Walter Messenger was suggested to me by the British Legion as we share a surname. As far as I know we are not related. I researched his name and found the story below submitted by his nephew Robert to this website about historic typewriters of all things!
http://oztypewriter.blogspot.co.uk/2013/11/11th-of-11th-and-typewriters-in-1918.html
I hope the family will not mind me sharing this.
"It is a poignant event for me, as my family played its part. Less than 16 months before the war ended, my uncle, Walter Gerald Messenger (my father's eldest brother and the son of a previous Robert Messenger) died on the Western Front, on July 22, 1917, of wounds suffered from a sniper's bullet. He had turned just 21 three months earlier. Three weeks after he was killed, Walter Messenger was posthumously awarded a Military Medal for bravery under heavy shellfire during the launch of the attack on Messines, on June 7, 1917.
Walter Messenger had embarked from Wellington for Suez on the Tofua on August 15, 1915, less than four months after the Gallipoli landings. He was 19 and four months old. The New Zealand government wouldn't have let him have a beer or vote, but he was old enough to die for another country's king in another country's war. He is buried at the Pont-D'Achelles Military Cemetery at, Nieppe, Nord, France, right on the Belgium border. Poppies are grown at the cemetery to be placed on the graves of the war dead.
Precipitated by the detonation of 19 enormous mines secretly dug under the front lines - a subterranean cataclysm which killed 10,o00 Germans (history's deadliest non-nuclear man-made explosion) - the Battle of Messines was planned to force the Germans to withdraw from the main battlefront of Vimy-Arras. The primary objective was the strategically important Wyschaete-Messines Ridge, the high ground south of Ypres which the Germans had used as a salient into the British lines, building their defence along its 10-mile length. Winning this ground was essential for the Allies to launch a larger campaign planned for east of Ypres. The initial attack, codenamed ‘Magnum Opus’, was the first time Australians and New Zealanders had fought side-by-side since the Gallipoli campaign. The New Zealand Division was tasked with the capture of Messines and onward, and it was my uncle who, with Harry Minnis, kept communication lines open to Advance Brigade Headquarters and the battalion. Messines casualties included 4978 New Zealanders and 6056 Australians. The Messines detonation of 455 tons of ammonal explosives was heard in London and felt in Dublin."
of the attack on Messines, on June 7, 1917.
Peter Messenger