This photograph is perhaps one of the most iconic and famous from the First World War, and was captured today 106 years ago by Australian Second Lieutenant Hubert Wilkins - but often, and wrongly, credited to the other and more well-known Australian war photographer Frank Hurley.
The photograph shows five Australian soldiers from the 110th Howitzer Battery of the 10th Field Artillery Brigade of the Australian 4th Division walking on duckboards inside the Château Wood near Hooge in Flanders, during the Third Battle of Ypres.
Four of the five soldiers have since been identified, with two of them confirmed. The soldier leading the party is Gunner James Macrea Fulton and the man to the right of him, staring into the camera, is Lieutenant Antony Devine. It's speculated the two next men behind are brothers - Gunner Hubert Lionel Nichols and Gunner Douglas Roy Nichols. The soldier at the back, whose faced is blurred, is for this reason unidentified.
All four identified soldiers survived the remainder of the First World War.
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