whittle$91821$ - definitie. Wat is whittle$91821$
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Wat (wie) is whittle$91821$ - definitie

AUSTRALIAN SOLDIER, RECIPIENT OF THE VC (1882–1946)
John Woods Whittle; Whittle, John
  • The group of ten Australian Victoria Cross recipients repatriated to Australia to assist in recruitment pictured on HMAT ''Medic'' with three naval officers. Whittle is in the centre of the back row.
  • Sergeant J. W. Whittle in France, 1916
  • Sergeant John Whittle c. 1918
  • John Whittle's medals at the Australian War Memorial, Canberra.
  • Memorial plaque in Cygnet, Tasmania

Kidnapping and murder of Lesley Whittle         
  • Donald Neilson and Lesley Whittle
SHART
Lesley Whittle; Death of Lesley Whittle; Leslie Whittle; Murder of Lesley Whittle
British teenager Lesley Whittle was kidnapped on 14 January 1975, and her body discovered on 7 March 1975. Her kidnapping and murder dominated national headlines for 11 months.
whittle         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Whittle (disambiguation); Wittle
(whittles, whittling, whittled)
If you whittle something from a piece of wood, you carve it by cutting pieces off the wood with a knife.
He whittled a new handle for his ax...
VERB: V n
whittle         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Whittle (disambiguation); Wittle
¦ verb
1. carve (wood) by repeatedly cutting small slices from it.
make by whittling.
2. (whittle something away/down) reduce something by degrees.
Origin
C16: from dialect whittle 'knife'.

Wikipedia

John Whittle

John Woods Whittle, VC, DCM (3 August 1882 – 2 March 1946) was an Australian recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest decoration for gallantry "in the face of the enemy" that can be awarded to members of the British and British Commonwealth armed forces. Whittle was serving as a sergeant in the First World War when he was decorated with the Victoria Cross following two separate actions against German forces during their retreat to the Hindenburg Line in 1917. In the latter action, he attacked a machine gun crew, killing the group and seizing the gun.

Born in Tasmania, Whittle completed twelve months active service during the Second Boer War, before returning to Australia and enlisting in the Royal Navy, where he served for five years as a stoker. Re-enlisting in the army, he was posted to the Army Service Corps, artillery, and Tasmanian Rifle Regiment before the outbreak of the First World War. Transferring to the Australian Imperial Force in 1915, Whittle joined the 12th Battalion in Egypt and embarked for the Western Front the following year. During an attack on the village of La Barque, Whittle rushed a German trench and forced the men from the position; he was awarded the Distinguished Conduct Medal as a result.

Wounded three times during the war, Whittle was the subject of two courts-martial for unruly behaviour. In October 1918, he returned to Australia at the invitation of the Prime Minister of Australia to assist in recruitment. Discharged from the military in December 1918, he later moved to Sydney. In 1934, Whittle was presented with a Certificate of Merit after saving a drowning boy. He died in 1946, aged 63.