Dear Fellow Gunners
Last Friday 17 August, many members of the Royal Regiment of
Australian Artillery gathered
amongst a full St Stephen's
Cathedral in Brisbane to thank God
for the life of Lieutenant Colonel
Denis Anthony Casey RAA (Retd).
This is a Gunner's tribute to that
officer and I thank the following
for their input: Ivan Clark, John
Casey, Paul Stevens, Bob Carson,
Keith van den Belt, Con Lucey,
Maurie McGuire, Rob Collins, Mick
Crawford, Dick Wickenden, John
Bertram, Gerry Dekker and Gerry
Salom.
Denis was born on 27 June 1940 and
spent the early years of his life at
an advisedly safe distance from the
Second World War with his family in
Herberton on the Atherton
Tablelands. With his four siblings,
the family moved to the Toowoomba
area after the war. Though a
skilled milker of cows, he completed
school at Downlands College then
became an apprentice electrician
with the Brisbane City Council. On
graduation, he married Muriel and
then joined the Citizen Military
Forces at 11th Field Regiment RAA,
Annerley, Brisbane on 1 May 1962.
This logical, considerate
and premeditated progression
illustrates trade mark traits of
Denis Casey.
In those days, merit was rewarded in
the CMF and Denis rose quickly
through the ranks. Though senior
NCOs were needed, this bloke was
officer material - he took only 18
months to be commissioned through
unit coaching on 2 November 1963.
He became renounced for his good and
mischievous humour and great story
telling. Perhaps the most widely
spread Casey anecdote of this time
was at Tin Can Bay when he was on a
trip to an observation post perched
up on top of gear in the back of
fellow officer Con Lucey's Austin
Champ. Champs were known for their
remarkably soft suspension and when
the vehicle bounded over a rock,
Denis was launched upwards and
outwards, landing flat on his back.
Con believed he had 'contributed to
Denis' early demise', but a lopsided
smile appeared on the victim's face,
he made a quick quip about lousy
drivers and climbed back on board.
Denis enjoyed ceremonies and rituals
and with two brothers in the clergy,
he had plenty of exposure. However,
from Gunner Casey's earliest days in
the CMF, then Sergeant Maurie
McGuire recalls that he was always
toying with a desire to join the
Regular Army. An opportunity to
undertake full-time service came in
1967 when 1st Field Regiment was
reforming at Wacol after returning
from its first tour of Vietnam. For
the next ten months, Lieutenant
Casey felt his way in the Regular
Army and in July 1968 was
commissioned into the Australian
Staff Corps.
His early appointments centered
around assistant adjutant to Dick
Wickenden and gun position officer
of 101st Field Battery. He attended
a forward observer's course, but
went to Vietnam as the ack adjutant
on 25 February 1969. Dick recalls
that for the first couple of months,
Denis was with the forward Artillery
Tactical Headquarters up at Long
Binh (northeast of Saigon) as a duty
officer. 105th Field Battery was in
the same fire support base (Kerry)
and members frequently either saw
him or heard of his humour. By mid
year, there was a vacancy for a
forward observer captain with the
105th and Denis was promoted to
captain to fill this appointment.
He joined Major Reg Sutton's A
Company of 5 RAR and, much to Reg's
delight, was an accomplished 500
card player. The pair were a
perfect complement - laid back, easy
going, but quite professional.
Denis demonstrated exceptional
composure under fire. In combat
situations, he could always be
relied upon for a calming quip - in
that quiet drawl of his - whenever
others were stressed and the radio
net became a little overheated.
A Company had its share of action in
Vietnam and Denis trained a fine
team. His assistant (ack),
Bombardier Gerry Dekker thoroughly
enjoyed the free rein he was given,
but knew that his boss was always
there to back him up when required.
(Gerry was awarded the Military
Medal for his actions during this
posting.) A very strong bond
developed within the team. When the
105th completed its tour of duty,
Denis returned to Australia with
them on 4 February 1970 and became
the battery's administrative
commander on and off throughout the
remainder of that year.
Posted to Townsville in 1971,
Captain Casey was appointed adjutant
of 4th Field Regiment RAA in
September. Then commanding officer
Gerry Salom described him as 'hard
working, keen to learn and very
loyal'. When Cyclone Althea struck
on Christmas eve that year, Denis
demonstrated excellent skills in
coordinating the activities of the
unit to help the local community in
this time of crises.
The next posting was right across
the country to Perth where he became
adjutant of 3rd Field Regiment RAA,
a CMF unit. There he was able
to combine his Regular Army
experience with his CMF background
and was a true asset to the unit.
After a short period with
Headquarters 2nd Task Force, Denis
moved to the School of Artillery
where he was promoted to major and
appointed as the senior instructor
of the Regimental Training Wing.
The Chief Instructor at the time,
Mick Crawford said that he will
always be remembered for his
excellent technical skills and high
standards. Life in the School's
Officers' Mess was never dull and as
Denis' mates were either posted to
Manly or arrived on a course, the
story telling enthralled the younger
officers in the Blue Room each
evening. It was also not uncommon
for practical jokes and harmless
mischief to spread across the School
as Casey and friends relived their
younger days.
In 1978, Major Casey attended the
Australian Staff College at Fort
Queenscliff, Victoria. This was the
start of many great friendships
which grew even stronger over the
years since. Fellow student Ivan
Clark fondly remembers 'his great
talent for observational humour and
forensic wit'. Whether it was
sailing on Port Phillip Bay, flying
across Australia in a Hercules
aircraft, dining in student friends'
homes or the Mess, standing at a pub
in Broome, 'or even sitting in those
silly collapsible Army chairs
discussing the military problems of
the world, Denis would engage - and
every moment was special.'
He returned to Brisbane in 1979 and
after a year as a logistics staff
officer at Headquarters 1st Military
District, returned to the Gunner
fold as the equivalent of the
Brigade Major Royal Artillery on
Headquarters 1st Division Artillery
at Enoggera. Here he worked
intimately with Lieutenant Colonel
Ken Mackenzie on the mammoth tasks
of justifying ammunition for RAA
training and spreading the load for
support to the School of Artillery
across the division. Ken admired
Denis' thorough professionalism and
attention to detail which were
essential in a position responsible
for assessing Artillery standards
throughout the division. The old
sense of humour was alive and well
- his mythical Lieutenant R Buckle
who was held responsible for many
practical jokes throughout the
headquarters, and in conjunction
with his fellow Staff College
classmate Adrian D'Hage, the great
paper plane competition. Ivan Clark
admired the Casey style in the
Mess. 'If you saw Denis coming over
to join your group, you would feel,
"You beauty! We can relax and enjoy
ourselves in his company." If you
were around Denis, life and work
were that little bit more enjoyable
and rewarding.'
In 1984, Denis was promoted to
lieutenant colonel and selected for
service with the United Nations
Military Observer Group, India and
Pakistan and posted to Kashmir.
Here he did his best to make a
positive difference in a difficult
situation. The stories of his
experiences as a UN observer in the
cease-fire zone between India and
Pakistan demonstrated his total
military professionalism and
diplomatic skills and often equalled
the much accoladed adventures of
Gunner Spike Milligan during the
Second World War.
After a brief time at Headquarters
Field Force Command in Sydney, Denis
left the Army in 1987 having
completed 20 years full-time
service. He returned to Brisbane.
Back in civvy Street, Mr Casey
turned his mind to human resources
and worked for the Institute of
Engineers, the Brisbane City Council
and Q-Build. However, it was his
final job as a court officer in the
Federal Courts that he really came
into his element. Ivan Clark was a
great fan of the 'catalogue of
stories with an eye for the foibles
of human nature on both sides of the
bench' which Denis developed in this
appointment. In later years, he was
also an active legatee with the War
Widows of the Gaythorne Group of
Brisbane Legacy.
Dr John Casey described how 'Denis
always had an easy relationship with
the church', no doubt fostered by
his brothers - Fathers Dermott and
Peter. He was a very Christian
person and throughout the 1990s, was
president of the Catholic
Ex-Servicemen's Association, their
representative on the ANZAC Day
Commemoration Committee of
Queensland and – 2 -responsible for
the organisational aspects of the
ANZAC Day service in St Stephen's
Cathedral. It was therefore most
fitting that Denis' life should be
celebrated by some 250 of his family
and friends in that cathedral under
the watchful eye of the
archbishop, one other bishop and
some 12 finely robed church clergy.
Another laudable attribute of this
man was his love of, and dedication
to his fellow Army mates. Though
severely limited in his mobility for
the last 12 months, he struggled
valiantly and made three significant
final public appearances - the
December 2006 Retired Gunner
Officers Luncheon at Victoria
Barracks, a May 2007 Staff College
reunion at the United Service Club,
and the June 2007 annual Binh Ba Day
Luncheon with a 105th Battery group
at the traditional Vietnamese
restaurant in West End. Each of
these was a major struggle for him,
but the old traits were there -
observant, entertaining and
topical. In his own quiet way,
Denis paid his Army mates the
supreme compliment by making this
round of engagements to say
'goodbye'. The Army influence was
prominent at his cathedral service -
a Regimental flag draped the casket,
his medals, sword and cap were the
pall and the congregation seemed to
have bemedalled mates in almost
every row. At the crematorium, a
uniformed bugler played the Digger's
ultimate farewell - Last Post
followed by Rouse. In between, all
present gave a special emphasis when
repeating the final words of the Ode
- 'We will remember them.'
Six years ago, Denis suffered a
heart muscle myopathy which left him
with a terminally deteriorating
condition. He was given a prognosis
of three years but beat these odds
by another three. He lost his hair
through chemotherapy, but never his
spirit and sense of humour. Muriel,
whom he loved so much, cared for him
selflessly throughout this
time. This devotion extended
through the last two weeks of
palliative care at home with
his immediate family. Denis passed
away peacefully with Muriel by his
side just before midnight on 12
August 2007.
Muriel is remaining in the family
home at 71 Gimba Street, Mitchelton,
Q, 4053. To her, the children
Damian, Denis Jnr, and Susan, and
all the members of the close-knit
Casey family, I have extended the
condolences of the members of Royal
Regiment of Australian Artillery.
Vale Lieutenant Colonel Denis
Anthony Casey - family man,
gentleman, humorist, story teller
and always an admired Gunner. Gone
to that great Stand Easy Area up
above at only 67 years young. Thank
you, old mate, for the wonderful
memories you have left with us.
Ubique
Arthur