The last of 12 Katikati names on the WW2 memorial panel; Lieutenant Russell Walford, service number 1024, 20th Armoured Regiment. Died December 16, 1943, in the battle for Orsogna during the Italian campaign. Just 29-years-old.
His tank had been knocked out while retreating from a position that had come under German fire.
It’s understood he was lying with other injured in a church yard when they were again caught in a maelstrom of German tank fire, anti-tank gun fire and flame throwers.
One surviving tank gunner recalled it being the worst experience of his life.
“Thirteen tanks went in, nine were shot up, several of the boys killed.”
It was his, the gunner’s, first taste of action.
“I wasn’t afraid so much, but sad. Fellows I’d been talking to a week earlier, you know, stiff and dead. Never see home again.”
Lieutenant Russell Walford now lies in a groomed plot, 1X.D.20, at the Sangro River War Cemetery in Chieti, central southern Italy. The son of Katikati is now a son of Italy too.
“He was a nice man,” concludes Pauline McCowan, the Katikati Museum volunteer.
“He talked about having a good time with his mates. He enjoyed sing-songs, he loved dancing, he was respectful, called his parents ‘mother’ and ‘father’. He was also a very good looking man.”
And by the time she finished transcribing his diary, Pauline says she felt completely in love with him.
“It was such a beautiful and privileged task. He just sounded like a really decent bloke.”
Friday, October 11: “Received parcel of socks and hankies from Jessie. Just what I wanted.”
Much of the diary is the daily mundanities - manoeuvres in the desert, a dental appointment, a debilitating bout of “gippo tummy” and a more sobering moment – a funeral for the “first man of the regiment to pass away”.
Thursday, December 12: “Train load of Italians (prisoners) passing throu (sic). Poor looking lot. Received air mail from Jessie.”
No mention of the horror, the blood and gore stories from the front line. Although he did write excitedly about seeing his first air raid over Cairo.
Saturday, June 12: “Anti-aircraft guns opened up. Vivid flashes through the sky. Fair bit of noise while it lasted.”
But the very next day he went to the movies to see Gracie Fields in ‘Shipyard Sally’, and then the following day there was surfing and “great fun” catching dangerous and venomous snakes, large lizards and spiders with their bayonets.
We’re back on Katikati’s Main Street and it’s just gone midday.
The clock tower right outside the Katikati War Memorial Hall tells reads 12.02 to be exact.
I check it against my phone – it’s bang on time. Excellent. Lieutenant Russell Freeland Walford, 20th Armoured Division, would approve. The clock raised in his honour at the grand cost to his family of £100 is ticking with military precision.
But it’s not just a clock, not just a monument – it’s a symbol of time, mortality and the passage of life.