[Index]
Edward John Francis RYAN (1890 - 1941)
Soldier, Victoria Cross
Children Self + Spouses Parents Grandparents Greatgrandparents
Edward John Francis RYAN (1890 - 1941) Michael RYAN (1860 - 1922)











Eugenia Constance NEWMAN (1865 - 1940) Joseph NEWMAN (1831 - 1915) Joseph NEWMAN (1808 - 1876)
Sophia SWORD (1809 - 1843)
Susan FISHER (1834 - 1903)



Edward John Francis RYAN

Edward John Francis RYAN
Edward John Francis RYAN Edward John Francis RYAN
b. 09 Feb 1890 at Tumut, New South Wales, Australia
d. 03 Jun 1941 at Melbourne, Victoria, Australia aged 51
Near Relatives of Edward John Francis RYAN (1890 - 1941)
Relationship Person Born Birth Place Died Death Place Age
Grandfather Joseph NEWMAN abt 1831 Rayleigh, Essex, England 1915 Yass, New South Wales, Australia 84
Grandmother Susan FISHER 1834 1903 Boorowa, New South Wales, Australia 69

Father Michael RYAN 1860 Sydney, New South Wales, Australia 18 Jun 1922 Tumut, New South Wales, Australia 62
Mother Eugenia Constance NEWMAN 1865 Yass, New South Wales, Australia 12 Nov 1940 Yass, New South Wales, Australia 75

Self Edward John Francis RYAN 09 Feb 1890 Tumut, New South Wales, Australia 03 Jun 1941 Melbourne, Victoria, Australia 51

Aunt Sophia NEWMAN 1854 Gunning, New South Wales, Australia
Aunt Emma NEWMAN 1855 Gunning, New South Wales, Australia
Aunt Sarah A NEWMAN 1857 Gunning, New South Wales, Australia
Aunt Lucy NEWMAN 1858 Gunning, New South Wales, Australia
Aunt Martha NEWMAN 1861 Gunning, New South Wales, Australia

Events in Edward John Francis RYAN (1890 - 1941)'s life
Date Age Event Place Notes Src
09 Feb 1890 Edward John Francis RYAN was born Tumut, New South Wales, Australia 62
18 Jun 1922 32 Death of father Michael RYAN (aged 62) Tumut, New South Wales, Australia
12 Nov 1940 50 Death of mother Eugenia Constance NEWMAN (aged 75) Yass, New South Wales, Australia
03 Jun 1941 51 Edward John Francis RYAN died Melbourne, Victoria, Australia 62
Source References:
62. Type: Web Page, Abbr: Australian Dictionary of Biography, Title: Australian Dictionary of Biography Online Edition, Publ: ANU, Locn: http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/adbonline.htm
- Reference = https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/ryan-edward-john-francis-8312 (Name, Notes)
- Notes: Edward John Francis Ryan (1890–1941)
by G. P. Walsh
Edward John Francis Ryan (1890-1941), soldier and labourer, was born on 9 February 1890 at Tumut, New South Wales, second son of Michael Ryan, a Sydney-born labourer, and his wife Eugenia, née Newman, from Gunning. Educated locally, he worked as a labourer before enlisting in the Australian Imperial Force at Wagga Wagga on 1 December 1915. After marching to Sydney with the 'Kangaroos' recruiting march he was posted to the 2nd Reinforcements of the 55th Battalion. He left Sydney on 14 April 1916 and after two months in Egypt joined his unit at Fleurbaix, France, in September. He remained with the 55th for the rest of the war except in January-June 1917 when he was detached to the Anzac Light Railways Unit.

John Ryan won the Victoria Cross for conspicuous bravery and devotion to duty during the allied assault on the Hindenburg defences on 30 September 1918. During the 55th Battalion's attack near Bellicourt Ryan, despite heavy fire, was one of the first to reach the enemy trench. A fierce counter-attack drove the Australians back to the Le Catelet line trenches where a bombing party at their rear placed them in a critical position. Ryan quickly organized and led a party to attack the Germans with bomb and bayonet. Reaching the position with only three men, Ryan and his party killed three Germans on the flank and then Ryan alone rushed the remainder with bombs and drove them back across no man's land. He fell wounded but his action saved a highly dangerous situation and enabled the trench to be retaken.

Private Ryan rejoined his battalion in December and on 22 May 1919 received his V.C. from King George V at Buckingham Palace. He returned to Sydney on 24 October and was discharged from the A.I.F. on 10 January 1920. A Sydney Morning Herald article described him as 'a thin lithe man with a smiling face that has been burned a deep mahogany brown'.

The subsequent years were not kind to John Ryan who, like so many returned servicemen, found it hard to adjust to civilian life and to keep a job. His circumstances worsened during the Depression when he was on the road for four years. Destitute, in August 1935 he walked from Balranald, New South Wales, to Mildura, Victoria, where he was given temporary work by the local council and shortly after found employment in a Melbourne insurance office where he remained for several years.

By May 1941, in poor health, he was again tramping the streets looking for work and was taken to hospital the day he was to have started yet another job. He died of pneumonia in Royal Melbourne Hospital on 3 June 1941 and was buried with military honours in the Catholic section of Springvale cemetery where eight V.C. winners formed a guard of honour. Unmarried, he was survived by two brothers and a sister Mrs P. G. Grant of Yass, New South Wales, who presented his V.C. to the Australian War Memorial in November 1967. His brother Malcolm was a trooper with the Light Horse, A.I.F.
- Reference = https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/ryan-edward-john-francis-8312 (Death)
- Reference = https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/ryan-edward-john-francis-8312 (Birth)

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