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Rock engraving throws spotlight on Australia’s top-secret World War II mustard gas program

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In 1943, a young man carved his name, the date, and his place of birth, into a rock outside the old Glenbrook Railway Tunnel, at the eastern side of the Blue Mountains.

Almost 80 years later, that small act has highlighted his remarkable involvement in the top-secret Australian storage of deadly mustard gas during World War II — despite a ban on its use after World War I.

The path to the discovery started last year after the Glenbrook District Historical Society sent a photo of the engraving to the Manning Wallamba Family History Society on the NSW Mid-North Coast.

This engraved rock is at the entrance to the old Glenbrook Railway Tunnel with the inscription, 8/43, LAC R A Bryan, Taree, NSW.(Supplied: Neil McGlashan)

It sparked the…



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