Stanley Kipman

 

Alias Stanislaus     Russian spelling Станислав Кипман

Born 9.03.1895    Place Warsaw, Poland  Ethnic origin Pole      Religion Church of England

Father Kipman, Kuba     Mother Kipman, Felicia

Brother Kipman, Maximilian

Residence before arrival at Australia lived in Switzerland for 4 years, in Germany for 2 years “and nearly in every other country of Europe for shorter periods, in and out, for education and holidays”

Arrived to Australia

            from London      on 7.11.1914       per Borda      disembarked at Sydney

Residence before enlistment Sydney

Occupation 1916 cashier, 1917 clerk, 1922 piano tuner

Service

service number N81500   enlisted 6.08.1917 POE Sydney

rank Private     place Depot

discharged 4.01.1918 MU

Naturalisation 1923

Residence after the war 1922 Moree

Materials naturalisation (NAA)

digitised service records (NAA)

Investigation Branch file (NAA)

 

From Russian Anzacs in Australian History:

There were a number of [...] cases in which Russians came under notice because of reports made to the authorities by their comrades or by people in the community. In the case of the Kipman brothers, who had spent several years living in Europe, the informant was a lady who resided in the same boarding-house and bombarded military intelligence with her ‘disclosures’ of their pro-German sympathies. A few words from her many communications are sufficient to convey their flavour: ‘The local postman told me … some cards written in German more than a year ago and addressed to me for them, they refused to accept. They could easily have read them before refusing to accept them.’ Sadly, the Kipmans were affected by her various ‘communications’, and never reached the front; formally, though, they were rejected on medical grounds.

 

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