Exoneration of Australian Lieutenant Arthur Gordon Whitlam: A 28-Year Campaign to Overturn a 1916 Court-Martial Conviction
Introduction
This report examines the case of Arthur Gordon Whitlam, a lieutenant in the Australian 1st Divisional Ammunition Column during World War I, who was wrongfully convicted by a court-martial in 1916. After a 28-year effort to restore his reputation, his conviction was quashed in 1944, following a review by senior Australian military and legal authorities.
Main Body
Arthur Gordon Whitlam, known as Gordon, served in Egypt from 1915 to 1916. In 1916, he was court-martialed in the French village of Sailly-Sur-la-Lys, near Armentieres, on charges of stealing items such as revolvers and field glasses from fellow officers in Egypt and sending them to his father in Australia. Whitlam had been held under close arrest for four months and transported from Egypt to France without adequate opportunity to prepare a defense or call witnesses. He was found guilty on four of ten charges—two of stealing and two of receiving stolen goods—and was cashiered (dismissed from the army with disgrace). The conviction relied heavily on the testimony of his batman, Ernest Edward Fowle, who claimed Whitlam had packed a trunk containing stolen items. Whitlam argued he had instructed Fowle to pack personal belongings for shipment home and had no knowledge of the stolen goods. He noted the improbability of an officer openly shipping stolen property through customs. The court-martial lasted two days, and the prosecuting officer argued that denial of possession constituted evidence of guilt. Court documents later showed Fowle changed his testimony multiple times. After returning to Australia, Whitlam’s civilian career as an accountant was destroyed; the Incorporated Institute of Accountants refused his professional license due to the conviction. He appealed to the British Army Council and Australian military in 1917, but both denied relief. A further appeal in 1923 was rejected despite Whitlam producing a letter from 1915 in which he expressed puzzlement about missing items and asked his father to return them. Legal reviewers later stated this letter demonstrated Whitlam’s ignorance of the stolen goods and alone justified quashing the conviction. By the early 1920s, senior figures including Prime Minister Billy Hughes and Solicitor-General Sir Robert Garran indicated in written notes that they suspected Whitlam had been wrongly convicted. However, Minister for Defence George Pearce opposed reopening the case, arguing it would encourage similar appeals. In 1926, Whitlam located Fowle in South Africa, where he was living under a false name after deserting the army. Fowle signed a statutory declaration reversing his earlier testimony, stating he believed Whitlam had no knowledge of the stolen items. When Whitlam presented this to authorities, he was offered a pardon but refused, as a pardon implied guilt. Whitlam’s campaign was sustained for years by the law firm of Major Frank P. Derham, who had represented him at the court-martial. Derham, commanding an artillery battery at the time, had only brief contact with Whitlam before the trial and was unable to mount a full defense. In 1944, Commander-in-Chief General Thomas Blamey, alerted by the Adjutant-General, ordered a review. Three eminent barristers—H.G. Alderman KC, Sir Edmund Herring, and Brigadier Eugene Gorman—examined the documents and unanimously concluded Whitlam was innocent. Alderman noted that his initial skepticism turned to anger at what he termed a travesty of justice. Attorney-General H.V. Evatt compared the case to the Dreyfus affair, writing that the facts were substantially similar and the conviction should be quashed. On July 19, 1944, Governor-General Lord Gowrie quashed the court-martial conviction, relieving Whitlam of all consequences. He was retrospectively restored to the rank of lieutenant, backdated to June 17, 1916, and his medals were returned. Whitlam waived any compensation, stating he sought only the restoration of his honor. Historian Greg Pemberton has speculated that Whitlam’s brother Fred—father of future Prime Minister Gough Whitlam—may have exerted influence through his role as Crown Solicitor, but archival records do not confirm this. The exoneration was gazetted and reported in newspapers but was overshadowed by World War II news.
Conclusion
Arthur Gordon Whitlam’s conviction was officially overturned after 28 years, and his rank and medals were restored. He declined financial compensation and died in 1971, one year before his nephew became Prime Minister. The case remains relatively obscure in Australian history, despite its parallels to the Dreyfus affair and the extensive documentation held in the National Archives of Australia.