John Simpson Kirkpatrick
John Simpson Kirkpatrick (6 July 1892 – 19 May 1915) was an English-born soldier who enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force and served as a stretcher bearer with the 3rd Field Ambulance during the Gallipoli Campaign of the First World War.[1][2] Born in South Shields, County Durham, he emigrated to Australia as a young man, working variously as a miner and tramway conductor before enlisting in August 1914 under the name John Simpson.[1][3] After landing at Anzac Cove on 25 April 1915, Kirkpatrick improvised by using donkeys scavenged from the beach to transport lightly wounded soldiers from exposed forward positions to casualty clearing stations along treacherous tracks under constant Turkish artillery and machine-gun fire.[2][4] Over the following three weeks, he reportedly evacuated hundreds of men, often working alone at night and demonstrating exceptional endurance and initiative in the absence of sufficient formal equipment or bearers.[2][5] Kirkpatrick was killed on 19 May 1915 by machine-gun fire while assisting a wounded comrade near Shrapnel Gully, having used several donkeys—including one named Duffy—in his efforts.[6][1] His brief but resolute actions came to symbolize the resourcefulness, compassion, and self-sacrifice of the ANZAC forces, earning him enduring commemoration as "the man with the donkey" despite no formal military decoration during his lifetime.[2][7]