After the outbreak of the
Second World War, French enlisted in the
Second Australian Imperial Force on 22 October 1939, the first in Crow's Nest to do so. French was promoted to
corporal in December. In early 1942, in response to the growing threat posed by Japan's entry into the war following the attacks on
Pearl Harbor and Malaya, the 2/9th Battalion, along with the rest of the 7th Division, was brought back to Australia. At this time they were eventually granted seven days' leave, and French returned to Australia and Crow's Nest. This leave was the final time his family saw him alive. This was followed by further training as the Australian Army reorganised for jungle warfare, before the 2/9th were committed to the fighting against the Japanese in
New Guinea.
Victoria Cross In late August 1942, the 2/9th Battalion was deployed to the
Milne Bay area of New Guinea. The Japanese were advancing south along the
Kokoda Track and Allied intelligence had predicted an attack around Milne Bay. In early September, the battalion took part in
heavy fighting after the Japanese landed a force to capture the Allied airfields situated there. He was survived by his fiancée Dulcie McCahon. Two of his brothers also served during the war: Eric in the Army, and Gordon, who was killed in action in August 1943 in Europe, in the
Royal Australian Air Force. ==Legacy==