{"id":29539,"date":"2025-02-25T14:13:44","date_gmt":"2025-02-25T06:13:44","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.cameronkrichards.net\/kennedymurrays\/?p=29539"},"modified":"2025-02-25T14:14:30","modified_gmt":"2025-02-25T06:14:30","slug":"the-small-but-pivotal-role-of-harry-murray-vc-in-the-framing-of-the-prosperous-book","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.cameronkrichards.net\/kennedymurrays\/the-small-but-pivotal-role-of-harry-murray-vc-in-the-framing-of-the-prosperous-book\/","title":{"rendered":"the small but pivotal role of Harry Murray VC in the framing of the &#8216;Prosperous&#8217; book"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>[this was a Jan 2025 post to the &#8216;Tasmanian Victoria Cross Descendants and Comrades FB group&#8217; &#8211; run by Kerri Statton who attended as an invited guest our Kennedy Murray descendants gathering in Evandale in early 2024<\/p>\n<p>My great-uncle Harry Murray VC from Evandale features quite significantly in my book out on Wednesday \u201cProsperous: The Kennedy Murrays and the origins of historic Evandale in early Colonial Australia\u201d . Writing this helped me appreciate that he and his cousin Charles Murray Littler (aka \u2018the Duke of Anzac\u2019 &#8211; the last Australian soldier to leave Gallipoli beach) were really chips off the old block of their grandfather Kennedy Murray. When we had a small gathering in Evandale earlier this year, I was pleased that Kerri (also a friend of close cousin Sue Hill) was able to come and join us to visit surviving Evandale landmarks of Harry as well as his grandfather.<\/p>\n<p>As I know this group might be interested in some of the relevant sections that focus on Harry, I have included below a few relevant excerpts from the book. Anyone interested in the book (a great tale of a Tasmanian \u2018golden age\u2019) can find out more at my site cameronkrichards.net\/kennedymurrays.<\/p>\n<p>Excerpts Chapter 1<\/p>\n<ol>\n<li><strong>Introduction: How the unveiling of the Harry Murray VC statue in 2006 opened the door to remember the largely forgotten role of the Kennedy Murrays in the early history of Evandale<\/strong><\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p><em>I am sure that the position could not have been held and our efforts crowned by victory but for the wonderful work of this Officer. His Company beat off one counter attack after another, three big attacks in all, although one of these consisted of no less than five separate bombing attacks\u2026 On one occasion the men gave ground for 20 yards but Captain Murray rushed to the front and rallied them by sheer valour, with his revolver in one hand and a bomb in the other. He was ubiquitous, cheering his men, heading bombing parties, leading bayonet charges or carrying wounded from the dangerously shelled areas, with unequalled bravery. So great was his power of inspiration, so great was his example that not a single man in his Company reported himself shell shocked although the shelling was frightful and the trench at times was a shambles that beggars description. His Company would follow him anywhere and die for him to a man<\/em>\u2026 \u2013 Excerpt from Harry Murray\u2019s VC recommendation in 1917 for his efforts in the Battle of Stormy Trench (https:\/\/www.awm.gov.au\/collection\/P11026799)<\/p>\n<p><strong>The link between the Harry Murray VC statue ceremony in Evandale in 2006 and the related unveiling that week of a memorial to \u2018the Kennedy Murrays\u2019<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On 24 February 2006 there was a memorable and well attended statue unveiling ceremony held in Evandale which was officiated by Australia\u2019s Governor General Michael Jeffrey. The statue was of Evandale-born Henry William Murray (aka \u2018Harry Murray VC\u2019) who remains the most decorated soldier in Australian history (and was the most decorated soldier in the British Empire in WW1 or ever). Charles Bean, the Official War Correspondent noted for his early and consistent articulation of the Australian \u2018Anzac\u2019 spirit and legend, regularly referred to Harry Murray in his reports and histories of WW1. \u201c<em>Australia\u2019s most significant fighting officer<\/em>\u201d was Bean\u2019s designation for the man who began the war as a mere private and was literally promoted to Colonel on WW1 battlefields from Gallipoli up to and across the Western Front. Harry received the VC for valour at Stormy Trench in 1917 &#8211; and his other military awards included the CMG, DSO and bar, DCM and Croix de Guerre. His almost forgotten story (and, following Tasmanian efforts, also his Australia War Memorial portrait) [1] has been resurrected in a timely and celebrated fashion before and after the 2006 statue unveiling. Such books as Frankl &amp; Slatyer\u2019s\u00a0<em>Mad Harry: Australia\u2019s Most Decorated Soldier<\/em>\u00a0(2003) and Hatwell\u2019s\u00a0<em>No Ordinary Determination: Percy Black and Harry Murray of the First AIF<\/em>\u00a0(2005) as well as a growing number of related military journal and online articles (Cf. also the Australian War Memorial tribute online at https:\/\/www.awm.gov.au\/collection\/P11026799) have assisted with this.<\/p>\n<p>This occasion was also the focus for the meeting of many descendants of not only Harry\u2019s grandfather Kennedy Murray (KM Jr) but his great grandfather Kennedy Murray Senior (KM Sr). KM Sr came to Australia in 1792 with the Fourth Fleet, and lived a long and colourful life (dying in Evandale in 1853) to become the head of one of Australia\u2019s bigger family trees (see the chapters of Part 2). The media focus of this occasion was on the Harry Murray VC statue unveiled in what is now known as Evandale\u2019s\u00a0<em>Harry Murray War Memorial Garden<\/em>. This garden is significantly just up the road a few hundred metres away from Kennedy Murray\u2019s still existing \u2018Georgian Manor\u2019\u00a0<em>Prosperous House<\/em>\u00a0(the original cottage built in 1820 and the later \u2018mansion\u2019 version in 1836) \u2013 later re-named\u00a0<em>Fallgrove House<\/em>. It\u2019s directly opposite to the also still existing\u00a0<em>Briar Lane Cottage<\/em>\u00a0of Murray\u2019s brother-in law George Collins which was likewise built in the 1820s and later extended. This was the initial \u2018adjoining \u2018hamlets\u2019 blueprint for how the extended Murray family played a central role in the early formation of Evandale in various ways that have also largely become forgotten.<\/p>\n<p>However, just a few hundred metres away in the other direction along Evandale\u2019s Murray Street there escendants who were also in Evandale for the Harry Murray statue unveiling. This took place in the original Anglican cemetery on the very spot of the first Murray family vault where KM Sr and KM Jr\u2019s first wife Sarah were also buried. [As will be explained later, KM Jr and his second wife Hannah were buried in the \u2018other family vault\u2019 which still exists in the Scottish Presbyterian (now Uniting Church) cemetery literally across the road]. Organised by family historians Joseph Cocker and Terry Browne, this was the \u2018unveiling\u2019 rather of a plaque remembering as \u2018early pioneers of Australia\u2019 the Kennedy Murray father and son who both died in Evandale some years before Harry was born there in 1880.<\/p>\n<p>As indicated above, we are reasonably sure that as per agreements reached by Hannah Goodall Murray with both David Murray and neighbour John Pearson in the early 1860s, Edward Kennedy Murray and his growing family with Clarissa Littler remained resident in Woodstock cottage whilst leasing and farming part of the former Blanchfield farm of his father. This arrangement seems to have lasted until 1881 when Edward Kennedy Murray was able to lease the Northcote farm at St Leonards. This was where his youngest daughter Annie Summers Murray (named after Clarissa\u2019s mother) was born in 1883 and where he then remained until his death in 1904. However, EKM and family spent a year or so in between (c1880) living in the workers cottage behind the former Clairville House of John Sinclair. At this time Clairville was owned by the same Cameron family who had originally arrived on the same ship as the McLeods in 1824 and then acquired the large Forden farmland on the Nile Rivulet adjacent to Samuel Bryan\u2019s\u00a0<em>Strathmore<\/em>\u00a0and James Cox\u2019s\u00a0<em>Clarendon<\/em>. It was in this cottage (just up the road from Hannah Goodall Murray\u2019s new Trafalgar farm) that EKM\u2019s son Henry William Murray (aka Harry Murray) was born on 1 Dec 1880. The arrangement appears part of some related temporary employment deal between EKM and the Camerons as he organised the move to Northcote [2].<\/p>\n<p><strong><em>Chapter 10 excerpt 2.<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>10.2 Kennedy Murray\u2019s \u2018Anzac grandsons\u2019 at the WW1 Battle of Mouquet Farm<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The Battle of Mouquet Farm was part of the infamous Somme offensive of 1916 on the Western Front. Almost 20,000 British soldiers died the first day of \u2018Somme\u2019 in futile trench warfare involving mainly suicidal attacks on defended machine-gun nests ordered by distant senior officers. Close to a million men from both sides were either killed or wounded by the end of this \u2018offensive\u2019. The month-long \u2018battle of Mouquet Farm\u2019 had particular significance for many soldiers in the AIF &#8211; which suffered over 11000 casualties there (and over 23000 if you include the linked battle of Pozieres). His cousin (the then Captain Harry Murray) and his own son Geoff had both been wounded and evacuated days earlier before the fateful last attack by the Australians involving Captain Charles Augustus Littler on the dawn of September 3. On that day Littler ignored both illness and leave given to him to visit his son before leading his company on yet another attack on a German machine gun nest from \u2018the trenches\u2019.<\/p>\n<p>Having got to know Littler (as well as Murray) well at Gallipoli (calling him \u2019the \u201c<em>best known personality on Anzac Beach<\/em>\u201d), the Australian war historian Charles Bean had met with him the night before and later wrote of Littler\u2019s brave death whilst continuing to inspire his men even after being badly wounded. Likewise, within minutes of his own shrapnel injuries on August 29 from a bomb blast (which saw him evacuated to a hospital in England to heal before returning to the battlefield yet again months later), an isolated as well as injured Harry Murray (on one of his regular \u2018officer-lead recces\u2019 into no-man\u2019s land) had found himself alone surrounded by five German soldiers. Undaunted, he killed two with his service revolver before the others ran off. A machine gun or bomb blast death was really the \u2018luck of the draw\u2019. Murray received his first of two Distinguished Service Order decorations for his efforts at \u2018Mouquet Farm\u2019.<\/p>\n<p>Like many other Anzac officers, Murray and Littler both strongly believed in inspiring their troops by leading from the front with hope and determination whatever the situation \u2013 as well as protecting the interests and welfare of their men whenever possible. Out of the grandchildren from KM\u2019s second family with Hannah Goodall, then, there was not just one \u2018famous Anzac hero\u201d in WW1 but at least two. [Just one could have been perhaps dismissed as just a \u2018lucky accident\u2019, but two starts to suggest something more]. Of course, these two men just reflected the courage and Anzac ethos of so many Australian soldiers in WW1 (including Littler\u2019s other younger son Guy who months earlier had been promoted to Lieutenant \u2018on the battlefield\u2019 before also being seriously injured demonstrating valour that saw him being awarded the Military Cross medal for bravery).<\/p>\n<p>As well as Charles Bean\u2019s related comments about Harry Murray (such as that Murray was \u201c<em>Australia\u2019s most distinguished fighting officer\u201d<\/em>\u00a0in WW1) particularly relevant here is that\u00a0he was \u201c<em>one who always rose to the occasion, practical and careful, yet at the same time reckless of personal safety \u2026 one who always got the best out of their men\u201d.<\/em>\u00a0Bean also made a very similar comment about Charles Littler in his war diaries (\u201c<em>a brave, honourable and experienced leader, the whole battalion looked up to him as to no other\u201d<\/em>).<\/p>\n<p>Bean\u2019s seminal articulation of the \u2018Anzac legend\u2019 on the Western Front as well as earlier at Gallipoli reflected on the unique (native-born) Australian values of \u2018courage, egalitarianism, endurance, mateship, initiative and a basic optimism whatever the situation\u2019. For Bean such traits generally distinguished the Anzacs from European soldiers too often debilitated by the passivity regularly borne of \u2018old class divisions\u2019 \u2013 especially involving those officers who too often thought they were superior and entitled to stay at the rear when ordering men to their deaths in WW1 trench warfare. When making his related comparison between Australians and the officers of other armies, Bean seems to have been particularly inspired to make this distinction by the examples of cousins Captain (later Colonel) Murray and Captain Littler both regularly leading with inspiration from the front. As Bean recognised, these were men who also exemplified the related \u2018bush ethos\u2019 derived from the rural Australian communities inspired by such early native-born Australian pioneers as Kennedy Murray Jr (who, as evident also in early Evandale, the more superior or entitled UK migrants and \u2018bunyip aristocrats\u2019 tended to look down upon, under-estimate and often attempted to exploit or betray).<\/p>\n<p><em>Excerpt chapter 14<\/em><\/p>\n<ol start=\"14\">\n<li><strong> Evandale as \u2018home\u2019 for not just \u2018local son\u2019 Harry Murray VC but all the<\/strong><\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p><strong>Kennedy Murrays (one of modern Australia\u2019s larger family trees)<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><em>On a post-World War II visit to Launceston, his nephew Joseph Murray Cocker, son of his [Harry\u2019s] favourite sister Annie (Dot) Cocker, suggested to Harry Murray that he pay a visit to the grave of his father in Evandale. Murray refused, saying \u201cNo, I haven\u2019t got any time for him. I have nothing to thank him for\u201d. Cocker was surprised at his uncle\u2019s vehemence. A few days later, however, Murray proposed to his nephew that they make a visit to the Launceston airport, and on arrival he instructed Cocker to go further to the Scot\u2019s Kirk in nearby Evandale. He then left the car and walked straight over to his father\u2019s grave\u00a0<\/em>[also part of the KM Jr second family crypt]\u00a0<em>which was overgrown with blackberries. Soon thereafter, Harry Murray approached the authorities and paid to have the grave permanently maintained.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>&#8211; G.Frankl &amp; C.Slatyer (2003),\u00a0<em>Mad Harry: Australia\u2019s most decorated soldier<\/em>, p 5-6.<\/p>\n<p><em>Except chapter 15<\/em><\/p>\n<ol start=\"15\">\n<li><strong>The astonishing further story of the recent discovery that KM Sr\u2019s \u2018Ayrshire Murrays\u2019 ancestral tree is one of post-1603 \u2018hidden MacGregors\u2019 (i.e. the Glenlyon branch of the \u2018royal is our blood\u2019 Scottish Clan tradition)<\/strong><\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p><em>It was the biggest public investiture since the first presentation of VCs, again at Hyde Park by Queen Victoria on 16 June 1857. Murray was the most prominent recipient of decorations at the [1917] investiture, for in addition to his Victoria Cross he received his two DSOs to join his earlier awarded DCM. King George V spoke to Murray for some time (p.113)\u2026 It was perhaps on this his first trip to Scotland that he stayed at Glenlyon in Perthshire at the home of Lord and Lady Montgomery. Murray became attached to the Montgomerys and, his family believes, had a romance with Clementine, a daughter of the house who became a lifelong friend and after whom he named his daughter. By coincidence the property outside Richmond Queensland on which he finally settled in 1928, was named Glenlyon (p.114)\u2026 [Harry Murray\u2019s family] stressed that he was intensely proud of his Scottish Highlander ancestry, as he believed it to be. He was imbued with the traditional Scottish virtues of courage, endurance and loyalty, and no doubt modelled his behaviour on them (p.184).<\/em><\/p>\n<p>\u2013 G. Frankl &amp; C. Slatyer (2003),\u00a0<em>Mad Harry: Australia\u2019s most decorated soldier.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><strong>Postscript: Harry (MacGregor) Murray\u2019s 1917 Glen Lyon \u2018homecoming\u2019?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>After the June 1917 Hyde Park Investiture where he was awarded his VC as well as his two DSOs by King George V, Harry Murray had become a minor celebrity and feted in the UK Press. This was apparently even more so in Scotland because of his family name. Soon after this he was invited by the Duke of Atholl to visit Blair Castle to discuss possible Murray related family connections. He was soon guest of honour there at a related function in the Blair Castle ballrooms. On the same visit it seems, he had received another invitation to visit the Montgomerys of Glenlyon. And as per the quote at the beginning of this chapter, he developed a particular connection to Clementine Montgomery and apparently made further visits there. This was before his return to Australia in 1919 a full twelve months after the WW1 armistice. He had been given special leave by the AIF to go off and \u2018study UK farming methods\u2019 (including in Scotland) for some months before then.<\/p>\n<p>It was some years later that he bought a large sheep station named Glenlyon at Richmond, Queensland. It was here that he lived from 1928 until his death at 86 in 1966 after a car accident (the \u2018farm\u2019 remained in the family for about another 40 years). No doubt he was likely attracted to buy the property in part because of his memories of visiting the original Glen Lyon area in Perthshire some years earlier. Like his great grandfather Kennedy Murray Sr, he was not sure about his original Scottish ancestry except for one thing. This was that he passionately believed he was descended from Scottish highland peoples (and no doubt felt very much at home on those Glen Lyon visits).<\/p>\n<p>I still have very vivid memories as a young boy of Harry loudly and confidently holding court at the Glenlyon family \u2018Christmas dinner\u2019 in 1965 just months before his death. I have no doubt that he would have been particularly chuffed at our \u2018coincidental discovery\u2019 that\u00a0<em>Glen Lyon<\/em>\u00a0was an ancestral home of sorts after all. He would have been proud to be linked also to the particular Scottish highland clan which, with its heroic warrior traditions, perhaps best exemplified \u2018<em>the traditional Scottish virtues of courage, endurance, and loyalty [that he]\u2026 no doubt modelled his behaviour on\u2019<\/em>. So it was that in 2023, as part of related research for this book (along with that of my mother\u2019s separate line of \u2018Murray ancestors\u2019) I also went to Glen Lyon to follow in the footsteps of Harry Murray as well as the family of Sir James MacGregor, Dean of Lismore.<\/p>\n<p>[1] In recent decades the Australian War Memorial had taken Harry\u2019s portrait (see above) down from its display halls. Coincidentally perhaps, this was after Harry\u2019s children Doug and Clem had declined various offers to either sell to others or to donate to the Memorial his VC and other medals. Soon after the statue unveiling (thanks to efforts of the then Senator Guy Barnett and others at the time) the Portrait was \u2018re-installed\u2019. In 2015 Clem came to an agreement with the Memorial to let them have an ongoing \u2018loan\u2019 of the medals.<\/p>\n<p>[2] Clarissa Littler lived with daughter Annie Summers Murray (or \u2018Dot\u2019 as she was known in the family) and her husband David Cocker in Launceston after the death of EKM in 1904 up until her own passing in 1933. This was one of the reasons that Harry Murray remained particularly close to both his sister Dot and her elder sister Hannah Goodall (obviously named after her mother) \u2013 who like Dot had married a Cocker brother (with Hannah marrying Joshua Reynolds Cocker). Consequently, Dot\u2019s son Joseph Murray [Joe] Cocker and Hannah Jr\u2019s grandson Peter Cocker both retained a local proximity to their particular interests in the Murray family history and genealogy [<em>Cameron Richards\u2019 additional personal note: I am likewise a great grandson of Hannah Jr (and Joshua Reynolds Cocker) \u2013 as well as being a 2 X great grandson of both Kennedy Murray and Hannah Goodall<\/em>]<\/p>\n<p><em>[3]\u00a0<\/em>We mentioned earlier that our investigation into the Kennedy Murray ancestry was initially linked to a related personal inquiry into our separate \u2018maternal Murray ancestry\u2019. We eventually found lost records of this Murray lineage back in time in Scotland. They were also not \u2018Atholl Murrays\u2019 nor linked to the Kennedy Murrays. However, we found that my mother\u2019s different Murray forebears derived in particular from Maryculter (and surrounding towns also) along the Dee River outside Aberdeen. Further research has revealed the area was a known \u2018Pictish Celt\u2019 stronghold long ago. This Murray (or Morays) lineage may have gone back further than the original 1225 CE buildings of the nearby Maryculter House (at that time a Knights Templar \u2018college\u2019 on land granted to yet another Norman family in 1187 CE).<\/p>\n<p>4] There are related\u00a0<em>Australian Dictionary of Biography\u00a0<\/em>as well as\u00a0<em>Wikipedia<\/em>\u00a0entries for Charles Augustus Murray Littler who was born 1868 and was 48 years old when he died. He had lived an adventurous and interesting life also before WW1. From his home in Devonport (where his wife and children remained), he was based for many years in the Philippines. It is here he ran a business whilst serving as a commercial agent for the Tasmanian government in the Far East &#8211; regularly getting caught up in various escapades (including intelligence work for the British navy and American forces as well as serving as a supply officer for three Russian cruisers for five months). A fuller account of his life can be found in the 1991\u00a0<em>Canberra Times\u00a0<\/em>article\u00a0<em>The adventures of the Duke of Anzac\u00a0<\/em>[] <a href=\"https:\/\/trove.nla.gov.au\/newspaper\/article\/122400528\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">https:\/\/trove.nla.gov.au\/newspaper\/article\/122400528<\/a><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone size-medium wp-image-29540\" src=\"https:\/\/www.cameronkrichards.net\/kennedymurrays\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/clairville-300x113.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"113\" \/> <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone size-medium wp-image-29541\" src=\"https:\/\/www.cameronkrichards.net\/kennedymurrays\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/harry-in-1917-300x200.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"200\" \/> <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone size-medium wp-image-29542\" src=\"https:\/\/www.cameronkrichards.net\/kennedymurrays\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/HMglenlyon-300x244.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"244\" \/> <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone size-medium wp-image-29543\" src=\"https:\/\/www.cameronkrichards.net\/kennedymurrays\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/HMyounger-300x155.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"155\" \/> <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone size-medium wp-image-29544\" src=\"https:\/\/www.cameronkrichards.net\/kennedymurrays\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/KMs-300x266.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"266\" \/> <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone size-medium wp-image-29545\" src=\"https:\/\/www.cameronkrichards.net\/kennedymurrays\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/02\/statue-300x255.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"255\" \/><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>[this was a Jan 2025 post to the &#8216;Tasmanian Victoria Cross Descendants and Comrades FB group&#8217; &#8211; run by Kerri Statton who attended as an invited guest our Kennedy Murray descendants gathering in Evandale in early 2024 My great-uncle Harry Murray VC from Evandale features quite significantly in my book out on Wednesday \u201cProsperous: The [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_et_pb_use_builder":"","_et_pb_old_content":"","_et_gb_content_width":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-29539","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-blog"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.cameronkrichards.net\/kennedymurrays\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/29539","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.cameronkrichards.net\/kennedymurrays\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.cameronkrichards.net\/kennedymurrays\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.cameronkrichards.net\/kennedymurrays\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.cameronkrichards.net\/kennedymurrays\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=29539"}],"version-history":[{"count":4,"href":"https:\/\/www.cameronkrichards.net\/kennedymurrays\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/29539\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":29549,"href":"https:\/\/www.cameronkrichards.net\/kennedymurrays\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/29539\/revisions\/29549"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.cameronkrichards.net\/kennedymurrays\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=29539"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.cameronkrichards.net\/kennedymurrays\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=29539"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.cameronkrichards.net\/kennedymurrays\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=29539"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}