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Peter Wiselenski Courtesy of Wiselenski family |
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Peter Wiselenski, 1940 B6531, alien registration (NAA) |
Peter Wiselenski
Alias Wishkenlski, Pete (WWI service records) Russian spelling Петр Адамович Виселенский (Вишневский?)
Born 6.12.1894 Place Slonim, Grodno, Belarus Ethnic origin Byelorussian Religion Russian Orthodox (WWI); Church of England (WWII)
Father Wiselenski, Adam Mother -
Residence before arrival at Australia lived in USA in 1912-1917
Arrived at Australia
from USA on 10.07.1917 per Canadian sailing vessel disembarked at Brisbane
Residence before enlistment Brisbane
Occupation 1917 labourer, after the war - farmer
Service
service number 7815 enlisted 17.07.1917 POE Brisbane
unit 2nd Tunnelling Coy rank Sapper
place Western Front, 1918
final fate RTA 7.02.1919 discharged 23.04.1919
Naturalisation 1940
Residence after the war Red Cliffs & Werribee Research Farm, Vic. till 1938; 1942 Swan Reach, Vic.
Family wife Mary Eliza Revell, married 1919; children Kelvin (Peter Kelvin) b.1922, Margaret b.1928, Phillip Jones b.1930, Pauline b.1932
WWII served 1942-1943 13 Bn VDC
Died 5.07.1974, Melbourne, Vic
Materials naturalisation (NAA) (Wiselenski)
digitised WWI service records (NAA) (Pete Wishkenlski)
WWII service records (NAA) (Wiselenski)
alien registration (NAA) (Wiselenski)
From Russian Anzacs in Australian History:
I encountered real vigilance in only a few cases [of Russians' enlistment], of which Pete Wishkenlski from Byelorussia was one. Wishkenlski, enlisting in Brisbane, was singled out from other Russians and compelled to make a statutory declaration: ‘My father and mother were born in Russia. I was born in Russia. I am not of German, Austrian, Bulgarian, or Turkish parentage.’
[...] The Russian Anzacs settling down with their farms became part of the last Australian generation to pioneer the land, establishing in the process an intimate connection with the land and its people. They were often few and far between in outback areas: Pete Wishkenlski, for instance, who’d been a tunneller in the army, settled on a returned soldiers’ dried-fruits block at Red Cliffs near Mildura (Victoria) and, according to the local policeman, was ‘the only Russian in this district’. For local people their only knowledge of Russians would have come from contact with people like Wishkenlski and other similar pioneers spread out all over Australia.
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