written by David on April 26th, 2007
The Anzac Day march in Brisbane started at 10am, and the van of the march arrived at my vantage point at about 10.10am.
The first 15 minutes or so of the march are shown in this video:
And then the marchers just kept on coming.
HMAS Brisbane. (HMAS = Her Majesty’s Australian Ship (His Majesty’s during WW 2))
I have no idea what this cryptic banner means.
The Australian Red Ensign being dipped in salute to the Shrine of Remembrance, about 100 m away from the marchers to their left.
460 Squadron RAAF, which was one of the Australian bomber squadrons that served under the UK’s Bomber Command (Wikipedia) during WW2
The RAAF (Royal Australian Air Force) Police Association
The Redland Shire Ladies Drum Corps
The Merchant Navy. (Sailors in cargo ships during wartime)
“Amateurs study strategy, professionals study logistics“
One of the most important struggles of WWII was the ‘Battle of the Atlantic‘, where German submarines tried to destroy cargo ships making their way across the Atlantic Ocean to and from the UK.
If the Germans had succeeded, the British would have had no choice but to come to terms with Germany. You can’t fight while you’re starving.
The Sunderland Squadrons (RAAF Squadrons 10 and 461) were equipped with the Short Sunderland flying boat, which was an important submarine hunter. Australian Sunderlands sunk 12 German subs during the Battle of the Atlantic.
The Women’s Australian Auxiliary Air Force, which gave women the chance to work in jobs previously closed to them - there was no choice but to use the available people, despite prejudices against it.
RAAF veteran salutes the Shrine of Remembrance, with the Royal Australian Air Force Ensign borne behind him
The 2/11 Forward Regiment
Non-marching Australian commando veterans in their green berets.
101 Tank Attack Regiment of the Australian Imperial Force (WW 2).
The Courier-Mail has a story about Roland Gillam, the only World War 2 veteran alive from the regiment.
Marchers in WWII Australian uniforms, wearing the colour patch of the 2/8th Infantry Battalion.
The 2/25th Infantry Battalion.
The Australian Red Cross (there is more info here at Digger History)
2/15th Australian Infantry Battalion
Tambourine player with the Salvation Army Band
The Australian contingent of the British Occupation Forces - Japan - there is a brief history of the Occupation if you click here.
The Atomic Ex-Servicemen’s Association - the interests of these veterans was shamefully ignored for many decades.
The Australian Women’s Land Army - you can click here for the Wikipedia entry 
A M199 Howitzer, which fires a shell 155 millimetres across (that’s a touch over six inches in old money).
Members of the Australian Special Air Services Association - there’s another page here for ASAS members.
The 3rd Cavalry Regiment - the Association’s website is here
Air Defence Queensland, Royal Australian Artillery, Post WWII veterans, and anti-aircraft gun
The Sapper Association Queensland.
Sappers are combat engineers - which means they build things or demolish them on the battlefield, under fire.
Soldier marches with the silver shovel that symbolises the work of the sappers.
You can click on any of the pictures here to get taken to where it is stored on flickr, the photo sharing website. If you do that, you can see much larger versions by clicking the ‘all sizes’ button at the top of the photo - some of the photos really need to be seen in big sizes to get the most out of them.
You can also see all the Anzac Day photos as a slideshow, and download them for your own use.
Stay watching Brisbane Is Home in the next couple of days, when there will be photos from the Dawn Service.
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April 26th, 2007
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April 26th, 2007 at 11:11 pm
Anzac Day in Brisbane - April 25, 2007 | Brisbane Is Home Says:[...] I’ve finished the first batch of photos: click here to see 30 photos from the Anzac Day March. [...]
April 27th, 2007 at 12:31 am
Wes Says:I went to the March in the city as well, but didn’t take anywhere near as many photos as you! Congratulations on a job well done.
April 27th, 2007 at 7:21 am
David Says:Thanks Wes! There’s plenty more photos to come - I’ll have the Dawn Service up tonight, and then I have to put the 100-odd other photos from the march on flickr.
It was a pretty big job and I ended up running out of room on the camera (mainly because of the video I took).
April 28th, 2007 at 11:26 am
patrickm Says:The cryptic Banner is Submarine speak. Submarines fly the scull and cross bones by tradition. See the film we dive at dawn as an example.