
22 Battalion: Borax
Borax the terrier was
said to have entered Trentham Camp as a volunteer, and he was initially adopted by 19
Battalion, which left him behind when it went overseas. He was then adopted by
A Company, 22 Battalion, which provided him with a uniform marked with his unit
and service number.
Borax may have been
more determined than Sergeant Noodles (who failed to embark), or perhaps he was just lucky, for when
the troop ship Empress of Britain left Wellington's Pipitea
wharf carrying the Second Echelon on 2 May 1940, he managed to get on board.
Although a formal
application made in camp to have him included on the embarkation roll had been
refused, Borax was discovered on board a day after the ship had
left port. There was a rumour
that the two sergeants who claimed responsibility had been demoted
and the dog destroyed, but Borax completed the journey; the Battalion history
includes a photograph of him on parade in England.
A newspaper account
stated that the battalion's Commanding Officer, Lieutenant Colonel L.W. Andrew VC, was a
First World War veteran who 'understood soldiers and their ways with mascots'
and had a soft spot for Borax.
Borax on parade in England
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How to cite this page: 'Borax, the mascot', URL: http://www.nzhistory.net.nz/media/photo/borax-the-mascot, (Ministry for Culture and Heritage), updated 22-May-2008
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