Walter Kalasnikoff
Alias Kalashnikoff Russian spelling Владимир Калашников
Born 1.01.1889 Place Ostrov, Pskov, North-Western Russia Ethnic origin Russian Religion Roman Catholic (enlistment form), Russian Orthodox (medical form)
Father - Mother Kalashnikoff, Kladvia S.
Arrived at Australia
from London on 31.08.1914 per Star of England disembarked at Sydney
Residence before enlistment Bundaberg, Mt Morgan, Qld
Occupation 1915 seaman, 1917 fireman, 1917-18 tramway employee
Service
service number 2727A enlisted 21.07.1915 POE Mt Morgan, Rockhampton, Qld
unit 25th Battalion, 9th Battalion rank Private
place Western Front, 1916 casualties WIA 1916
final fate RTA 17.10.1916 discharged 24.01.1917 MU
WWI contacts Yan Soolkovsky
Naturalisation applied 1918, naturalisation refued
Residence after the war Brisbane
Wife Mary Kalasnikoff (Rudovsky), married 1918
Died 9.12.1920 in the Red Cross Hospital, Corinda
Materials naturalisation (NAA)
digitised service records (NAA)
alien registration (NAA)
wife’s naturalisation (NAA)
wife's alien registration (NAA)
Kallashnikoff, W., ‘A Russian Protest’, Daily Mail (Brisbane), 27 August 1918, p.2.
From Russian Anzacs in Australian History:
Kalasnikoff’s case was the most tragic of these stories. Originally from the township of Ostrov, near Pskov in northwestern Russia, he had worked on ships as a fireman and his chest and arms were covered with tattoos including Russian and American flags and a variety of designs, many featuring an anchor — like a plea for protection. Kalasnikoff enlisted in the AIF in 1915 but in 1916, before any of the major Western Front actions took place, was nearly blinded in an explosion at Bois Grenier. Invalided to Brisbane with 75 per cent incapacitation, he struggled on for a while. In 1918 his pension was reduced and he applied for naturalisation, as it was hard to find work without it. His application went through without a hitch and in February 1919 his naturalisation certificate was issued and just about to be mailed when ‘fresh evidence’ appeared. This new ‘evidence’ was the Brisbane Censor’s report that Kalasnikoff, when visiting the Russian Association in 1918, ‘disowned, as a disgrace, his returned soldier’s Badge, as it was a sign that he had fought against his German brothers’. Another of his ‘crimes’ was that a socialist revolutionary, Herman Bykoff (alias Resanoff), who also had arrived in Australia as a fireman, had lodged with the Kalasnikoffs for some time after Kalasnikoff’s return from the front. All this was enough for Kalasnikoff to be branded ‘a Bolshevik of dangerous propensities’ and for his naturalisation to be denied. A constable sent to collect information about Kalasnikoff recorded the opinions of an opponent of his, Leo Berk, who said that Kalasnikoff’s ‘wife is well known for her Bolshevik views … Kalashnikoff [Kalasnikoff] is led by his wife. He is not a bad man on the whole, but if Bolshevism attained to any degree of success in Australia Kalashnikoff would certainly come out as a Bolshevik.’
This investigation into Kalasnikoff coincided with the red flag riots — the worst possible time for a Russian to come to the attention of the security services. After the riots a friend wrote to Kalasnikoff, who was then in hospital, ‘I was nearly beaten for speaking Russian — by Englishmen. We must be as far from Russia as we possibly can. There is danger for the Russians on every step and corner.’ Nevertheless, the Brisbane RSL gave him its support: ‘Being unnaturalized, he finds it very difficult to secure work’; as well, a Queensland parliamentarian raised his case with the minister for Home Affairs. It was all in vain. Meanwhile, Kalasnikoff’s health declined markedly and he was unable to work. He died in December 1920 at a hospital in Corinda, paying dearly for having once enjoyed his freedom of speech in Australia.
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