Rogers joined a local company of the
Victorian Mounted Rifles in 1898. Following the outbreak of the
Second Boer War he enlisted as a
private in the 1st Victorian Mounted Infantry Company. He subsequently arrived at
Cape Town in South Africa in November 1899, where his contingent was allocated to a composite
Australian regiment which served in the
Cape Colony and
Orange River. In May 1900 he was seconded to the Provincial Mounted Police in Orange River Colony as a
corporal. Rogers subsequently remained in South Africa at the conclusion of his period of service, joining the
South African Constabulary. He was 26 years old, and a
sergeant in the South African Constabulary,
South African Forces when the following deed took place for which he was awarded the Victoria Cross. After returning to Australia in late 1901 Rogers was commissioned as a
lieutenant in the 6th Battalion,
Australian Commonwealth Horse, and embarked for South Africa again on 19 May 1902. Following the conclusion of the war his battalion returned to Australia, and he received his Victoria Cross from the acting governor-general,
Lord Tennyson, on 18 September 1902 at Government House, Melbourne. He had previously been
mentioned in despatches. Rogers then unsuccessfully sought to obtain a commission in the Australian Military Forces and, after buying and selling a property near
Yea, Victoria, returned to South Africa where he worked as detective with the Cape Police until February 1904. On 25 April 1907, Rogers married Ethel Maud Seldon at
Portland, Victoria and they later had two sons. Following the outbreak of the
First World War, Rogers was appointed as a lieutenant with the
3rd Light Horse Brigade Train, Australian Army Service Corps. He was wounded at
Anzac Cove on
Gallipoli on 4 August 1915, and after recovering in hospital in Egypt later served in the Anzac Provost Corps before being returned to Australia for medical reasons in June 1916. Although his appointment in the
Australian Imperial Force was terminated on 31 December 1916, he continued to serve on home duties as a
captain until the end of the conflict. He subsequently transferred to the reserves on 1 June 1922. ==Later life==