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Fascinating People Fascinating Places

Wagga Wagga: World War I Stories

Fascinating People Fascinating Places

Daniel Mainwaring

Documentary, Society & Culture:documentary, History, Society & Culture

51.1K Ratings

🗓️ 5 August 2022

⏱️ 26 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Wagga Wagga: World War 1 Stories On commemorative occasion such as Anzac and Memorial Day, we inevitably reflect on the service of prior generations in The First World War as well as other conflicts. But while these service men and women fought bravely during the conflict, how did the war fit in with their broader lives? Its a topic that Historian Ian Hodges of The Australian Department of Veteran’s affairs has been exploring with regard to World War I for his new book He Belonged to Wagga. The conflict that saw Australia forge a national identity distinct from the broader British Empire and one that saw the creation of The Australian Imperial Force the nation’s first military force equipped for overseas conflict. To show the affect of the war he focused on one particular city located about 300 miles inland from Australia. It’s somewhat off the beaten bath and a name few outside South Eastern Australia are probably familiar with. Is it pronounced Wagga Wagga? Guest Expert: Ian Hodges of The Australian Department of Veteran’s Affairs Picture: Dept of Lands, Sydney – cropped from old map “County of Wynyard, New South Wales, 1897” at the National Library of Australia, located here Wagga Wagga in 1897 Public Domain File:Wagga Wagga map 1897.jpg Created: 1 January 1897 Music: English: Elgar; Enigma variations, Theme IX. Nimrod Date 1 January 1947 Source https://archive.org/details/EdwardElgar-EnigmaVariations/01ThemeI.C.a.e..mp3 Author John Barbirolli Halle Orchestra, Public Domain — Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/daniel-mainwaring5/message

Transcript

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0:00.0

Fascinating people, fascinating places.

0:03.0

G'd a and welcome to the Dan Mainwearing podcast.

0:07.0

This is where we talk to and about the famous and the infamous,

0:11.0

the celebrated and the obscure, the well-known and the

0:13.3

well-known and the obscure, the well-known and the undiscovered.

0:15.6

Interviews, articles and discussion from around the globe.

0:19.1

On commemorative occasions such as Anzac a memorial day, we inevitably reflect on the service of prior generations in the First World War, as well as other conflicts.

0:31.0

But while these service men and women fought bravely during the

0:34.4

complex, how did the war fit in with their broader lives? It's a topic that

0:39.9

historian Ian Hodges of the Australian Department of Veterans Affairs has been exploring

0:45.9

specifically with regard to World War I.

0:50.0

That conflict saw Australia forge national identity distinct from the broader British

0:55.5

Empire and it also saw the creation of the Australian Imperial Force, the country's first military force equipped for overseas conflict.

1:07.0

To show the effect of the First World War, he focused on one particular city,

1:12.0

located about 300 miles inland from Sydney is somewhat

1:16.3

off the beaten path and has a name few outside southeastern Australia are

1:21.5

probably familiar with.

1:23.2

So Ian, is it pronounced Waga Waga?

1:26.6

Waga.

1:27.4

It's pronounced Waga.

1:29.1

It means in the indigenous language of the Wuraggery people,

1:32.3

the police of many crows.

...

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