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Giving a voice to the missing: The work of Fallen Diggers

25 April 2025 Written by VRC

Since 2013, the not-for-profit, volunteer-run charity Fallen Diggers has quietly and tirelessly undertaken one of the most important tasks in honouring our country’s fallen – researching and locating missing Australian servicemen and women, as well as aircraft, from the First and Second World Wars. Their work is part archaeology, part history, and above all, an act of honour and compassion.

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With more than 35,000 Australians from both world wars still without a known grave, and more than 230 WWII-era aircraft missing with their crews across Australia, it’s a poignant reminder of how much remains unresolved. Many of these fallen are commemorated on memorials across the globe: Lone Pine, VC Corner, Menin Gate, Villers-Bretonneux, El Alamein, and Lae among them. Others rest still entombed in lost ships, sunken aircraft, or lie in unmarked graves on distant fields. 

But for a lucky few, this isn’t the end of their story. 

Through meticulous research and battlefield archaeology, Fallen Diggers pieces together clues left behind – fragments of kit, forgotten reports, handwritten letters – anything that might bring identity back to the nameless. Their mission is clear: to research, locate and identify Australia’s missing service personnel and ensure they are given a dignified and honourable burial, and that their families, at long last, can say goodbye. 

The outcomes tell the story. Since their inception, Fallen Diggers has positively located 47 missing soldiers, with another 100 cases under assessment. In 2022 alone, 16 rededication services were held in Commonwealth War Graves cemeteries across France and Belgium, each one giving a name and a story to the forgotten. Every rediscovered soldier brings comfort not just to family members, but to a nation grateful for their service. 

Working alongside key national and international partners such as the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, the Australian War Memorial, and the Unrecovered War Casualties – Army, Fallen Diggers also supports investigations into WWII-era aircraft crash sites, several of which have recently revealed significant debris fields now undergoing further analysis. 

Their vision is powerful in its simplicity: That all fallen Australian service personnel will have their name and a known burial. 

As we reflect on the true meaning of service this Anzac Day, the work of Fallen Diggers reminds us that remembrance isn’t limited to a single day or ceremony – it is an ongoing commitment that those who served will never be forgotten, their stories will be uncovered, and their families will have the chance to say goodbye. 

This work cannot continue without support. Donations are vital to help fund ongoing research, archaeological surveys, and the long and often complex identification process. To learn more or support the mission of Fallen Diggers, visit fallendiggers.com.au. 

Lest we forget. 

Pte Harry Huntsmen

Pte Harry Huntsmen

KIA in September 1917 during the third battle of Ypres.  Fallen Diggers identified his final resting place. 

Fallen Digger identified

Fallen Digger identified

After 100 years Pte Harry Huntsman from Loch was identified and received a funeral service. 

Fallen Diggers’ work in action: Just one of many success stories  

Private Harry Huntsman, a 24-year-old farmer from Coburg, Victoria, was killed in action during the battle of Polygon Wood on 20 September 1917. For nearly a century, his grave remained unknown, marked only with the words ‘Known Unto God’. Thanks to the tireless efforts of researchers from Fallen Diggers, Harry’s final resting place was identified in 2015. Their work led to a rededication ceremony at Birr Cross Roads Cemetery in Belgium, where Harry received a named headstone and a service attended by his family, Australian officials, and the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. After more than 100 years, Private Huntsman’s sacrifice is now formally recognised and remembered with honour. 

 

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