KILLED IN ACTION
LT.-COLONEL E. T. W. LOVE. COMMANDER OF MAORI BATTALION. (By Telegraph—Press Association.) WELLINGTON, This pay. "It is with deep regret I announce that Lieutenant-Colonel E. T. W. Love, Commander of the Maori Battalion, has been killed in action,” said the Minister of Defence, Mr Jones, last night. “His loss will be keenly felt, not only by the redoubtable battalion of which he was the first Maori commanding officer, but also by the Second N.Z.E.F., for officers of his ability and experience can ill be spared. When Colonel Love was promoted to the command only a few weeks ago, Lieut-enant-General Freyberg spoke highly of his qualifications and said he felt confident the appointment would be justified. That confidence has been well borne out, for, in the brief but momentous period since then, the Maori Battalion under its new leader has added still more to a splendid fighting record in Greece and Crete. In expressing my own and the Government’s sympathy with Colonel Love’s widow and children, and with his father and mother, Mr and Mrs Hapi Love and other members of his family, I would add that New Zealand and the Maori people have lost a leader whose qualities were proved time and again on the hard testing ground of the Middle East battlefields.” Colonel Love ■ was associated with the Maori Battalion from its earliest beginnings. At the outbreak of war he held the rank of captain in the Ist Battalion, Wellington Regiment. He was shortly afterward appointed to Army Headquarters staff for duty in connection with the formation of a Maori Battalion. He proceeded overseas with the main body of the Battalion and fought in Greece where he was at one time reported missing. He was later promoted to the rank of major and fought in the Christmas Libyan campaign. When the former pfficer commanding the Battalion, LieutenantColonel (now Brigadier) Dittmer returned to New Zealand, Colonel Love assumed temporary command.'
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Wairarapa Times-Age, 17 July 1942, Page 2
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323KILLED IN ACTION Wairarapa Times-Age, 17 July 1942, Page 2
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