corvette HMAS Armidale.

On 1st December 1942 the Armidale was attacked by Japanese aircraft – 9 bombers and 4 fighters - whilst enroute to Timor. Despite taking evasive action, the vessel was struck by two air-launched torpedoes. As the vessel began to sink, the order was given to abandon ship but crew members who leapt into the sea were strafed by the attacking aircraft. After assisting to free a life raft, Sheean was struck by bullets in the chest and back. He managed to scramble across the listing deck, strapped himself into the aft Oerlikon 20mm cannon and began shooting at the fighters to protect the sailors already in the sea. He managed to keep the Japanese aircraft away, shooting down one of the Japanese planes and damaging two others, all the while as the water kept rising up his body.
  


According to Ordinary Seaman Russell Caro, Sheean was “still firing as he disappeared beneath the waves”.

Sheean's crewmates later testified to witnessing tracers rising from beneath the water's surface as Sheean was dragged under.

Of the 149 men aboard the Armidale, 49 survived. Many of the survivors attributed their lives to Sheean’s actions.

For his "bravery and devotion when HMAS Armidale was lost", Sheean was recognised with a posthumous Mention in Despatches, although many hold that he was worthy of a Victoria Cross.

At the time of his death, Ordinary Seaman Edward "Teddy" Sheean was 18 years old.

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Reader comments:


Duna April 26, 2011 at 11:08 AM

Lest we forget...Thanks for the post on young Sheean.

D. W. Hodge
LCDR, U.S. Navy

 

Tiana Kelly June 2, 2011 at 12:23 PM

teddy is my great great uncle and it's great to see people like yourself reading about him so much, it's great to come across someone's article about him and got all the facts about his death correct, =) my great uncle garry ivory actually got together with a lady named marlene and wrote a song about uncle teddy, it's called "teddy sheean you're a hero to me". my uncle garry ivory has just got back from a trip to the canberra war memorial and the hobart TAS memorial, he is fighting for uncle teddy to be awarded the VC... he was in tuesday's paper (the advocate) once again =)

 

LynneMarch 4, 2012 at 7:17 PM


You can also see more links and photos from the Facebook Group I've just created: 





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