
CAMBRIDGE
UNIVERSITY, TRINITY COLLEGE WORLD WAR 1 WAR MEMORIAL
World
War 1 - Roll of Honour with detailed information
Compiled and copyright © Gill Cannell & Andrew Dishman 2009
The
Cambridge University, Trinity College World War 1 memorial is in the
form of Trinity College Chapel at the east end of which, either side
of the altar, there are oak panels are engraved with the 619 names of
those who died in the First World War. The memorial dedication and inscription
is carved on the floor of the pavement, in front of the high altar.
[date]
indicates date of matriculation.
(1914) indicates those who were admitted for the Michaelmas Term of
1914, but who never actually matriculated.
A date marked with an asterisk denotes that the person to whom the entry
refers joined the College in that year by some procedure other than
matriculation, e.g. by migration from another College or the non-collegiate
body.
The extra
details here are taken from `The War List of the University of Cambridge,
1914 – 1918’ by G.V. Carey. (Cambridge University Press,
1921.)
M denotes
those mentioned in despatches.
m denotes mentioned in the Secretary of State’s list for valuable
services in connection with the war
MC denotes Military Cross
 |
Photographs
copyright © Gill Cannell & Andrew Dishman 2009
|
 |
IUXTA
FIDEM DEFUNCTI SUNT OMNES ISTI NON ACCEPTIS REPROMISSIONIBUS
SED A LONGE ASPICIENTES ET SALUTANTES
ET CONFITENTES QUIA PEREGRINI ET HOSPITES SUNT SUPER TERRAM.
All
of these died in faith without having received the promises,
but from a distance they saw and greeted them.
They confessed that they were strangers and foreigners on the earth.
(Hebrews 11: 13)
In
memory of the men of this College who gave their lives in war MCMXIV
– MCMXVIII
ADAMSON |
William |
[1904]
Captain, Loyal N. Lancashire Regiment. Killed in action 24 April
1916 |
ADDY |
J
Carleton |
[1910]
Captain, E. Yorks. Rgt. M.C. Killed in action 3 May 1917 |
ALBRIGHT |
Martin
C |
[1905]
Major, Worcestershire Yeo. Died 8 Nov. 1917 of wounds received in
action |
ALDERSEY |
Hugh |
[1907]
Captain, Cheshire Yeo. Killed in action 10 March 1918 |
ALLEN |
John
E R |
[1909]
Lieutenant, 16th Lancers. M2. Died 8 April 1918 of wounds received
in aciion |
ALLEN |
Melville
R H A |
[1910]
Lieutenant (A.), R.F.C. Killed in flying accident 21 March 1917 |
ALLOM |
Charles
C G |
[1914]
Captain, Royal Field Artillery. Died 20 Oct. 1917 of wounds received
in action 9 Oct. 1917 |
ANDREWES |
Charles
N |
[1895]
Lieutenant, Labour Corps. Died 29 Nov. 1918 of influenza contracted
on active service |
ANSELL |
Arthur
George |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant, Royal Engineers (1st Field Survey Coy.). Died 25
April 1918 of gas poisoning. aged 23. Son of A. J. and E. Ansell,
of "Liscard," New Rd., Solihull, Birmingham. Bachelor
of Science, Trinity College, Cambridge. Buried in BOULOGNE EASTERN
CEMETERY, Pas de Calais, France. Plot VII. Row B. Grave 41. |
APPERLY |
Basil
L M |
[1911]
2nd Lieutenant, Queen’s Own (R.W. Kent Regiment.). Died 19 April
1917 of wounds received in action |
ARMSTRONG |
Michael
Richard Leader |
[1908]
2nd Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery and 150th Field Company, Royal
Engineers. Killed in action 22 April 1916. Aged 27. Son of Henry
Bruce Armstrong and Margaret Armstrong, of Deans Hill, Armagh. B.A.
(Mechanical Science Tripos Trinity College, Cambridge). Buried in
AUTHUILE MILITARY CEMETERY, AUTHUILLE, Somme, France. Row D. Grave
69. |
ARNOLD-WALLINGER |
Geoffrey
Seldon |
Lance
Corporal 8778, Inns of Court Officer Training Corps. Died 24 September
1916. Aged 27. Son of Robert Nasmyth Arnold-Wallinger, and Maud
Arnold-Wallinger, of Kitts Croft, Writtle. B.A. Trinity College
(Cambs); Clerk in Holy Orders. Buried in WRITTLE (ALL SAINTS) CHURCHYARD,
Essex. |
AUSTEN-CARTMELL |
Arthur
James |
[1912]
Lieutenant, 1st Battalion, King’ Royal Rifle Corps. Killed in action
1 June 1916. Aged 23. Son of James Austen-Cartmell (Barrister-at-Law),
of 27, Campden House Court, Kensington, London, and the late Mary
Aflleck Austen-Cartmell. Educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge.
Buried in CABARET-ROUGE BRITISH CEMETERY, SOUCHEZ, Pas de Calais,
France. Plot XV. Row M. Grave 12. |
BACKHOUSE |
Hubert
E |
[1901]
Captain, Sherwood Foresters (Notts. and Derby Regiment.). Killed
in action 15 Oct. 1916 1916 |
BACKUS |
Arthur
R |
[1913]
Captain, Rifle Brigade. M.C. Accidentally killed near Neuve Eglise
22 Sept. 1917 |
BAINBRIGGE |
Philip
G |
[1909]
2nd Lieutenant, Lancashire Fusiliers.; attd. Welsh Regiment. Killed
in action 18 Sept. 1918 |
BALFOUR |
John |
[1913]
Captain, Scots Guards.; attd. Royal Engineers. (Signals). M.C. M.
Killed in action 21 March 1918 |
BALLAMY |
Harold
W |
[1912]
Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. (T.F.). Killed in action 15 Aug.
1917 |
BALLANCE |
Leslie
A |
[1907]
2nd Lieutenant, London Regiment. (Civil Service Rifles); Captain,
King’s Royal Rifle Corps. Killed in action 28 Sept. 1916 |
BARBER-STARKEY |
William
Henry J |
[1898]
Captain, Royal Field Artillery. Died in German hands 10 Sept. 1914
of wounds received in action at Le Cateau 26 Aug. 1914 |
BARCLAY |
Thomas
H |
[1902]
Major, Surrey Yeo. Silver Medal for gallantry in saving life at
sea. Drowned on H.M. transport Transylvania 4 May 1917 |
BARKBY |
Hartley |
No
further information currently |
BARNSLEY |
T
Kenneth |
[1911]
Captain, R. Warwickshire Regiment. and Coldstream Guards. Killed
in action 31 July 1917 |
BARTHROPP |
Sidney
A N S |
[1910]
2nd Lieutenant, R. Sussex Regiment. Killed in action at Cuinchy
29 Jan. 1915 |
BATLEY |
Ralph
C |
[1881]
T.D. Major, Dorset Yeo. Died 23 Oct. 1917 |
BEALEY |
Adam
C |
[1892]
Captain, Somerset L.I. M.C. M. Died 22 Nov. 1917 of wounds received
in action in Palestine |
BEAUMONT-NESBITT |
Wilfrid
Henry |
[1913]
Captain Grenadier Guards. M.C. Killed in action at Bourlon Wood
27 Nov. 1917 |
BECHER |
Maurice
A N |
[1903]
Captain, King’s Own Scottish Borderers. Killed in action in Gallipoli
26 April 1915 |
BEDELL-SIVEWRIGHT |
David
Revell |
[1899]
Surgeon, R.N. Died in Gallipoli 5 Sept. 1915 |
BEER |
Arthur
H |
[1913]
Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. (T.F.). M.C. M. Died 21 Aprl
1918 of wounds received in action at Bethune 19 April 1918 |
BELL |
Edward
V |
No
further information currently |
BELL |
Gawain
M |
[1896]
Major, Hampshire Regiment. D.S.O. M. Killed in action in the Third
Battle of Ypres 31 July 1917 |
BELL |
John
James |
[1891]
Major, Ayrshire Yeo. Died 2 March 1915 |
BELL |
William
H D |
[1902]
Captain, N. Zealand Force and K. Edward’s Horse. M. Killed in action
31 July 1917 |
BELLEW |
Richard
C |
No
further information currently |
BENTINCK |
Henry
D A |
[1899]
Major, Coldstream Guards. Brevrt Major. M. Died 2 Oct. 1916 of wounds
received in action 15 Sept. 1916 |
BETHELL |
Christopher
|
[1904]
Captain King’s Own (Yorkshire Light Infantry. Killed in action
20 February 1916. Aged 31. Son of Col. E. H. Bethell, of 18, Hyde
Park Square, London, W.2., and the late Mrs. Bethell. Barrister-at-Law
of the Inner Temple. Mentioned in Despatches. Buried at CITE BONJEAN
MILITARY CEMETERY, ARMENTIERES, Nord, France. Plot IX. Row F.
Grave 81.
Extracted
information, sources: Truth, 1 March 1916 p.340, Yorkshire
Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 16, 28 February 1916, 2 March
1916. Researched by Jonathan Vernon:
Born
27 Dec 1884 Kirkee, Poonah, Bombay, India second son of Edward
Hugh Bethell DSO, retired Colonel R.E. and mother Gertrude and
grandson of the late Mr William Froggatt Betheel, or Rise Park,
and Watton Abbey, Yorkshire.
Of
18 Hyde Park Square, Middlesex
Educated
at St. Andrews College, Grahamstown, South Africa where he had
a distinguished academic career graduating with honours and from
25 June 1905, Trinity College, Cambridege being President of the
Cambridge Union and graduated with honours. Lawyer 1908. After
leaving the university he was called to the Bar but never practiced,
as he gave up his time to philanthropic work at Cambridge House,
Camberwell. When war broke out he enlisted in the Coldstream Guards,
and after three month’s training accepted a commission in
the 10th King’s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry (KOYLI). He
was promoted to Captai in August 1915. Mentioned in despatches.
He was was serving with the corps in Flanders when he was killed
on 20 February aged 31.
Colonel
Bethell’s remaining sons were both serving on active service
in France. Major Hugh Keppel Bethell, 7th Hussars, commandings
the 1st Northamptons (survived the war, rose to the rank of Colonel,
died 3 March 1947 on his farm in Kenya), and Lieut. David Bethell
in the Scots Guards. Colonel Bethel, then commanding Royal Engineers
at Plymouth was about to take up an appointment in France.
Extract
from Driffield Times - Saturday 4 March 1916, page 2:
RISE
Capt. Christopher Bethell, 10th K.O.Y.L.I, is announced to have
been killed in Flanders February 20tb. Aged 31 years, he was the
second son of Colonel E. H. Bethell, D.S.O. R.E. and grandson
of the late Mr. William Froggart Bethell, of Rise Park, and Watton
Abbey. Yorkshire. He was educated at Malvern College, Grahamstown,
South Africa, and Trinity College, Cambridge, where be was president
of the Union and graduated with honours. Although he was called
to the Bar, he for some years devoted his time and energies to
philanthropic work at Cambridge House, Camberwell. When the war
commenced he enlisted in the Coldstream Guards, and three months
later accepted a commission id n the K.O.Y.L.I., being promoted
Captain in August last. Capt. Bethell's Colonel writes. “His
loss is irreparable, and he was the most self-sacrificing and
bravest of men.” Colonel's Bethell’s remaining sons
are both on active service in France.
Extract
from Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer - Saturday
26 February 1916, page 6 and Beverley and East Riding Recorder
- Saturday 4 March 1916, page 5:
CHRISTOPHER
BETHELL, 10th K.0.Y.L.I.,
is announced to have been killed in Flanders February 20. Aged
31 years, he was the second son of Colonel E. H. Betbell, D.5.O..
R.E., and grandson of the late Mr. William Froggatt Bethell, of
Rise Park, and Walton Abbey, Yorkshire. He was educated at Malvern
College, Grahamstown, South Africa, and Trinity College, Cambridge,
where he was president of the Union and graduated with honours.
Although lie was called to the Bar, he for some years devoted
his time and energies to philanthropic work at Cambridge House.
Camberwell. When the war commenced he enlisted in the Coldstream
Guards, and three months later accepted a commission in the K.O.Y.L.I.
being promoted to captain August last. Capt. Bethell’s Colonel
writes: '"His loss is irreparable, and he was the most self-sacrificing
and bravest of men." Colonel Bethell's remaining sons are
both on active service in France. Major Keppel Bethell, 7th Hussars,
commands the 1st Northamptons, and Lieut. David Bethell is in
the Scots Guards. Colonel Bethell, now commanding Royal Engineers
at Plymouth, is about to take up an appointment in France.
|
BINNING |
Lord
George |
[[1876]
C.B., M.V.O. Lieutenant-Col., Lothian and Border Horse; Brig.-Gen.
Died 12 Jan. 1917 of pneumonia |
BION |
Rupert
Euston |
[1910]
Lieutenant, 20th Hussars; Lieutenant (A.), Royal Air Force. Killed
in action 9 April 1918 |
BIRKBECK |
George |
[1913]
Lieutenant, Norfolk Yeo. Died 19 Feb. 1916 |
BIRKBECK |
Gervase
W |
[1905]
Captain, Norfolk Regiment. (T.F.). M. Killed in action 19 April
1917 |
BLACK |
Donald
C |
[1916]
2nd Lieutenant (A.), F.A.F. Killed in flying accident 23 April 1918 |
BLAKE |
George
P |
[1898]
Captain, R. Welsh Fusiliers. Killed in action 20 July 1916 |
BODENHAM |
Henry
Edward C H |
[1914]
2nd Lieutenant, Black Watch; Lieutenant, M.G.C. Killed in action
on the Somme 7 Sept. 1916 |
BOLITHO |
Geoffrey
R |
[1911]
2nd Lieutenant, Devon Regiment. and R.F.C. Died 25 Oct. 1916 of
wounds received in action |
BOLTON |
William
S |
[1904]
Sergt., R. Fusiliers (Sportsman’s Bn.). Died 7 Feb. 1919 of pneumonia
contracted on active service |
BOND |
Charles
Gordon |
[1900]
Captain, 2nd Battalion, Duke of Edinburgh's (Wiltshire Regiment).
Killed in action 25th November 1915. Aged 34. Born 18th July 1881
in Savernake, Wilthsire. Son of the Rev. Gordon Bond, of Savernake,
Wiltshire; husband of Dorothy Melian Bond, of Thistledown, Bude,
Cornwall. Educated at Sherborne Collge and Cambridge University.
Entered Military Service from University 1903. Height 5 feet 10½
inches. Buried in GUARDS CEMETERY, WINDY CORNER, CUINCHY, Pas de
Calais, France. Plot II. Row G. Grave 6. See also Lords
MCC World War 1 |
BONHAM-CARTER |
Arthur
Thomas |
[1887]
S. African Defence Force; Captain, Hampshire Regiment. m. Killed
in action 1 July 1916 |
BONVALOT |
Edward
St L |
[1910]
2nd Lieutenant, Coldstream Guards. Killed in action 9 Oct. 1915` |
BOSCAWEN |
Hon
Vere D |
[1909]
2nd Lieutenant, Coldstream Guards. Killed in action near Ypres 29
Oct. 1914 |
BOWEN-COLTHURST |
Robert
Macgregor |
[1902]
Captain, Leinster Regiment. Killed in action 15 March 1915 |
BOWES-LYON |
Gavin
P |
(1914)
Lieutenant, Grenadier Guards. Killed in action 27 Nov. 1917 |
BOYD |
Harold
A |
[1913]
2nd Lieutenant, R. Inniskilling Fusiliers. Killed in action 7 Sept.
1914 |
BRADSHAW |
Percival
C |
[1914]
2nd Lieutenant, King’s Own Scottish Borderers. Killed in action
1 May 1916 |
BRADSHAW |
Richard
Edward K |
[1914]
Lieutenant, London Regiment. (Rangers). Killed in action 1 July
1916 |
BRADSHAW |
W
Douglas |
[1915]
2nd Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. Killed in action 31 Oct.
1916 |
BRAGG |
Robert
C |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. Died 2 Sept. 1915 of wounds
received in action in Gallipoli 1 Sept. 1915 |
BREESE |
William
L |
[1902]
2nd Lieutenant, R. Horse Guards. Killed in action 14 March 1915 |
BREUL |
Oswald
G F J |
(1914)
Lieutenant, Royal Engineers. (Signals). M.C. Died on active service
16 Oct. 1917 |
BROADBENT |
Cecil
H |
[1900]
2nd Lieutenant, King’s Own (Yorkshire L.I., T.F.). Died 1 March
1916 of injuries received in bombing accident |
BRODIE |
Ewen
James |
[1896]
Captain, Cameron Hdrs. Killed in action 11 Nov. 1914 |
BROWNE |
Charles
P |
[1905]
Captain, Corps of Guides, Indian Army. Killed in action 11 April
1915 |
BROWNE |
Montague
B |
[1894]
2nd Lieutenant, Sherwood Foresters (Notts. and Derby ;Regiment.,
T.F.). Died 30 April 1916 of wounds received in the Irish Rebellion |
BRUDENELL-BRUCE |
James
Ernest J |
[1897]
Lieutenant, Northamptonshire Yeo. Died 11 April 1917 of wounds received
in action |
BRUNTON |
Edward
H P |
[1907]
Lieutenant, R.A.M.C. Killed in action 8 Oct. 1915 |
BUCHANAN |
Arthur
N |
[1903]
Lieutenant (T.), Royal Air Force.Died 14 Oct. 1918 of pneumonia |
BUCKLAND |
Thomas
A |
[1911]
Lieutenant, Norfolk Regiment. M. Died 18 Oct. 1915 of wounds received
in action 13 Oct. 1915 |
BUDENBERG |
Donald
H |
[1915]
Captain, Manchester Regiment. Killed in action near Voormezeele
25 April 1918 |
BULLIVANT |
Ritchie
P |
[1902]
Captain, London Yeo. (Middlesex Hussars). M.C. Killed in action
24 Sept. 1918 |
BURNABY |
Geoffrey |
[193]
Lieutenant, London Regiment. (R. Fusiliers.). Died 23 Oct. 1916
of wounds received in action |
BURNAND |
Cyril
F |
[1910]
2nd Lieutenant Grenadier Guards. Killed in action 11 March 1915 |
BURRELL |
Raymond
F T |
[1908]
2nd Lieutenant, Queen’s Own (R.W. Kent Regiment.) Killed in action
26 Sept. 1915 |
BUTCHER |
W
Guy D |
[1910]
Captain, London Regiment. (L.R.B.). Killed in action at Glencorse
Wood 16 Aug. 1917 |
BUTLER |
Gordon
Kerr Montagu |
[1910]
Lieutenant, 2nd Scottish Horse [Territorial] attached Machine
Gun Corps. Died on service in Egypt 17 July 1916. Aged 23. Baptised
12 December 1891 at Cambridge, All Saints, son of Henry Montagu
and Agnata Frances Butler, of Trinity Lodge, Trinity College,
Cambridge. Son of H. Montagu Butler and Agnata F. Butler, of Trinity
Lodge, Cambridge. Educated 1905-1910 Harrow School, Harrow, Middlesex,
son of Dr H M Butler. Buried in KANTARA WAR MEMORIAL CEMETERY,
Egypt. Plot C. Grave 18. See also Cambridge,
St Faith's School and also Cambridge
Guildhall
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1917:
BUTLER
Gordon Kerr Montagu of Trinity Lodge Cambridge
lieutenant in Scottish Horse died 17 July 1916 in Egypt Administration
Peterborough 15 January to the reverend Henry
Montagu Butler trinity college master.
Effects £390 13s. 11d.
|
BUTLER |
J
Ormonde |
No
further information currently |
BUTLER |
William
Martin |
[1901]
Major, 1st Siege Company Royal Monmouthshire, Royal Engineers. (T.F.).
Died 5 March 1919. Aged 36. Son of Arthur John and Mary Caroline
Butler, of Woodend, Weybridge, Surrey, husband of Enid Butler. Educated
at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge. A civil engineer. Buried
in VALENCIENNES (ST. ROCH) COMMUNAL CEMETERY, Nord, France. Plot
II. Row C. Grave 20. |
BUTLIN |
Sir
H Guy T , Bart |
[1911]
Captain, Cambridgeshire Regiment. M. Killed in action 16 Sept. 1916 |
BUXTON |
Andrew
R |
[1898]
Captain, Rifle Brigade. Killed in action 7 June 1917 |
BUXTON |
Jocelyn
Murray Victor |
Second
Lieutenant, 6th Battalion, Rifle Brigade attached 25th Company,
Machine Gun Corps (Infantry). Died 1 July 1916. Aged 20. Son of
the late Sir T. F. Victor Buxton, 4th Bart., and of Lady Buxton,
of "Warlies", Waltham Abbey, Essex. Educated at Broadstairs
and Marlborough. Gained a History Exhibition at Trinity College,
Cambridge. No known grave. Commemorated at THIEPVAL MEMORIAL, Somme,
France. Pier and Face 16 B and 16 C. |
CAMPBELL |
Islay
M |
(1914)
Lieutenant, Sussex Yeo.; attd. R. Sussex Regiment. Died 4 April
1918 of wounds received in action |
CAMPBELL |
John
A |
[1897]
Lieutenant, 6th (Inniskilling) Dragoons. Died in Germany 2 Dec.
1917 of wounds received in action |
CAMPBELL-JOHNSTON |
Patrick
Seymour C |
[1913]
Leiut., Royal Field Artillery.; A.D.C. M.C. Belgian Croix de Guerre.
Died 30 Aug. 1919 of wounds received in action 21 May 1918 |
CARLESS |
Hugh
D |
No
further information currently |
CARLILE |
E
H Hanbury |
[1899]
Captain Hertfordshire Yeo.; attd Hertfordshire Regiment. Killed
in action 22 March 1918 |
CARVER |
Oswald
Armitage |
[1905]
Captain, 1st/2nd (East Lancashire), Royal Engineers. Died of wounds
8 June 1915. Aged 28. Son of Oswald William and Kate Carver, of
Holmes Chapel, Cheshire; husband of Elizabeth A. N. (nee Hobart)
Carver, of West Runton House, West Runton, Norfolk, married 1911
in Tonbridge, Kent; brother of Basil (below). Educated Charterhouse,
Surrey. Employed by The Hollins Mill Co. Ltd. of 5, Portland Street,
Manchester, appears on their Roll of Honour. In the 1891 census
he was aged 4, born Cheshire, resident with his parents at Rose
Hill House, Stockport Road, Marple, Stockport, Cheshire. In the
1901 census he was aged 14, born Marple, Cheshire, a boarder at
Charterhouse School, resident Hindhead Road, Godalming, Surrey.
Buried in LANCASHIRE LANDING CEMETERY, Turkey (including Gallipoli).
Section A. Grave 7. See also Horton
School, Northill and Charterhouse
School, Surrey
Extract
from The Times (London, England), Tuesday, August 29,
1916; pg. 4; Issue 41258:
SECOND
LIEUTENANT BASIL ARMITAGE CARVER, Dragoons, youngest son of W.O.
and Mrs. Carver, Cranage Hall, Holmes Chapel, Cheshire, died of
mine gas poisoning on August 21, being overcome while endeavouring
to rescue some engineers in a tunnel. He was at Horton Preparatory
School, Charterhouse, and for a short time at Sandhurst when war
broke out, and he obtained his commission a few weeks before his
18th birthday.
Extract
from Nantwich Guardian - Friday 18 June 1915, page 5:
CAPTAIN
O. A. CARVER
MEMBER OF WELL-KNOWN
CHESHIRE FAMILY KILLED
Captain
Oswald Artmitage Carver East Lancashire Royal Engineers (Territorial
Force), who death in action in the Dardenelles was recorded on
Tuesday, was born in 1887. He was the second son of Mr. W.O O.
Carver and Mrs. Carver of Cranage Hall, Holmes Chapel. He was
educated at Tanllwyfan, Colwyn, Horton School, Charterhouse, and
Trinity College, Cambridge. He rowed for Cambridge in the inter-Univeristy
race of 1908, and also for the 'Varsity in the Olynmpic Games
the samke year. He married Elizabeth Adah Noel Hobart, daughter
of Mr. Robert Hobart, of Tunbridge Wells, whom he leaves a widow
and two children. Captain Carver lived at Marple, and was a director
of the Hollins Mill Company, Limited, Manchester. Much sympathy
is felt with Mr. and Rms. W. O. Carver and family in their sad
bereavement.
|
CASTLE |
Tudor
R |
[1901]
Private, R. Fusiliers (P.S. Bn.; 2nd Lieutenant, The Queen’s (Royal
West Surrey Regiment.). Killed in action 31 Aug. 1916 |
CAVENDISH |
Lord
John Spencer |
[1893]
D.S.O. Major, 1st Life Guards. Killed in action 20 Oct. 1914 |
CAY |
Albert
Jaffray |
[1898]
Lieutenant, Worcestershire Yeo. Killed in action 23 April 1916 |
CAZALET |
Edward |
[1913]
2nd Lieutenant, The Buffs (E. Kent Regiment.) and Welsh Guards.
Killed in action 10 Sept. 1916 |
CHADWICK |
James
H |
[1907]
Private, R. Fusiliers (P.S. Bn.); Lieutenant-Col., Manchester Regiment.
D.S.O. Killed in action 4 May 1917 |
CHAMBERLAIN |
Eric
D |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant, Loyal N. Lancashire Rgt. Killed in action 30 Nov.
1917 |
CHANCE |
Edward
Seton |
[1900]
Captain (Brevet Major), 2nd Dragoon Guards (Queen's Bays) attached
as Commanding Officer, 6th Battalion, Leicestershire Regiment. Killed
in action 29 May 1918. Aged 36. Born 23 June 1881 in Carlisle. Son
of Frederick William (now Sir Frederick Chance, K.B.E.) and Mary
Seton Chance, of Morton, Carlisle. Member of Charterhouse Football
Eleven 1899-1900. Height 6 feet 1½ inches. Unmarried. In
the 1901 census he was aged 19, born Carlisle, Cumberland, an Undergraduate
at Trinity College, Cambridge, visiting The Knoll, Barnards Green,
Malvern Common, Guarlford, Upton on Severn, Worcestershire. No known
grave. Commemorated on SOISSONS MEMORIAL, Aisne, France. See also
Charterhouse
School, Surrey
From
the Charterhouse Register, Oration Quarter 1895:
Chance
, Edward Seton. b. 23 June, 1.881. (Verites); Football XI, 1899-1900;
Left C.Q., 1900. Trin. Coll., Camb.-Joined R. Welsh Fusiliers, 1903.
E.
S.
Chance, Esq., Morton, Carlisle |
CHANCE |
Eustace
George St Clair |
No
further information currently |
CHAPMAN |
Wilfrid
H |
[1898]
Captain, Yorkshire Regiment. Killed in action in Gallipoli 7 Aug.
1915 |
CHARLES |
J
Arthur M |
[1908]
2nd Lieutenant, King’s (Shropshire L.I.). Died 10 Feb. 1915 of wounds
received in action 23 Oct. 1914 |
CHICHESTER |
William
George Cubitt |
[1911]
Lieutenant, London Regiment. (R. Fusiliers.). Killed in action 15
Sept. 1916 |
CHURCHILL |
W
Maurice |
[1901]
Major, 12th Cavalry, Indian Army. M. Order of St Anne, 3rd Class
(Russia). Died 4 Nov. 1918 of pneumonia |
CLARK |
Eric
Foster |
(1914)
Lieutenant, The Buffs (E. Kent Regiment.); attd. R.F.C. Killed in
action 1 Jan. 1917 |
CLARK-KENNEDY |
Alexander
K |
[1902]
Captain, King’s Own Scottish Borderers (T.F.). Killed in action
19 April 1917 |
CLIFTON |
Hubert
E |
[1910]
2nd Lieutenant Devon Regiment. M.C. Died 4 Oct. 1916 of wounds received
in action 23 Sept. 1916 |
CLISSOLD |
Harry |
[1889]
Major, Royal Engineers. (T.F.). D.S.O. M2. Killed in action 28 Sept.
1917 |
CLOSE-BROOKS |
Arthur
Brooks |
[1903]
Captain, Manchester Regiment. M.C. M. Died 10 Jan. 1917 of wounds
received in action |
CLOSE-BROOKS |
John
C |
[1895]
Lieutenant, Life Guards. Killed in action 30 Oct. 1914 |
CLOUGH |
Alan |
(1914)
Captain, W. Yorks Regiment. Killed in action 1 July 1916 |
COCKERELL |
Samuel
Pepys |
[1898]Old
Etonian. Lieutenant (Pilot), Egypt Detachment, Royal Flying Corps.
Died of smallpox at Ismailia 20th March 1915. Aged 34. Son of the
late William Acland Cockerell and Sidney Ada Cockerell. Left Eton
College in 1898. Member of the Cambridge University Boat Race Team
of 1900. Former Commercial Attache to Spain and Portugal. In the
1911 census he was aged 31, born 20 Gloucetser Place, London, a
Financier, resident Chesham Mans Pont Street, Borough of Chelsea,
Chelsea, London & Middlesex. Buried in ISMAILIA WAR MEMORIAL
CEMETERY, Egypt. Section A. Grave 117. See also the Stock
Exchange memorial and Lords
MCC World War 1 |
COCKS |
Willard
F |
[1911]
Lieutenant, Lincolnshire Regiment. Died 9 April 1917 of wounds received
in action |
COOK |
Frank
R |
[1915]
Lieutenant, E. Yorks. Regiment. and R.F.C. Killed in flying accident
22 Feb. 1918 |
CORNISH |
Charles
L |
[1905]
Lieutenant, Highland L.I. Killed in action 13 Nov. 1914 |
CORRY |
Frederick
H L |
[1908]
Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. Died 30 Sept. 1915 of wounds
received in action 25 Sept. 1915 |
COWPER |
Geoffrey
M |
[1908]
Captain, R.A.M.C. M. Died 3 Oct. 1918 of wounds received in action |
COX |
Derek
Percy |
(1914)
2nd Lieutenant, R.FC. Killed in action 21 Aug. 1917 |
CRAWLEY |
Eustace |
[1886]
Major,
12th (Prince of Wales's Royal) Lancers. Killed in action 2nd November
1914. Aged 46. Born 19th April 1868, Highgate, Middlesex. Son of
the late Baden Crawley; husband of Lady Violet Crawley (nee Finch),
of 5, Lancaster Gate Terrace, London, W. Played cricket for Cambridge
University 1887-1889. No known grave. Commemorated on YPRES (MENIN
GATE) MEMORIAL, Ieper, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium. Panel 5. See also
Lords MCC WW1
Extract
from Du Ruvigny's Roll of Honour:
CRAWLEY,
EUSTACE, Major, 12th (Prince of Wales's Royal) Lancers,
3rd s. of the late Baden Crawley; b. 16 April, 1868; educ. Harrow;
gazetted 2nd Lieut. 12th Lancers, from the Militia, 7 Aug. 1889;
promoted Lieut. 7 Jan. 1891, Capt. 17 Nov. 1897, Brevet Major
29 Nov. 1900, and Major 29 July, 1905; was A.D.C. (extra) to the
Lord Lieutenant, Ireland, from 19 Feb. 1894, to 8 July, 1895;
took part in the operations in Sierra Leone 1898-99 (Medal with
clasp); served in West Africa 1898, where he was in command of
the Expedition to Bula; in the South African War 1899-1902, as
Special Service Officer, being afterwards employed on the Staff;
took part in the advance on Kimberley, including action at Magersfontein
and the Relief of Kimberley; operations in Orange Free State Feb.
to May, 1900, including actions at Paardeberg, Poplar Grove, Dreifontein,
Houtnek (Thoba Mountain) and Zand River; operations in the Transvaal
May and June, 1900, including actions near Johannesburg and Diamond
Hill; operations in the Transvaal, west of Pretoria, July to 29
Nov. 1900; operations in the Orange River Colony May to 29 Nov.
1900, Including actions at Lindley, Bethlehem and Wittebergen,
and those in Cape Colony Aug. 1901, to 31 May, 1902 (mentioned
in Despatches [London Gazette, 10 Sept. 1901]; brevet of Major;
Queen's Medal with four clasps and King's Medal with two clasps);
served in West Africa (Northern Nigeria) 1903; took part in the
Kano-Sokoto Campaign (Medal with clasp), and in the operations
in the district to the east of Zaria, being in command; was D.A.A.G.
India, from 17 April, 1909, to 16 April, 1913; served with the
Expeditionary Force in France and Flanders, and was killed in
action near Ypres 2 Nov. 1914. He in. 14 Dec. 1904, Violet Ella,
elder dan. of Charles Wightwick Finch, 8th Earl of Aylesford.
Extract
from The Bond of Sacrifice Volume 1:
MAJOR
EUSTACE CRAWLEY, 12th (PRINCE OF WALES'S ROYAL) LANCERS,
who was killed near Ypres on the 2nd November, 1914, was born
on the 16th April, 1868, third son of the late Baden Crawley.
He was educated at Harrow, and joined the 12th Lancers from the
Militia becoming Lieutenant in 1891, and Captain in November,
1897. Major Crawley saw much active service. In 1898-99 he took
part in operations at Sierra Leone, West Coast of Africa, for
which he received the medal and clasp. Again, in 1899 he was in
command of the Bula Expedition in Nigeria, being mentioned in
Despatches by General Wilcox, in December, 1899. He commanded
the Nigeria Company Constabulary from the latter date.
In 1900-02 he was appointed a Special Service Officer in the South
African War; was D.A.A.G. Ridley's Corps of Mounted Infantry from
April to December, 1900; took part in General Ian Hamilton's march,
being present at the actions of Diamond Hill, Johannesburg, and
Wittebergen; and also at operations in Cape Colony under General
French; he was Intelligence Officer to Capper's Column at the
end of 1901, and Staff Officer to Doran's Column from December,
1901, to May, 1902. For his services he was mentioned in Despatches
by Lord Roberts, 4th September, 1901, given the Brevet rank of
Major from November, 1900, and received the Queen's medal with
four clasps, and the King's medal with two clasps. From May to
November, 1902, he was D.A.A.G. on the staff of Colonel Hickman,
commanding the troops at Middelburg, Cape Colony.
In 1902-03 he again saw service in Nigeria, being in command of
a column in the Kano Expedition, for which he received the medal
and clasp. In 1903 he commanded Mounted In-fantry, in India, and
obtained the substantive rank of Major in July, 1905. In 1906-07
he was officiating Brigade-Major of the Amballa Cavalry Brigade
and to the Inspector-General of Cavalry in India.
Major Crawley married, in December, 1904, Lady Violet Ella Finch,
elder daughter of the eighth Earl of Aylesford.
His
profile from Cricinfo
|
CREWDSON |
Theodore
Wright |
[1914]
Captain, Manchester Regiment.; A.D.C. Died 6 Nov. 1916 of wounds
received in action 28 Oct. 1916 |
CRISPIN |
Hugh
T |
[1887]
Lieutenant-Col., Northumberland Fusiliers. and R. Sussex Regiment.
M. Killed in action 30 Oct. 1914 |
CROFT |
John
Arthur Christopher |
Second
Lieutenant, 4th Battalion, Royal Warwickshire Regiment attached
to 2nd Battalion, Duke of Wellington's (West Riding Regiment). Killed
in action 18 April 1915. Aged 27. Born 15 April 1888. Son of Henry
Herbert Stephen and Emma Croft, of Sussex Square, Brighton. No known
grave. Commemorated on YPRES (MENIN GATE) MEMORIAL, West-Vlaanderen,
Belgium. Panel 8. See also Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey
Extract
from Bond of Sacrifice: Officers Died in the Great War 1914-1916,
volume 2, page 110-111:
2nd
LIEUTENANT JOHN ARTHUR CHRISTOPHER CROFT, 4th BATTN. (EXTRA RESERVE)
ROYAL WARWICSHIRE REGIMENT, attd. 2nd BATTN. THE DUKE OF WELLINGTON
(WEST RIDING REGIMENT), was
the youngest son of Henry Herbert Stephen Croft, barrister-at-law,
Recorder of Tenterden, and was born at 28, Royal Crescent, London,
on the 15th April, 1888.
He was educated at Charterhouse and Trinity College, Cambridge.
He was an international hockey player, Blackheath Club, champion
of the Thames Punting Club, 1912, and a member of the New University
Club, St. James's Street, London.
He was gazetted to the Royal Warwickshire Regiment, in August, 1914,
and trained with it in the Isle of Wight. In November, 1914, he
was attached to the West Riding Regiment, and served with it in
the trenches in France till April, 1915.
He
was killed on the 18th of the latter month in the first attack on
Hill 60, near Ypres, "while "—in the words of his
Commanding Officer— "leading his men with the greatest
bravery in the successful charge on Hill 60 on Sunday last. We have
lost a most capable and gallant officer and charming friend whose
place it will be hard to fill." |
CROPPER |
John |
[1883]
Captain. Born 17th September 1864, 2nd son of Edward and Theodosia
Cropper, of Fearnhead, Great Crosby; husband of Anne Ellen Cropper,
of Mount Ballan, Chepstow, Mon. He was at Charterhouse [H] 1878
- 1883. He went up to Trinity College, Cambridge. He qualified in
medicine and worked for a time at a medical mission in Acre. In
the Great War he was commissioned into the R.A.M.C. He was drowned
in the sinking of the Britannic on 21st November 1916. The wreck
is now designated an official war grave. He is commemorated on the
Mikra Memorial, outside Salonica.
See also Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey
Note:
Britannic, built by Harland
and Wolff in Belfast for the White Star Line and launched in 1914,
was a sister ship to the Titanic. During the Great War she served
as a hospital ship. She sank in 55 minutes after hitting a mine
4 miles off the Greek island of Kea, on her way back to Lemnos from
Southampton via Gibraltar and fortunately empty of passengers. 30
lives were lost, many of these when two lifeboats, prematurely launched,
drifted into the still-turning propellers, 1,036 were saved.
From
the Charterhouse School Register, Oration Quarter 1878:
Cropper,
John. b. 17 Sept., 1864. (Hodgsonites); Left C.Q., 1881. Trin. Coll.,
Camb.; M.A.; St. Bartholomew's Hospital; M.D.; B.C.-C.M.S., Medical
Mission, Acre, Palestine, 1895-1901.
J. Cropper, Esq., M. D., Mount Ballan, Chepstow.
Extract
from Kington Times - Saturday 2 December 1916, page 5:
LOST
IN THE BRITTANIC.
Captain
Cropper, who lost his life in the sinking of the Britannic, was
a brother of Mrs. Probyn, wife of the Rev. H. E. H. Probyn, Vicar
of Kington.
|
CROSSE |
Edward
A W |
No
further information currently |
CROSSLEY |
Brian |
[1904]
Lieutenant, Highland L.I. M. Killed in action 18 May 1915 |
CROWE |
Hugh
Barby |
[1912]
Lieutenant, R. Fusiliers. Drowned on H.M. transport off Gallipoli
28 Oct. 1915 |
CUNNINGHAM |
James
Michael |
[1897]
Captain, Suffolk Regiment. Died 28 March 1918 of wounds received
in action |
CLARKE |
William
???? |
No
further information currently |
CUNNINGHAM |
James
S |
[1904]
Sergt., R. Highlanders, Canadian Force. Killed in action 31 Oct.
1916 |
CURRIE |
Richard
F I |
[1899]
Lce.-Corpl., R. Fusiliers. Killed in action 15 July 1916 |
DAFFARN |
Maurice |
[1906]
2nd Lieutenant, N. Rhodesian Police. Killed in action in Rhodesia
24 April 1915 |
DART |
Hugh |
[1900]
Private, Middlesex Regiment. (P.S. Bn.); Captain and Adjt., York
and Lancaster Regiment. Died 2 July 1916 of wounds received in action |
DARWIN |
Erasmus |
[1901]
Second Lieutenant 4th Battalion, Yorkshire Regiment who was killed
in action on Saturday, 24th April 1915. Aged 33. Son of Horace and
Ida Darwin, of The Orchard, Cambridge. Employed Cambridge Scientific
Instrument Coy Ltd. Commemorated on the YPRES (MENIN GATE) MEMORIAL,
Ieper, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium. Panel 33 Also listed on family
gravestone in churchyard. See
also Cambridge Guildhall
and Cambridge
St Giles
From
Andy Pay's research into the Marquis de Ruvigny's Roll of
Honour the following:
Volume
1, Part 1, Page 106
DARWIN, Erasmus, 2nd Lieut 4th battalion, Aleaxandra,
Princess of Wales Own Yorkshire Regiment (T.F) Only son of Horace
Darwin, F.R.S. Chairman of Cambridge Scientific Instrument Co,
by his wife, the Hon Emma Cecilla (Ida) nee Farrer, only daughter
of Thomas Henry, 1st Lord Farrer and grandson of Charles Darwin.
Born
Cambridge 7-12-1881, educated at Horris Hill and Marlborough (Cotton
House) and gained an exhibition for Mathematics at Trinity College,Cambridge.
He went up to Trinity in October 1901 and took the mathematical
Tripos in his second year being placed among the senior Optimes.
Afterwards he took the mechanical sciences Tripos and was placed
in the second class in 1905.
On
leaving Cambridge he went through the shops at Messrs Mather and
Platts at Manchester. After this he worked for some little while
with the Cambridge Scientific Instrument Co., of which he was
a director, and then became assistant secretary of Bocklow Vaughan
and Co Ltd at Middlesborough. Here he stayed for seven years and
at the outbreak of war occupied the postion of secretary to the
company.
As
soon as war broke out he decided to join the army and on 12-9-14
was gazetted 2nd Lieut in the 4th (Territorial) battalion of the
Yorkshires, which after training at Darlington and Newcastle crossed
to France, as part of the Northumbria division on 17-4-15 and
was within a week called upon to take part in the second battle
of Ypres. Here these Territorial troops fresh from home and tried
at the very outset almost as highly as men could be tried, behaved
with a steadiness and coolness which gained for them the congratulations
of the generals commanding their division and their army corps.
Early
on the morning of the 24-4-15 the battalion was ordered to attack
the village of Fortuin, close to St Julien where the Germans had
broken through. This attack they successfully carried out in the
face of terrific shellfire, being ordered to retire at dusk.
By
driving the enemy back a mile or more they had attained their
object which was to prevent a breach in the line, and they hade
made good their front with the Canadians and Royal Irish on their
right.
It
was during this advance that Darwin fell, killed instantaneously.
His Commanding Officer, Colonel Bell wrote of him "Loyalty,
Courage and Devotion to duty - he had them all .... He died in
an attack which gained many compliments to the battalion. He was
right in front. It was a mans death". Corporal Wearmouth,
who was in his platoon wrote "I am a section leader in his
platoon and when we got the order to advance he proved himself
a hero. He nursed us men, in fact the comment was, you would say
we were on a field day. We had got to within twenty yards of our
halting place when he turned to our platoon to say something.
As he turned he fell, and I am sure he never spoke. As soon as
I could I went to him but he was beyond human aid. Our platoon
sadly miss him, as he could not do enough for us, and we are all
extremely sorry for you, in your great loss".
Private
Wood wrote to a friend in Middlesborough "I would expect
you would know poor Mr. Darwin .... I was in his platoon and I
can tell you he died a hero. He led us absolutely regardless of
the bullets from the German Maxim guns and snipers that whistled
all around him".
Just
before he left England, when his battalion was under orders for
the front, he was summoned to the war office and offered a staff
appointment at home in connection with munitions of war. This
would have given great scope to his capabilities. "It would
have been interesting and important work" he wrote "but
of course there are plenty of older men who can do it just as
well as I can".
He
felt that at the moment his place should be with his Regiment
and made, in the words of one present at the interview, a fine
appeal to be allowed to go with his men. It was granted and he
went gladly with no looking back.
The
Times (30-4-15) said of him "Erasmus Darwin would, if he
had lived, have added fresh distinction to the name of his familyin
a walk of life in which it has never before figured. Between Cambridge
and a great iron works in the north there is something of a gulf
fixed and one who knew Darwin only in his Cambridge home cannot
say anything more than that all that met him in business conceived
a very high opinion of his grasp of the subject, his acuteness
and administrative ability. It was indeed impossibe to know him
without realising that he combined with intellectual ability a
calm, sound and practical judgement, and a general capacity for
doing things well and thoroughly. He had, too, what must have
been invaluable to him in his work, a most genuine sympathy with
and affection for working men, and this quality, which, amongst
so many other things, had made him love his work at Middlesborough,
gave him intense pleasure when soldiering came to him as a wholly
new and unlooked for esperience. He delighted in the men, and
especially in long expeditions across the moors with his scouts.
There is one more quality as to which all his friends would agree,
namely a conscientiousness that was eminently sane and wide minded
and completely unswerving. No one in the world was more certain
what to do what he believd to be right.
|
DAVIDSON
|
Norman
R |
[1897]
Lieutenant-Col., R.H.A.; G.S.O. D.S.O. and Bar. Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel.
M3. Died 5 Oct. 1917 of wounds received in action |
DAVIES |
Arthur
C |
[1896]
Captain, R. Welsh Fusiliers. Killed in action 10 Aug. 1915 |
DAVIES |
George
LLewelyn |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant, 6th Battalion, King’s Royal Rifle Corps attached
to 5th Battalion, Rifle Brigade. Killed in action 15 March 1915.
Aged 21. Son of Arthur and Sylvia Llewelyn Davies. Step-son of Sir
J.M. Barrie, Bart, Model for Barrie's 'Peter Pan'. Educated at Eton
and Trinity College, Cambridge. Buried in VOORMEZEELE ENCLOSURE
NO. 3, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium. Plot II. Row E. Grave 2. |
DAVIES |
Roland
A Llewelyn |
[1911]
Lieutenant, R. Fusiliers. Serbian Distinguised Service Medal. Killed
in action 4 Oct. 1918 |
DAY |
Maurice
C |
[1910]
Lieutenant, 13th Rajputs, Idian Army. Killed in action in E. Africa
4 Nov. 1914 |
DE
CANDOLLE |
Alec
C V |
[1883]
Major-Gen., Director-General of Transportation, Mesopotamia. C.B.
M. Grand Officer, Order of the Crown of Roumania |
DEIGHTON |
John |
[1906]
Captain, R.A.M.C. Died 20 Sept. 1916 of wounds received in action |
DENMAN |
Richard
C |
[1914]
Private, H.A.C.; Lieutenant, Grenadier Guards. Killed in action
1 Dec. 1917 |
DENNISTOUN |
John
R |
[1913]
Lieutenant, Fort Garry Horse, Canadian Force; attd. R.F.C. M. Killed
in action 4 May 1916 |
DE
ROTHSCHILD |
Evelyn
Achille |
[1904]
Major, Buckinghamshire Yeo. M. Died 17 Nov. 1917 of wounds received
in action |
DEWHURST |
George
C L |
[1910]
Lieutenant, Rifle Brigade. Killed in action 1 July 1916 |
DICKINSON |
Raymond
S |
[191]
Captain, London Regiment. (Queen’s Westminster Rifles). Killed in
action 2 Oct. 1915 |
DIXON |
J
Evelyn B |
[1913]
Captain, R. Warwickshire Regt (T.F.). Killed in action 1 July 1916 |
DOBBS |
William
Cary |
[1889]
Captain, "D" Company, 2nd Battalion, Middlesex Regiment.;
attd. R. Fusiliers. Killed in action 31 July 1917. Aged 46. Son
of Robert Conway Dobbs, J.P., and Edith Juliana Dobbs, of Camphire,
Cappoquin, Co. Waterford. Twice previously wounded. Educated at
Winchester College and Trinity College Cambridge. No known grave.
Commemorated at YPRES (MENIN GATE) MEMORIAL, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium.
Panel 49 and 51. |
DODGSHON |
Angus
J C |
(1914)
Lieutenant, Gloucestershire Regiment. (T.F.). Killed in action 10
Nov. 1917 |
DODGSON |
Francis |
[1908]
Captain, 8th Battalion, Yorkshire Regiment. Killed in action 10
July 1916. Aged 27. Son of Henley F. Dodgson, of Bovingdon, Herts.
Educated at Marlborough College and Trinity College, Cambridge.
Buried in SERRE ROAD CEMETERY No. 2, Somme, France. Plot XXVIII.
Row K. Grave 8. |
DON |
Archibald
William Robertson |
[1909]
Lieutenant, 10th Battalion, Black Watch (Royal Highlanders). Died
in Macedonia 11 Sept. 1916 of dysentery. Aged 25. Son of the late
Robert Bogle Don and of Lucy Flora Don, of Warren House, Farnham
Common, Bucks. Educated at Winchester and Trinity College, Cambridge
(Scholar of Trinity). Student of Medicine at St. Bartholomew's Hospital
Served in France, 1914-15, Salonika, 1916. Born at Broughty Ferry,
Forfarshire. His brother Robert Macpherson Don also fell. Buried
in SALONIKA (LEMBET ROAD) MILITARY CEMETERY, Greece. Row O. Grave
12. |
DONALDSON |
Sir
Hay F , K C B |
[1877]
Brig.-Gen., empld. Ministry of Munitions. Drowned on H.M.S. Hampshire
6 June 1916 |
DONALDSON |
Norman |
[1897]
Lieutenant, 45th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery. Killed in action
10 March 1915. Aged 36. Born 19 January 1879 in Chiswick, Middlesex.
Baptised 20 February 1879 in Chiswick St. Nicholas, son of John
and Frances Sarah Donaldson, resident Chiswick, Middlesex. Son of
Mrs. F. S. Donaldson, of 2, Melbury Rd., Kensington, London, and
the late John Donaldson; husband of Dorothea Joan Donaldson, of
Lower Franklands, Pangbourne, Berks. Mentioned in Despatches (MiD).
No known grave. Commemorated on LE TOURET MEMORIAL, Pas de Calais,
France. Panel 1.
See also Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey
Extract
from Bond of Sacrifice: Officers Died in the Great War 1914-1916,
volume 2, page 132:
LIEUTENANT
NORMAN DONALDSON, 5th BATTERY, ROYAL FIELD ARTILLERY (RESERVE OF
OFFICERS), who was born on the 19th January, 1879, was
the second son of the late John Donaldson, of Chiswick, and Mrs.
Donaldson, of Kensington and The Crofts, Pangbourne.
He was educated at Charterhouse and Trinity College, Cambridge,
where he took his degree in Science in 1900. At Cambridge he rowed
head of the river, was in the trial eights, also fenced for his
University against Oxford. He joined the Royal Artillery in May,
1900, and served in both Horse and Field Batteries, retiring in
1909, and, voluntarily joining the Reserve of Officers in August,
1914, in the following month was gazetted to the Special Reserve,
Royal Field Artillery, as Lieutenant.
His
Commanding Officer wrote as follows : "Lieutenant Donaldson
was shot through the head and killed instantaneously in the Battle
of Neuve Chapelle on the 10th March, 1915, and was buried near the
trench in which he fell. At the time of his death he was observing
Officer for the battery in the trenches. There was no more gallant,
unselfish, indefatigable officer in the Army, and he was loved by
all the officers and men who served with him. The battery could
not have suffered a greater loss. In order better to follow and
report on the progress of the attack, he had shown himself above
the parapet, with the regardlessness of personal danger that characterised
him, though he was never unnecessarily reckless In this respect.
The last messages from him were to say that we had gained the German
trenches, and that the fire of our battery was effective."
He was mentioned in Sir John French's Despatch of 31st May, 1915,
and his battery's share in the success of the bombardment was fully
recognised in all the orders.
Hie
married, in 1912, Dorothea, daughter of Mr. J. Freeman, of Shepperton.
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1915:
DONALDSON
Norman of Lower Franklands Pangbourne Berkshire
lieutenant R.F.A. died 10 March 1915 in France having been killed
in action Probate London 28 April to Dorothea Jane
Donaldson widow.
Effects £1928 3s.10d. |
DOWLING |
Geoffrey
Charles Walter |
[1910]
Captain, King’s Royal Rifle Corps. Killed in action at Hooge 30
July 1915 |
DREWE |
Adrian |
[1910]
Captain, Royal Garrison Artillery M. Killed in action 12 July 1917 |
DRYSDALE |
Donald
R |
[1913]
Lieutenant, Dorset Regiment. Died 25 Sept. 1916 of wounds received
in action |
DUFF |
Beauchamp
P |
[1911]
2nd Lieutenant, Cameron Hdrs. Killed in action 25 Sept. 1915 |
DUNCAN |
David
Alan |
Flight
Sub-Lieutenant (Pilot), Killingholme Naval Air Station, Royal Naval
Air Service. Killed while flying in a Sopwith Schneider 3800, drowned,
2 June 1917. Aged 22. Son of Mr. George H. P. Duncan and Mrs. H.
R. Duncan, of 12, Kensington Court, London.In the 1911 census he
was aged 15, born Valparalso, Chile, a school boarder, resident
Charterhouse, Goldaming, Godalming Rural Detached, Surrey. Educated
Trinity College, Cambridge. Buried in KENSAL GREEN (ALL SOULS')
CEMETERY, London. Grave reference 173. 44875. See also Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey |
DUNVILLE |
John
S |
(1914)
2nd Lieutenant, 1st Dragoons. V.E. Died 26 June 1917 of wounds received
in action 25 June 19171 |
EADE |
Aylmer |
[1910]
2nd Lieutenant, Yorkshire Regiment. Killed in action 9 Oct. 1917 |
DE
PEDDISON |
Richard |
No
further information currently |
EDWARDES |
Thomas |
No
further information currently |
EGERTON |
Philip
de M W |
[1913]
Old Etonian. Captain, 19th (Queen Alexandra's Own Royal) Hussars.
Killed in action 8th October 1918. Aged 23. Son of Sir Philip Henry
Brian Grey Egerton, 12th Bart., of Oulton Park, Cheshire, and Mary
Carolyn Campbell Grey Egerton, his wife (now Mrs. Richard McCreery).
His twin brother, Roland le Belward Egerton also served. In the
1901 census he was aged 15, born London, a student, boarding at
Eton College, Eton, Buckinghamshire & Berkshire. Educatd at
Eton College and Trinity College, Cambridge. Buried in BUSIGNY COMMUNAL
CEMETERY EXTENSION, Nord, France. Plot IV. Row B. Grave 29. See
also Lords MCC World War 1
memorial
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1919:
EGERTON
Philip de Malpas Wayne of Oulton Park Cheshire
lieutenant 19th Royal Hussars died 8 October 1918 in France killed
in action Administration London 20 February to
sir Philip Henry Brian Grey Egerton baronet.
Effects £1989 4s. 6d.
Extract
from Chester Chronicle - Saturday 19 October 1918, page
3:
KILLED
IN ACTION
EGERTON.—On
8th inst., at Brancourt, France, Lieut. Philip de Malpas Wayne
Egerton, only surviving son of Sir Philip H. B. Grey Egerton,
Bart., Oulton Park, Cheshire.
cp128
|
EILOART |
Horace
A |
[1908]
Major, London Regiment. (R. Fusiliers.) D.S.O. M.C. and Bar. M 3.
Died June 1920 from the effects of wounds received in action 28
May 1918 |
ELLICOTT |
Frederick
Arthur John |
[1911]
2nd Lieutenant, King’s Own Scottish Borderers. Killed in action
8 July 1916 |
ELLIOT |
Hon
Gavin W E |
(1914)
Lieutenant, Scots Guards. Died 6 Aug. 1917 of wounds received in
action |
ELLIOT |
Wilfrid
E |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant, Dorset Regiment. Killed in action 26 Sept. 1916 |
EVANS |
Bernard |
[1906]
Lieutenant, Middlesex Regiment and 55th Squadron, Royal Flying Corps.
M - Mentioned in Despatches. Died 8 April 1917. Aged 29. Son of
Edwin Evans, of 9, Ashley Gardens, Victoria, London; husband of
Bessie H. Evans (nee Murray), of 86, Emmanuel Rd., Streatham Hill,
London. Solicitor, B.A., LL.B. Marlborough College and Trinity College,
Cambridge. Buried in ONTARIO CEMETERY, SAINS-LES-MARQUION, Pas de
Calais, France. Plot IV. Row A. Grave 28. |
EVANS |
Rupert
Ancrum |
[1909]
Sergt., H.A.C.; Second Lieutenant, 3rd Battalion, Prince Of Wales's
Own (West Yorkshire Regiment). Accidentally killed 25 January 1916.
Born 6 November 1891. In the 1901 census he was aged 9, born Kennington,
Surrey, son of patrick T and Alice E Evans, resident 54, Longridge
Road, Kensington, London & Middlesex. In the 1911 census he
was aged 19, born Kensington, London, a studdent visiting at Parkhurst,
Haslemere, Lurgashall, Sussex. Buried North-West of Church in HARPLEY
(ST. BARTHOLOMEW) CHURCHYARD, Worcestershire. See also Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey and also Upton
St Leonards, Gloucestershire
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1916:
EVANS
Rupert Ancrum of 54 Longridge-road Earl's Court Middlesex
second-lieutenant 3rd West Yorkshire (Prince of Wales' Own) regiment
died 25 January 1916 at Whitley Bay Northumberland Administration
London 8 August Alice Emily Evans widow. Effects
£8829 5s. 2d
Resworn £8809. 7s. 0d. Further spent 29 January 1937.
|
EWING |
Arthur
H |
(1914)
Captain, E. Yorks. Regiment. M.C. and Bar. M. Died 8 Sept. 1918
of wounds received in action |
EZRA |
David |
[1902]
Lieutenant, Royal Garrison Artillery Killed in action 6 Aug. 1918 |
FARMER |
Henry
C M |
[1911]
2nd Lieutenant, King’s Royal Rifle Corps. Killed in action 10 May
1915 |
FARQUHAR |
Hobart
B |
[1892]
Captain, London Regiment. (Civil Service Rifles). Killed in action
near Vimy Ridge 21 May 1916 |
FEILDING |
Hon
Henry S |
[1912]
Lieutenant, K. Edward’s Horse; A.D.C.; Captain, Coldstream Guards.
Died 9 Oct 1917 of wounds received in action |
FENWICK |
Anthony
L |
[1913]
Captain, Lincolnshire Regiment. M. Killed in action 16 Feb. 1918 |
FERGUSON |
Hugh
M |
[1910]
Captain, S. Staffs. Regiment. Killed in action 11 June 1917 |
FINCH |
Henry
Alfred Ingle |
[1897]
Private, 2nd Battalion, Canadian Infantry attached to Trench Mortar
Battery. Died 28 April 1916 of wounds received in action. Aged 37.
Son of George Ingle Finch and Bessie Finch, of Little Shelford,
Cambridge. Born at Hammersmith, London, England. Educated at St.
Paul's School, and B.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge. Previous
to enlisting at London, Ontario, in Jan; 1915, was farming in the
United States of America. Buried in LIJSSENTHOEK MILITARY CEMETERY,
West-Vlaanderen, Belgium. Plot VI. Row B. Grave 23A. |
FIRTH |
Arnold |
[1901]
2nd Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. (T.F.). Killed in action
15 April 1917 |
FIRTH |
Richard
C D |
[1897]
Lieutenant, S. Lancashire Regiment. Died 21 Dec. 1914 |
FISHER |
John
Wilfred |
[1910]
Captain, 10th Battalion, Sherwood Foresters (Notts. and Derby Regiment.)
Awarded the Distinguiged Service Order (D.S.O.) M - Mentioned in
Despatches. Died 8 July 1916 of wounds received in action. Aged
23. Son of Horace Arthur and S. Kate Fisher, of Arno Vale, Notts.
Three times previously wounded, the last fatally. Educated Malvern
and Trinity College, Cambridge. Buried in HEILLY STATION CEMETERY,
MERICOURT-L'ABBE, Somme, France. Plot I. Row A. Grave 15. |
FISKE |
Charles
H |
[1914]
2nd Lieutenant, 111th Regiment. United States Army. Killed in action
near Fismes (Aisne) 12 Aug. 1918 |
FORREST |
John
W |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant, Seaforth Hdrs. Killed in action 27 Sept. 1915 |
FORSTER |
Frederic
A |
[1898]
Captain, R. Fusiliers. Died 23 Sept. 1914 of wounds received in
action at Mons |
FORSTER |
William |
[1910]
Private, R. Fusiliers. Killed in action 7 Oct. 1916 |
FOSTER |
Bernard
La T |
[1912]
Lieutenant, Manchester Regiment. Killed in action 24 July 1916 |
FOWLER |
David
D |
[1915]
2nd Lieutenant (A.), R.F.C. Killed in action 16 March 1917 |
FOWLER |
J
Dudley |
[1910]
Lieutenant, 5th (R. Irish) Lancers. Killed in action 30 Nov. 1914 |
FOYSTER |
Philip
Tillard |
[1906]
Captain, 86th Field Company, Royal Engineers. Died 11 December 1916
of wounds received in action 6 December 1916. Aged 28. Son of the
late Rev. George Alfred Foyster and Adelaide Julia Foyster. Educated
at Marlborough College and Trinity College, Cambridge. Born at Hastings.
Buried in ETAPLES MILITARY CEMETERY, Pas de Calais, France. Plot
I. Row B. Grave 76. |
FREEMAN-MITFORD |
Hon
Clement Bertram O F |
[1896]
Major, 10th Hussars. D.S.O. Killed in action 13 May 1915 |
FRENCH |
Hon
Ernest A |
[1913]
Captain, S. Wales Borderers. Died 16 Aug. 1917 of wounds received
in action |
FREND |
William
R |
[1893]
Captain, Sherwood Foresters (Notts. and Derby Regiment.) Killed
in action 20 Sept. 1914 |
FROST |
Edmund
L |
[1909]
Lieutenant, S. Lancashire Regiment. (T.F.). Killed in action 16
June 1915 |
GADDUM |
Russell
C S |
[1899]
2nd Lieutenant, R. Fusiliers. Killed in action 10 Sept. 1916 |
GALBRAITH |
Alexander
Norman |
[1896]
Captain, Ceylon Rifles. Accidentally killed in Egypt (20 Feb. 1916) |
GARFIT |
Thomas
N C |
[1910]
Lieutenant, Durham L.I. Killed in action in Gallipoli 30 April 1915 |
GARNETT |
Kenneth
Gordon |
[1911]
Seaman, R.N.R.; Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. Awarded the Military
Cross (M.C.) and the French Croix de Guerre with palm. Died 22 August
1917 of wounds received in action 21 August 1916. Aged 25. Son of
William and Rebecca Garnett, of I, The Chestnuts, Branch Hill, Hampstead,
London. Educated at Trinity College (B.A.). Rowing Blue No. 5 in
Cambridge Eight in 1914. Buried in PUTNEY VALE CEMETERY AND CREMATORIUM,
London. Plot/Row/Section I. Grave 672. |
GARNETT-BOTFIELD |
Alfred
Clulow F |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant,Rifle Brigade; Lieutenant, S. Wales Borderers. Killed
in action 9 May 1915 |
GARNETT |
W
H Stuart |
[1900]
Lieutenant-Cdr., R.N.R.; Lieutenant, R.F.C. Killed in flying accident
21 Sept. 1916 |
GARRETT |
Stephen |
[1897]
Captain, Suffolk Regiment. (T.F.). Killed in action 12 March 1915 |
GEDGE |
Cecil
Bertie |
[1885]
Old Etonian. Second Lieutenant, 3rd (City of London) Battalion
(Royal Fusiliers), London Regiment. Killed in action 25th September
1915. No known grave. Commemorated on LOOS MEMORIAL, Pas de Calais,
France. Panel 130. See also Lords
MCC WW1
Extract
from Du Ruvigny's Roll of Honour:
GEDGE,
CECIL BERTIE, 2nd Lieut., 3rd Battn. (Royal Fusiliers)
The London Regt. (T.F.), attd. Grenadier Coy., Garhwal Brigade.
I.A., only surv. child of Sydney Gedge, of Mitcham Hall, co. Surrey,
Solicitor, by his wife, Augusta, dau. of Robert Herring ; b.
Mitcham Hall aforesaid, 20 Feb. 1866 ; educ. Eton and Trinity
College, Cambridge, where he graduated B.A.; was a Barrister,
being called to the Bar (Inner Temple) in 1891, and afterwards
practised on the South-Eastern Circuit and at the Essex and Herts
Sessions ; joined the Sportsman's Battn. 9 Oct. 1914 ; was gazetted
2nd Lieut. 3rd London Regt. 1 April, 1915 ; went to France in
June. when he was attached to the Grenadier Coy., Garhwal Brigade,
and was killed in action at the Battle of Loos 25 Sept. following.
His Colonel wrote : "He was wounded early in the advance
and came back and had his wounds dressed, and then went out again
to lead his men, and he has not been seen since. He was a brave
English gentleman, and we are glad to think he was one of us.
. . . I am very sorry to say I have had strict orders not to send
forward for 'Mention' any officer who has been killed. If it were
not for this very strict rule I should have sent forward your
husband's name," and a brother officer : "There is one
thing that may console you, and that is, your husband showed the
greatest courage. He was wounded by shrapnel early in the morning,
but refused to go back. He just had his men bind him up, and when
the order came to go over the parapet, he led his men over like
a hero." He was a good sportsman, being well known in Switzerland
as a curler ; was also a keen scholar, and had edited various
publications, including "Granta" in 1890, "Huts,"
1902-3, and was sub-editor of Lord Halsbury's "Laws of Ayland."
He m. at St. Margaret's, Westminster, 6 Aug. 1892, Jessie
Bickley (Brackondale, Strawberry Hill, Twickenham), 3rd dau. of
Bery Bickley Rogers, and had a dau., Sydney, Jessie, b.
12 Sept. 1893.
|
GEE |
Robert
F McL |
(1914)
2nd Leut., Wiltshire Regiment. Died 27 Oct. 1914 of wounds received
in action |
GELDERD-SOMERVELL |
Roger
Frederic C |
[1904]
2nd Lieutenant, Grenadier Guards. Died 13 March 1915 of wounds received
in action |
GETHING |
Hugh
B |
[1902]
2nd Lieutenant, Gloucestershire Yeo. Killed in action in Gallipoli
21 Aug. 1915 |
GIBBONS |
Edwyn
I |
[1911]
Private, R. Fusiliers; Lieutenant, Lancashire Fusiliers. Killed
in action 29 April 1917 |
GIBSON-CRAIG |
Sir
Archibald Charles, Bart |
[1902]
Lieutenant, Highland L.I. M. Killed in action 13 – 17 Sept 1914 |
GILLILAND |
Valentine
K |
[1907]
Captain, R. Irish Rifles. Killed in action 8 May 1915 |
GILMOUR |
Alastair
S |
[[1906]
2nd Lieutenant, Argyll and Sutherland Hdrs. Killed in action 15
Sept. 1916 |
GILSON |
Robert
Quilter |
[1912]
Lieutenant, 11th Battalion, Suffolk Regiment. Killed in action 1
July 1916. Aged 22. Son of Robert Cary Gilson and Emily Annie Gilson,
of Canterbury House, Marston Green, near Birmingham. Born at Harrow-on-the-Hill.
Classical Exhibitioner of Trinity College, Cambridge. Buried in
BECOURT MILITARY CEMETERY, BECORDEL-BECOURT, Somme, France. Plot
I. Row R. Grave 28. |
GJERS |
Lawrence |
[1912]
Captain, Seaforth Hdrs. Killed in action 4 Oct. 1917 |
GODDARD |
Archibald
Spencer |
[1905]
Captain, 5th Battalion, Canadian Infantry. Killed in action, during
an attack near Courcelette he was badly wounded just before the
First Objective had been reached and succumbed to his wounds soon
after being carried back to the old front line 26 September 1916.
Aged 30. Born 14 October 1886 in Folkestone, Kent. School teacher
by trade. Son of Mary Monica Goddard, of Folkestone, and the late
William Day Goddard. On the staff of King Edward School, Edmonton,
Alberta. Graduate of Trinity College, Cambridge. Religious denomination
Church of England. Attested 4 November 1915 at Calgary. No known
grave. Commemorated on VIMY MEMORIAL, Pas de Calais, France. National
Archives of Canada Accession Reference: RG
150, Accession 1992-93/166, Box 3596 - 24 |
GODDARD-JACKSON |
Nicholas
Wlliam |
[1914]
2nd Lieutenant, Northamptonshire Regiment. Killed in action at High
Wood 9 Sept. 1916 |
GOLD |
Philip |
No
further information currently |
GOODWIN |
Harold
D |
[1908]
Lieutenant, Middlesex Regiment. Killed in action 1 July 1916 |
GOOLDEN |
Alexander
W |
[1908]
Lieutenant, E. Surrey Rgt.; empld. O.C.B. Killed in action in Afghanistan
after the Armistice |
GORE-BROWNE |
Harold
Thomas T |
[1904]
Private, Canadian Mtd. Rifles; 2nd Lieutenant, King’s Royal Rifle
Corps. Died 23 Aug. 1916 of wounds received in action 19 Aug. 1916 |
GRACEY |
Horace
C |
[1911]
Captain, Rifle Brigade. Killed in action at Le Transloy 18 Oct.
1916 |
GRANT |
Alan
F M |
[1911]
2nd Lieutenant, The Queen’s (Royal West Surrey Regiment.). Died
18 June 1916 of gas poisoning |
GRANT |
Alexander |
No
further information currently |
GRANTHAM |
Edward
Rodney Hasluck |
[1914]
2nd Lieutenant, 1st Battalion, Northumberland Fusiliers. Died 31
March 1917 of wounds received in action. Aged 20. Second son of
Richard Fuge Grantham and Adela Grantham, of 19, Daleham Gardens,
Hampstead, London. Educated at Rugby and Trinity College, Cambridge.
Buried in FAUBOURG D'AMIENS CEMETERY, ARRAS, Pas de Calais, France.
Plot II. Row M. Grave 22. |
GRANTHAM |
Frederic
W |
[1889]
Captain, R. Munster Fusiliers. Killed in action 9 May 1915 |
GRATTAN-BELLEW |
William
Arthur |
[1913]
2nd Lieutenant, Connaught Rangers; Major, R.F.C. M. Died 24 March
1917 of wound received in action |
GRAY |
Edward
J |
No
further information currently |
GRAY |
Maurice |
[1908]
Lieutenant, 2nd Dragoon Guards. (Queen’s Bays); Captain, M.G.C.
Killed in action 8 Aug. 1918 |
GREEN |
Horace
S |
[1902]
Major, London Regiment. M. Killed in action 20 Sept. 1917 |
GREGORY |
John
S |
[1908]
Captain, Royal Army Service Corps. and R.F.C. M. Killed in action
19 Feb. 1918 |
GRIBBLE |
Charles
H |
[1907]
Lieutenant, The Buffs (E. Kent Regiment., T.F.). Killed in action
30 Nov. 1017 |
GRIFFITH |
Geoffrey
F |
[1910]
Captain, London Regiment. (Q.V.R.). M. Killed in action 26 Sept.
1917 |
GRIFFITHS |
Richard
E |
[1907]
Private, Australian Force. Killed in action in Gallipoli 1915 |
GWYNNE |
Roderick
T S |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant, King’s Own (Yorkshire L.I., T.F.). Died 23 May 1915
of wounds received in action |
HABERSHON |
Leonard
O |
[1912]
Captain, E. Yorks. Regiment. Killed in action 13 Nov. 1916 |
HADEN |
Frederic
H |
No
further information currently |
HALL |
Frederick
G |
[1909]
Captain, Cheshire Regiment. Killed in action 7 July 1916 |
HALLAM |
Horace
George Searle |
(1914)
Lieutenant, Royal Army Service Corps. (T.F.) attached to Egyptian
Camel Corps. Killed in action near Jaffa 1 December 1917. Aged 22.
Son of George Hanley Hallam and Georgiana Louisa Hallam, of "Ortygia,"
Lower Rd., Harrow, and S. Antonio, Tivoli, Rome. Old Harrovian,
entered at Trinity College, Cambridge. Buried in RAMLEH WAR CEMETERY,
Israel and Palestine (including Gaza). Section B. Grave 23. |
HALLIDAY |
John
Alexander aka Alec |
Captain,
11th (Prince Albert's Own) Hussars. Died,
in the Duchess of Westminster's Hospital at Le Touquet, of wounds
received in action at Messines 13th November 1914. Aged 39. Son
of John and Maria Halliday, of Chichlade House, Salsibury, Wiltshire.
Buried in north-west part of ALL SAINTS CHURCHYARD, CHICKLADE, Wiltshire.
See
also Lords MCC WW1
Extract
from De Ruvigny's Roll Of Honour 1914-1918, volume 1, page
169:
HALLIDAY,
JOHN ALEXANDER, Capt., 11th Hussars, eldest s.
of the late John Halliday, of Chicklade House, co. Wilts (d. 13
Feb. 1915), by his wife, Maria (d. 25 Feb. 1916), dau. of Richard
Brown, of Ebbw Vale, Monmouth; b. 10 April, 1875; educ.
Harrow and Trinity College, Cambridge; was gazetted 2nd Lieut. from
Militia to the 11th Hussars, then in India, 5 Jan. 1898, and promoted
Lieut. 3 March, 1900, and Capt. 18 March, 1905; served in the South
African War on the Staff as Special Service Officer, 25 July to
22 Aug. 1901, and as Signalling Officer, 23 Aug. 1901 to 14 June,
1902 (Queen's Medal with five clasps); was Adjutant 11th Hussars,
and afterwards of the Leicestershire Yeomanry; went to France with
the Expeditionary Force, 15 Aug. 1914; served through the retreat
from Mons, the Battle of the Marne. the 1st Battle of Ypres, &c.,
and died in the Duchess of Westminster's Hospital at Le Touquet,
13 Nov. 1914, of wounds received in action at Messines, 31 Oct.
previously; unm. Capt. Halliday was a good all-round athlete.
and was in both cricket and football elevens at Harrow; capt. of
the Gymnasium eight; champion heavy weight boxer for the Public
Schools Competition at Aldershot, 1894, and threw the hammer for
Cambridge in the University Sports, 1896-7. He was well known in
the hunting-field in Ireland and South Wiltshire.
Extract
from The Bond of Sacrifice Volume 1, page 166:
CAPTAIN
JOHN ALEXANDER HALLIDAY, 11th HUSSARS, son of the late
John Halliday, of Chicklade House, Salisbury, was born in London
on the 10th April, 1875. He was educated at Harrow, where, in 1893,
he was in the School Cricket XI, in 189.2- 93 in the Football XI,
won the second prize for heavy- weight boxing in the Public Schools'
Competition in 1893, and the first prize for the same in 1894. He
then went to Trinity College, Cambridge; where he won the hammer-throwing
prize at the Inter-'Varsity Sports in 1897.
Captain Halliday joined the 11th Hussars in March, 1898, becoming
Lieutenant in March, 1900, and obtaining his troop in March, 1903.
He took part in the South African War in 1901 on special service,
and afterwards on the Staff, as signalling officer. He was present
at operations in the Transvaal, Orange River and Cape Colonies,
receiving the Queen's medal with five clasps. From April, 1908,
to February, 1911, he was Adjutant of his Regiment, and from March,
1911, to February, 1914, Adjutant of the Leicestershire Yeomanry.
In the Great War he was with his Regiment during the retirement
from Mons, and was fatally wounded at Messines on the 31st October.
dying from the effects in the Duchess of Westminster's Hospital
at Le Touquet on the 13th November, 1914.
Captain Halliday, who was a member of the Cavalry Club and of the
M.C.C. and I Zingari, was well known in the hunting field in Ireland,
where he hunted for twelve consecutive seasons.
Extract
from Wiltshire Times and Trowbridge Advertiser - Saturday 21 November
1914, page 4:
Capt.
Halliday Dies of Wounds.
Captain
John Alexander Halliday (Alec). 11th Hussars, who died in the Duchess
of Westminster's Hospital, Touquet, on November 18th. from wounds
received in action at Messines on October 31st, was the eldest son
of Mr. John Halliday, of Chicklade House, Wilts. Born on April 10th,
1875, and educated at Harrow and Trinity College, Cambridge, he
was good all-round athlete. He was in both cricket and football
elevens at school, champion heavy-weight boxer at the Public Schools
competition, Aldershot, 1894, and threw the hammer for Cambridge
in the University sports, 1896-97. He joined the 11th Hussars in
1898, served in India, and on special service in the South African
War (medal). He obtained his captaincy in 1905, and was adjutant
to the Leicestershire Yeomanry for three years. He went out with
the Expeditionary Force at the beginning of the war, and fought
all through the retreat from Mons. He was well known in the hunting
field in Ireland and South Wilts.
Extract
from Broad Arrow - Friday 20 November 1914, page 29:
Capt.
John Alexander Halliday, 11th Hussars, who died in the Duchess of
Westminster's Hospital, Le Touquet, on the 13th inst., from wounds
received in action at Messines on the 31st ult., was the eldest
son of Mr. John Halliday, of Cricklade House, Wilts. Born in 1875,
and educated at Harrow and Trinity College, Cambridge, he joined
the Line from the Militia in 1898, and was promoted captain in 1905.
He was engaged on special service during the South African War of
1899-1902. |
|
Herbert
Otho |
[1911]
Lieutenant. 12th Battalion Northumberland Fusiliers. Killed in
action on 25 September 1915. No known grave. Commemorated on Loos
Memorial, Pas de Calais, France. Panel 20 to 22. See also Cromer
War Memorial
Extract
from Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer - Wednesday
8 December 1915, page 6:
LIEUT.
HERBERT OTHO HAMILTON, 12th Northumberland Fusiliers, previously
reported missing is now believed to have hve been killed on September
26 at Loos. He was the only son of the Rev. W. F. T. Hamilton,
vicar of Cromer, and in January last he married Muriel, daughterof
Mrs. Wakley, of Lassmade, Barnstaple. He was educated at Repton
School and at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he took his degree
in June, 1914.
Extract
from Exeter and Plymouth Gazette - Wednesday 8 December
1915, page 3:
Lieut.
Herbert Otho Hamilton, 12th Northumberland Fusiliers, reported
missing, now believed killed September 26th at Loos, was educated
Repton School and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he took his
degree in June, 1914. He joined the Army in September, and received
his commission in the 12th Northumberand Fusiliers. He was the
only son the Rev. W. F. T. Hamilton, Vicar of Cromer (and formerly
of Christchurch Church, Woking), and in January last he married
Miss Muriel Wakley, daughter of Mrs. Wakley, of Lasswade, Barnstaple.
The major commanding his Company wrote: "We had to attack
at 9 a.m. My Company was leading, and of the Company Herberh s
platoon had the honour of leading. He fell right forward in the
fining line at the head of his men. He was a very gallant officer,
and greatly beloved by all." In his last letter to his father,
Lieut. Hamilton wrote:—" Just a line while the beginning
of the great battle is going on. It is wonderful how peaceful
one feels amid it all. Any moment one may be put out of action,
but one does not worry. That quiet time alone with at the Holy
Communion was very nice and solemn and most comforting."
|
HAMILTON |
Kenneth |
[1905]
Lieutenant, W. African Frontier Force. Died in Nigeria 15 Nov. 1918
of influenza contracted on active service |
HANDFORD |
Everard
Francis Sale |
(1914)
2nd Lieutenant, Sherwood Foresters (Notts. and Derby Regiment.,
T.F.). Killed in action 15 Oct. 1915 |
HANDFORD |
H
Basil S |
[1912]
Captain, Sherwood Foresters (Notts. and Derby Rgt., T.F.). Killed
in action 15 Oct. 1915 |
HANSON |
Oswald
H |
[1891]
Lieutenant-Cdr., R.N.V.R. Killed while prisoner in German hands
5 Nov. 1914 |
HARKER |
E
Keith |
No
further information currently |
HARMSWORTH |
Hon
Vere S T |
(1914)
Lieutenant, R.N.V.R. (R.N.D.). Killed in action 13 Nov. 1916 |
HARRIS |
Roland
J |
No
further information currently |
HARRISON |
Everard |
[1901]
Captain, R.A.M.C. (T.F.). Killed in action 18 April 1917 |
HARROWING |
John
Stanley |
[1907]
Captain, Royal Army Service Corps. and R. Warwickshire Regiment.
M.C. Chevalier, Legion of Honour(France). Killed in action at Bullecourt
4 May 1917 |
HARTLEY |
Charles
F |
No
further information currently |
HARTLEY |
William
E |
[1896]
Instructor, R.N. Accidentally killed on H.M.S. Vnguard 9 July 1917 |
HARVEY |
Douglas
L |
[1911]
2nd Lieutenant, 9th Lancers. Killed in action 2 Nov. 1914 |
HARVEY |
Frank
L |
[1909]
Lieutenant, 9th Lancers. Killed in action 30 Oct. 1914 |
HASKINS |
Francis
W |
[1908]
Private, Cheshire Regiment. Died July 1916 |
HASLAM |
William
K S |
[1911]
Captain, Royal Field Artillery. (T.F.). Killed in actin 27 April
1917 |
HEAPE |
Brian
[Ruston] |
[1911]
Lieutenant Acting Captain, "A" Battery, 162nd Brigade,
Royal Field Artillery. Killed in action 16 May 1917. Attested
7 August 1914, as 1092, West Riding Divisional Signal Company,
Royal Engineers, born Cambridge, aged 22 years 1 month, employed
as an Engineer at Vickers Ltd, unmarried, height 5 feet 9¾
inches, chest 40 inches, embodied from 7 August 1914 to 1 October
1914. In the 1901 census he was aged 8, born Trumpington, resident
(Heyroun), Chaucer Road, Trumpington, Chesterton, Cambridgeshire.
Buried in FAUBOURG D'AMIENS CEMETERY, ARRAS, Pas de Calais, France.
Plot V. Row E. Grave 27. See also Cambridge,
St. Faith's School
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1917:
HEAPE
Brian Ruston of 10 King's Bench-walk London a
captain R.F.A. died 10 May 1917 at Arras in France Administration
London 15 August to Walter Heape esquire. Effects
£1484 16s. 3d.
Extract
from De Ruvigny's Roll of Honour 1914-1918, Volume 3,
page 133-134:
HEAPE,
BRIAN RUSTON, Capt., R.F.A., s. of Waiter Heape,
M.A., F.R.S., of King's End House. Bicester, and of 10, King's
Bench Walk, Temple, by his wife Ethel, dau. of Joseph Ruston ;
b. Cambridge. 27 June, 1892: educ. at Parkfield, Hayward's
Heath; at Repton. where he was a member of the O.T.C., and shot
for his school at Bisley ; he also represented his school in the
team sent to Aldershot for the Public Schools competition of his
year, and at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he served in the
University Cavalry Corps. He was apprenticed to Messrs. Vickers,
Sheffield ; joined the West Riding Territorial Royal Engineer
Corps on the outbreak of war ; obtained a commission in the Royal
Horse Artillery in Dec. 1914, and subsequently exchanged into
the Royal Field Artillery. He served with the Expeditionary Force
in France and Flanders from March, 1915 ; took part in the operations
on the Somme, and was killed in action 16 May, 1917, while acting
Major in command of his battery, and fighting his gnus at the
Battle of Arras. His Colonel wrote : Brian, as you know, was a
great friend of mine, and we had journeyed into much danger together.
You have reason to be proud of him as the bravest of brave soldiers.
as brave a man as ever I have met. He had nerves of steel, and
did not know what fear was ; in fact, he didn't realize that there
was any such thing as danger in the whole world. He was a born
fighting soldier, a most capable battery commander, and during
the whole time he was serving under me I never found a single
fault in him, nor did I have a single complaint from him I miss
that great big, cheery fellow, with his wonderfully joyful laugh
and his perfect good temper. He was the life and soul of his battery,"
and a brother officer: " His death was nearly as great a
blow to us as It must be to you, as we loved him as only a soldier
can love a very brave and gallant officer." Unm.
|
HEBBLETHWAITE |
Christopher
John? |
[1903]
Lieutenant, Nigeria Regiment., W. African Frontier Force. Killed
in action near the Nigerian frontier 7 April 1915 |
HEDLEY |
William
A C |
(1914)
Lieutenant, The Buffs (E. Kent Regiment.). M. Died 19 July 1918
of wounds received in action |
HELM |
Henry
P D |
[1912]
Captain, Border Regiment.; Captain (O. and Ad.).Royal Air Force.
M. Died 6 Nov. 1918 |
HENDERSON |
Alec
S |
[1905]
Captain, London Regiment. (R. Fusiliers.). Died 25 April 1915 of
wounds received in action |
HENN |
Edward
Henry Lovett |
[1910]
2nd Lieutenant, 9th Battalion, Rifle Brigade; attached to King’s
Royal Rifle Corps. Killed in action 25 September 1915. Aged 23.
Son of Edward Lovett-Henn and Margaret Agnes Vaughan Henry his wife,
of Campagne Sidi-Merzoug, El-Biar, Algiers. Educated at Freiburg
University, Baden, and Trinity College, Cambridge. B.A., 1913. Qualified
for entry to Foreign Office (2nd in Competition), August, 1914.
Volunteered Sept., 1914, and went to France in August,1915. No known
grave. Commemorated om YPRES (MENIN GATE) MEMORIAL, West-Vlaanderen,
Belgium. Panel 46 - 48 and 50. |
HENRI |
Frank |
[1912]
Captain, Northumberland Fusiliers. Killed in action 15 June 1918 |
HERDMAN |
George
A |
[1914]
2nd Lieutenant, King’s (Liverpool Regiment.). Killed in action1
July 1916 |
HERMAN |
George
A |
[1911]
Lieutenant, Cambridgeshire Regiment. Killed in action near Givenchy
20 July 1916 |
HERRIES |
Alexander
D Y |
[1911]
Captain, King’s Own Scottish Borderers. Killed in action on the
Somme 23 July 1916 |
HESLOP |
George
H |
(1914)
Captain, Middlesex Regiment. Killed in action 1 July 1916 |
HESS |
Henry |
(1914)
Private, R. Fusiliers (P.S. Bn.); 2nd Lieutenant, Middlesex Regiment.
M. Died 28 Oct. 1916 of wounds received in action |
HETHERINGTON |
Thomas
William |
[1911]
Lieutenant, Durham L.I. Killed in action 17 July 1916 |
HEXT |
Thomas
M |
[1915]
2nd Lieutenant, King’s Royal Rifle Corps. Killed in action 29 April
1917 |
HEYWOOD |
Arthur
G P |
[1904]
Major, Manchester Regiment.; G.S.O. 3. Died 12 Sept. 1918 of wounds
received in action 28 Aug. 1918 |
HEYWOOD |
Bertram
C P |
[1882]
T.D. Colonel, Manchester Regiment. (T.F. Res.). Died 28 Oct. 1914
|
HEYWORTH |
Heyworth
Potter Lawrence |
[1896]
Captain and Adjt., N. Staffs. Regiment. Killed in action in Gallipoli
6 Aug. 1915 |
HICKS |
Basil
Perrin |
[1911]
Lieutenant, R. Berkshire Regiment. Killed in action 25 Sept. 1915 |
HILARY |
Harry
J |
[1897]
2nd Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. Died 3 June 1917 of wounds
received in action |
HILL |
Charles
E C |
[1913]
Lieutenant and Adjt., Highland L.I. M. Killed in action in Mesopotamia
17 April 1916 |
HILLS |
William
F W |
[1912]
Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. and R.F.C. Killed in action 6
March 1917 |
HILTON |
Henry
D |
[1902]
2nd Lieutenant, Middlesex Regiment. Killed in action 19 Dec. 1914 |
HILTON |
Murray
V |
[1875]
Colonel, E. Lancashire Regiment. Killed in action 20 Oct. 1915 |
HINDLEY-SMITH |
Evelyn
Hay |
No
further information currently |
HOARE |
H
Colt A |
[1907]
Captain, Dorset Yeo. Died 19 Dec. 1917 of wounds received in action
Nov. 1917 |
HODGSON |
Cyril
A G |
[1902]
Captain, R. North Devon Yeo. Died 20 March 1918 of pneumonia following
malaria contracted on active service |
HODGSON |
George
W H |
[1907]
Lieutenant, Border Regiment. Died 6 Nov. 1914 of wounds received
in action 2 Nov. 1914 |
HOLMAN |
Donald |
(1914)
Lieutenant, Middlesex Regiment.; attd. The Queen’s (Royal West Surrey
Regiment.). Killed in action 8 Aug. 1918 |
HOPGOOD |
John
L |
(1914)
Private, Middlesex Regiment. (P.S Bn.); 2nd Lieutenant, The Queen’s
(Royal West Surrey Regiment.). Died 17 Aug. 1916 of wounds received
in action 13 Aug. 1916 |
HOPKINSON |
Bertram
|
[1892]
F.R.S. Lieutenant Colonel, Royal Air Force. Killed in flying accident
in crash of a Bristol F.2b. Monday, 26th August 1918. Aged 44.
Son of Dr. John Hopkinson, F.R.S., M.A., D.Sc., and Mrs. E. Hopkinson,
of "Ellerslie", Adams Rd., Cambridge; husband of Mariana
Hopkinson (nee Siemens), of 10, Adams Rd., Cambridge. Buried in
the right half, near chapel, in ST. GILES & ST. PETER CHURCHYARD
CEMETERY, Cambridge. Grave reference 2D51/2. The RAF List 1st
April 1918 lists him as Major serving under Ministry of Munitions
(Aircraft Production). See also Cambridge
St Giles and Cambridge
Guildhall
Born 11 January 1874, Birmingham ; eldest son of Dr.John Hopkinson
(1849-1898) (later Professor of Electrical Engineering, King's
College, London) & Evelyn Hopkinson (nee Oldenburg). Educated
at St.Paul's, London, Trinity College, Cambridge (MA Mathematics),
& King's College, London (BSc Experimental Physics). Called
to the Bar, 1897, & practised patent law. Consultant electrical
engineer, 1898-1903. In 1903, married Mariana, eldest daughter
of Alexander Siemens; in same year, appointed Professor of Mechanisms
& Applied Mechanics, Cambridge University, & elected Professorial
Fellow at King's College,Cambridge. Research into electronic measurement
techniques, efficiency of internal combustion engines,& effects
of projectiles & explosives on armour plate. Elected Fellow
of the Royal Society,1910. Also served as Major on London Electrical
Volunteers (TF) & commanded RE Section of Cambridge University
OTC, 1908-14. On outbreak of war, taught at School of Military
Engineering, Chatham, then worked at Admiralty, 1915, on protection
of warships from mines and torpedoes, developing "bulge"
protection system. Transferred to Royal Flying Corps November
1915, as Technical Staff Officer. 1916-18, directed research into
aircraft bombing and armament development at Experimental Station,
Orfordness. Companion of the Order of St.Michael & St.George
(gaz. 24th January 1917) ; prom.to Lt.Col. (RAF) (gaz. 23rd July
1918). Killed in flying accident 26/8/1918, piloting Bristol F.2b
C4885; flying solo, crashed in bad weather at Paston, Essex, en
route from Martlesham Heath to Hendon. Buried at St.Giles' Cemetery,
Cambridge, 30th August 1918, after funeral service at King's College
Chapel. Survived by widow & six daughters.
|
HOPKINSON |
Eric
Humphrey |
[1913]
Lieutenant, 1st Battalion, Cambridgeshire Regiment. Awarded the
Military Cross (M.C.) M - Mentioned in Despatches twice. Died in
German hands 2 June 1915 of wounds received in action. Aged 21.
Son of Albert and Olga C. Hopkinson, of 6, Adams Rd., Cambridge.
Scholar, Trinity College, Cambridge. No known grave. Commemorated
on PLOEGSTEERT MEMORIAL, Hainaut, Belgium. Panel 10. |
HOPKINSON |
Rudolph
C |
[1909]
Lieutenant, Royal Engineers. (Signals). M. Died 9 Feb. 1917 of wounds
received in action 24 Nov. 1915 |
HOPLEY |
Geoffrey
William Van der Byl |
[1910]
Second
Lieutenant, 2nd Battalion, Grenadier Guards and Special Reserve.
Died of wounds 18th May 1918. Born 9th September 1891, Kimberley,
Cape Province, South Africa. Buried in HARROW CEMETERY, Middlesex.
Grave reference 19. I. 3306. See also Lords
MCC WW1
Extract
from Wisden
Cricketers' Almanack
Second
Lieut. Geoffrey William Vanderbyl Hopley (2nd Battalion Grenadier
Guards) died at the age of 23 on May 12 in the Military Hospital
at Boulogne-sur-Mer, having been severely wounded in Flanders
on February 3. He was in the Harrow Eleven in 1909 and 1910, in
the latter season being second in the batting averages with 27.18.
In his two matches against Eton he scored 1 and 23, 35 and 8.
Proceeding to Cambridge, he obtained his Blue in 1912, making
14 and 6 not out v Oxford, but was unable to keep his place in
either of the two following years. In 1914 he gave every promise
of regaining a position in the side, scoring 29 and 120 in the
Seniors' Match and 86 and 68 in a Trial game, but later he was
quite out of form. In 1912 he won the heavyweight boxing for Cambridge.
He was brother of Mr. FJV Hopley, and had been a member of the
MCC since 1911.
Extract
from De Ruvigny's Roll Of Honour 1914-1918, Volume 2,
page 171:
HOPLEY,
GEOFFREY WILLIAM VANDER BYL, 2nd Lieut., 2nd Battn. Grenadier
Guards. 2nd s. of the Hon. William Musgrove Hopley, of
Tenterden, Wynberg, Cape Colony, Senior Judge of Southern Rhodesia,
by his wife, Annie, eldest dau. of the Hon. John Vander Byl, M.L.A.
; b. Kimberley, South Africa, 9 Sept. 1891 ; educ. Harrow
(Scholar), and Trinity College, Cambridge (Scholar), where he
obtained a First Class in the Law Tripos ; subsequently became
a Barrister-at-Law, being called to the Bar (Inner Temple) in
1914 ; volunteered for Imperial Service on the outbreak of war
in the Aug. of that year, and was gazetted 2nd Lieut. Grenadier
Guards on the 19th ; served with the Expeditionary Force in France
and Flanders, and died in hospital at Boulogne. 12 May, 1915,
from wounds received in action near Bethune on 3 Feb. He was a
keen sportsman; while at Harrow played in the Cricket XI. against
Eton, and later in the Cambridge Xl. against Oxford ; also represented
Cambridge as heavyweight boxer against Oxford : unm.
|
HORNSBY |
Richard
L W |
[1911]
2nd Lieutenant, Lincolnshire Regiment. Killed in action 9 Oct. 1915 |
HORNUNG |
John
P |
[1913]
2nd Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. M.C. Died 20 Feb. 1916 of
wounds received in action |
HOWARD |
Cecil
C |
No
further information currently |
HOWARD |
John
B |
(1914)
Captain, R.Welsh Fusiliers. (T.F.). Died 6 Sept. 1918 of wounds
received in action |
HOWKINS |
George
A |
[1913]
2nd Lieutenant, Northum,berland Fuls. Killed in action 25-27 Sept.
1915 |
HUBBACK |
Francis
W |
[1903]
2nd Lieutenant, London Regiment. (Rifles). Died 12 Feb. 1917 of
wounds received in action |
HUDSON |
Arthur
C |
[1895]
Major, R. Fusiliers. Died 2 Oct. 1916 of wounds received in action |
HUDSON |
Ralph
Palliser Milbanke |
[1910]
Captain, 3rd Battalion, Duke of Wellington's (West Riding Regiment).
Died 25 March 1920 form the effect of wounds received in action.
Born 14 October 1890. Baptised 19 November 1890 in Ashbrooke,
Christ Church, Durham, son of Ralph Millbanke and Eliza Westropp
Hudson. Sailed from Plymouth to Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
8 November 1916, aged 25 aboard the Omrah. See also Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1920:
HUDSON
Ralph Palliser Milbanke of 8 the Cedars Sunderland
died 25 March 1920 Probate Durham 2 December
to Annie Charleston Hudson widow Ralph Frederick Richard Becher
lieutenant in H.M. Army and John Sanderson Dawson coal exporter.
Effects £16619 11s. 10d. in the United Kingdom.
Extract
from Lichfield Mercury - Friday 2 April 1920, page 6:
Captain
Ralph Hudson ("Peter"), short story writer and shipowner,
has died at Sunderland, aged thirty. His death was indirectlhy
due to injuries received through being buried in a shell hole
during the war.
|
HUGHES |
Norman
A |
[1907]
Private, R. Fusiliers (P.S. Bn.); Captain, Welsh Regiment. Killed
in action 18 Sept. 1918 |
HUGHES |
Thomas
McK |
[1902]
Private, London Regiment. (Artists Rifles); Lieutenant, King’s Royal
Rifle Corps and Gen. Staff (Intelligence), attd., R.F.C. M. Killed
in action near Polderhoek 5 Feb. 1918 |
HUGHES-GIBB |
Harold
Francis |
[1910]
Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. Killed in action 18 April 1917 |
HULTON-SAMS |
Rev
Frederic Edward B |
[1900]
Lce.-Cpl., Bedfordshire Regiment.; Lieutenant, D. of Cornwall’s
L.I. Killed in action at Hooge 30 July 1915 |
HUNTSMAN |
Benjamin
C |
(1914)
Captain, Sherwood Foresters (Notts. and Derby; Regiment., T.F.).
Killed in action 7 April 1917 |
INGRAM |
Thomas
L |
[1894]
Captain, R.A.M.C. D.S.O. M.C. M2. Killed in action 16 Sept. 1916 |
INSOLE |
George
C L |
[1907]
Captain, Welsh Guards. M.C. Killed in action 12 April 1918 |
INNES |
Donald
McLeod |
Second
Lieutenant, 14th Battalion, Royal Highlanders (Black Watch). Died
of wounds 6 October 1918. Aged 19. Born at Cambridge. Birth registered
in the July to September Quarter 1899 in Cambridge. Baptised 11
July 1899 in Cambridge, St Paul, son of Margaret and Hugh Mcleod
Innes, of St Eligius Street, Cambridge. Son of Hugh McLeod Innes
and Margaret Innes, of 6, St. Elgins
(sic
- s/b Eligius)
St., Cambridge; grandson of Lt. Gen. James John McLeod Innes, V.C.,
Royal Engineers; brother of Patrick McLeod Innes (below). Scholar
of Repton School; Exhibitioner of Trinity College, Cambridge. In
the 1901 census he was aged 1, born Cambridgeshire, son of Hugh
Mcleod and Margaret Innes, resident 6, St Eligins Street, Cambridge.
Buried in ABBEVILLE COMMUNAL CEMETERY EXTENSION, Somme, France.
Plot IV. Row G. Grave 16.
See also Cambridge Guildhall
and also Cambridge St Paul's
|
INNES |
Patrick
McLeod |
Second
Lieutenant, 111th Siege Battery, Royal Garrison Artillery. Killed
in action 30 April 1917. Aged 19. Birth registered in the July to
September Quarter 1897 in Cambridge. Baptised 13 October 1897 in
Cambridge, St Paul, son of Margaret and Hugh Mcleod Innes, of St
Eligius Street, Cambridge. Son of Hugh McLeod Innes and Margaret
Innes, of 6, St. Eligius St., Cambridge; brother of Donald McLeod
Innes (above). Educated at Haileybury College, 1911-1916. Head of
School, elected to a History Scholarship at Trinity College, Cambridge,
1915. Buried in LA TARGETTE BRITISH CEMETERY, NEUVILLE-ST. VAAST,
Pas de Calais, France. Plot I. Row A. Grave 3. See also Cambridge
Guildhall and also Cambridge
St Paul's
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1917:
INNES
Patrick McLeod of 6 St. Elgin's-street Cambridge
second-lieutenant Royal Garrison Artillery died 3o April
17 Administration Peterborough 5 October to Hugh
cLeod Innes fellow and bursar Trinity College.
Effects £144 5s. 4d.
|
IPSWICH |
Viscount
William Henry Alfred |
[1903]
Lieutenant, Coldstream Guards.; Lieutenant (A.), Royal Air Force.
Killed in flying accident 23 April 1918 |
ISHERWOOD |
Samuel
G |
No
further information currently |
JACKSON |
Bertram
R |
[1906]
Captain, Coldstream Guards. Killed in action 15 Sept. 1916 |
JACKSON |
Edward
P |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant, R. Warwickshire Regiment.; attd. S. Wales Borderers.
Killed in action 9 May 1915 |
JEAKES |
John
W |
[1899]
Lieutenant, R. Berkshire Regiment. Died 12 Oct. 1917 of wounds received
in action |
JENKIN |
Louis
F |
(1914)
2nd Lieutenant, Loyal N. Lancashire Regiment.; Captain, R.F.C. M.C.
and Bar. Killed in action 11 Sept. 1917 |
JENNISON |
James
L |
No
further information currently |
JOHN |
Hugh
Graham |
[1914]
2nd Lieutenant, York and Lancaster Regiment.; attd. Northumberland
Fusiliers. (T.F.). Wounded and missing, presumed killed in action,
at Hooge 16 June 1915 |
JOHNSON |
George
A M T |
(1914)
2nd Lieutenant, London Regiment. (St Pancras Bn.). Killed in action
21 May 1917 |
JOHNSON |
Reginald
T |
[1898]
Captain, N. Staffs. Regiment. (T.F.). Killed in action near Hulluch
13 Oct. 1915 |
JOHNSON |
William
Morton |
[1900]
Captain, 16th Battalion, Manchester Regiment. Killed in action at
Montauban 2 July 1916. Aged 34. Son of William Henry Johnson, B.Sc.,
and Agnes Morton Johnson, of Woodleigh, Altrincham, Cheshire. Educated
at Harrow and Trinity College, Cambridge. M.A., F.R.G.S. Chairman
and Managing Director, R. Johnson, Clapham & Morris Ltd., Manchester.
No known grave. Commemorated on THIEPVAL MEMORIAL, Somme, France.
Pier and Face 13 A and 14 C. |
JOICEY |
Hon
Sydney J D |
[1903]
Captain and Adtj., Northumberland Fusiliers. Killed in action 20
March 1916 |
JONES |
Cecil
Hugh |
[1906]
Captain, R. Welsh Fusiliers. Killed in action 18 Sept. 1918 |
JONES |
Evan
Davies |
[1911]
2nd Lieutenant, R. Fusiliers; Lieutenant (A.), Royal Air Force.
Killed in action 2 April 1918 |
JONES |
Fred
J J R |
[1913]
Trooper, 27th Regiment. Of Dragoons, French Army. Died 23 Feb. 1915
of wounds received in action |
JOWETT |
Eric
C |
(1914)
Lieutenant, Northumberland Fusiliers.; Lieutenant (A.), R.F.C. Died
in German hands 9 July 1916 of wounds received in action 8 July
1916 |
KEELING |
Frederic
H |
[1904]
C.S.M., D. of Cornwall’s L.I. Killed in action 18 Aug. 1916 |
KEEN |
Arthur
W |
[1913]
Major (A.), Royal Air Force. M.C. Died 2 Sept. 1918 of wounds received
in action 15 Aug. 1918 |
KELSEY |
Arthur
E |
[1883]
Fleet-Surgeon, R.N.; Captain, R.A.M.C. Drowned on H.M. hospital
ship Glenart Castle 26 Feb. 1918 |
KENNEDY |
Horas
T |
[1908]
2nd Lieutenant, N. Staffs. Regiment.; Lieutenant, R. Scots Fusiliers.;
attd Royal Engineers. (Fioeld Survey Coy.). Killed in action 6 June
1917 |
KENNEDY |
John
M S |
[1912]
Lieutenant, Seaforth Hdrs. Killed in action 10 Aug. 1915 |
KERRISON |
Roger
O |
[1891]
Old
Etonian. Lieutenant-Colonel, 6th Reserve Cavalry Regiment (Formerly
Suffolk Yeomanry) attached 4th Brigade, Australian Field Artillery.
Died of dysentery 18th September 1917. Aged 44. Son of Roger and
Florence Lucy Kerrison, of Tattingstone Place, Ipswich, Suffolk.
Educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge. Left Eton College
in 1891. Joined the Loyal Suffolk Hussars (Yeomanry) in 1896,
subsequently commanded the Regiment. In the 1881 census he was
aged 7, born Norfolk, a scholar, son of Roger and Florence Lucy
Kerrison, resident Tower House, 17, Ipswich St Mary at the Tower,
Ipswich, Suffolk. Married Diana Elizabeth Postle Heseltine in
1896 in St Paul, Wilton Place, Knightsbridge, Middlesex who he
divorced and then married Elizabeth Isobel Stuart Ferguson in
the July to September Quarter 1915 in St. Martin registration
District, London. . Buried in WIMEREUX COMMUNAL CEMETERY, Pas
de Calais, France. Plot IV. Row N. Grave 4. See also Lords
M.C.C. WW1 War Memorial.
Photograph
Copyright © Illustrated London News - Saturday 20 October
1917, page 17
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1917:
KERRISON
Roger Orme of 56 Brompton-square Middlesex died
18 September 1917 iri France Probate London 28
December to Elizabeth Isobel Stuart Kerrison widow.
Effects £19578 12s. 2d.
Extract
from Hampshire Independent - Saturday 22 September 1917,
page 7 and Hampshire Advertiser - Saturday 22 September
1917, page 6:
Lieutenan
Colonel Roger Orme Kerrison, Reserve Regiment of Cavalry, attached
Australian Artillery, died on September 18th, in hospital abroad,
of dysentery contracted on active service, aged 44. Colonel Kerrison
formerly commanded the Suffolk Hussars Yeomanry. He was a magistrate
for Suffolk, and Lord of the Manor of Tattingstone. He married
first in 1896 Diana Elisabeth, third daughter of John Postle Heseltine,
formerly of Walhampton, Lymington, and second, in 1915, Elizabeth
I. Stuart-Ferguson.
|
KINDERSLEY |
Henry
R |
[1882]
Major, Dorset Yeo. and Labour Corps |
KING |
Arthur
M |
[1888]
Major, Rifle Brigade. Killed in action 15 March 1915 |
KINNAIRD |
the
Hon Douglas Arthur (Master of Kinnaid) |
[1898]
Old Etonian. Captain, 1st Battalion, Scots Guards. Killed in action
24th October 1914. Aged 35. Master of Kinnaird. Son of 11th Baron
Kinnaird, of Rossie Priory, Inchture, Perthshire, resident 10, St.
James's Square, London. His brother The Hon Arthur Middleton also
fell. Educated Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge. Left Eton College
in 1898. Height 5 feet 7½ inches. Religious denomination
Presbyterian. Served in Egypt 22nd March 1912 to 1st January 1913
and France from 4th October 1914. Buried in GODEZONNE FARM CEMETERY,
Ieper, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium. Plot II. Row A. Grave 1. See also
Lords MCC WW1
Extract
from De Ruvigny's Roll Of Honour 1914-1918, volume 1, page
216:
KINNAIRD,
HON. DOUGLAS ARTHUR, Master of Kinnaird, Capt., 2nd Battn.
Scots Guards, eldest s. of Arthur Fitzgerald, 11th Lord
Kinnaird, K.T., by his wife, Mary Alma Victoria, dau. of Sir Andrew
Agnew, of Lochnaw, 8th Baronet; b. Rossie Priory, Inchture,
co. Perth, 20 Aug. 1879; educ. Cheam School. Surrey; Eton, and Trinity
College, Cambridge (13.A. 1901, M.A. 1905); gazetted 2nd Lieut.
3rd Scots Guards, 22 May, 1901, and promoted Lieut. 1 Feb. 1904,
and Capt. 3 Feb. 1 912; transferring to the 2nd Battn. when the
3rd was disbanded; went to Antwerp with his Battn. in the 7th Division;
served through the retreat from that place and was killed in action,
23 Oct. 1914, during one of the numerous rearguard actions, to protect
the retirement of the Belgian Army. Buried with another officer
at Zonnebeke Farm, near Poligne, Belgium; unm. Capt. Kinnaird
was in the Volunteer Corps at Eton and Cambridge, and travelled
much on the Continent to study Art and Literature. In 1906, he went
to East Africa for big game shooting, aud made a large collection
of heads and trophies. lie also visited India for the Coronation
Durbar at Delhi in 1911.
Extract
from The Bond of Sacrifice, Volume 1, page 216:
CAPTAIN
the Honble. DOUGLAS ARTHUR KINNAIRD, MASTER OF KINNAIRD, 2nd BATTN.
SCOTS GUARDS, who was killed in action on the 24th October,
1914, near Ypres, was the eldest son of the eleventh Baron Kinnaird
and the Baroness Kinnaird, of Rossie Priory, Inchture, Perthshire,
and was born there on the 20th August, 1879. He was related to the
Duke of Leinster, the Earl of Gainsborough, and Sir Andrew Agnew.
Captain Kinnaird was educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge,
as Lord Kinnaird had been, taking his degree of M.A. at the University.
He was a Lieutenant in the Eton College Volunteer Corps, and also
in the Cambridge University Volunteer Corps. He subsequently joined
the Forfar and Kincardine Artillery Militia, afterwards entering
the Scots Guards in May, 1901, becoming Lieutenant in February,
1904.
The 2nd Battalion Scots Guards formed part of the VIIth Division,
which left England for Belgium early in October, and in the severe
fighting near Kruiseik, in which Captain Kinnaird was killed, the
battalion lost many officers. The Master of Kinnaird, who obtained
his company in February, 1912, was not married, and his next brother,
the Hon. K. F. Kinnaird, becomes heir to the barony.
He was a member of the Guards' and Bachelors' Clubs, and among his
recreations were polo and cricket.
Extract
from Dundee Evening Telegraph - Monday 2 November 1914,
page 1:
MASTER
OF KINNAIRD.
Son and Heir of Lord Kinnaird,
Has Been Killed in Yser Battle.
Intimation
was received at Rossie Priory to-day that the Master of Kinnaird,
son and heir of Lord Kinnaird, had been killed in action at the
Yser on 24th ult.
The
Hon. Douglas Arthur Kinnaird was a lieutenant in the Scots Guards.
He was born on 20th August, 1879, and was educated at Trinity College,
Cambridge.
Great sympathy will be extended throughout
the Carse of Gowrie to Lord and Lady Kinnaird on their loss.
Extract
from Dundee Courier - Tuesday 3 November 1914, page 4:
HEIR
OF LORD KINNAIRD
OF ROSSIE PRIORY
IS KILLED WHILE FIGHTING
IN FRANCE.
ONLY
600 OF BATTALION OF 1200
ANSWER ROLL CALL.
Information
was received at Rossie Priory yesterday that the Hon. Douglas Arthur
Kinnaird, the Master of Kinnaird, and son of Lord and Lady Kinnaird,
of Rossie Priory, Perthshire, had been killed in action on the Yser
on 24th October.
Lord
and Lady Kinnaird are at present in London, where they are spending
the winter months, and the sad news was conveyed to them there.
Deceased
was a captain in the 2d Battalion of the Scots Guards. He was 35
years of age, and was gazetted second lieutenant on 22d May, 1901,
lieutenant on 1st February, 1904, and captain on 3d February, 1912.
He was the eldest of four brothers, two of whom are at present serving
with the colours, Kenneth Fitzgerald, with the Scottish Horse, and
Arthur Middleton, with a London Territorial body.
Educated at Cambridge.
The
late Master Kinnaird, who was educated at Cambridge, took a great
interest , all military matters. He was busily engaged training
recruits until about a month ago, when his battalion was ordered
to the front for active service. Out of the 1200 who comprised the
battalion, only some 600 answered the roll-call at the conclusion
of the engagement in which the Master of Kinnaird was killed. Deceased
was in command of the battalion when he met his death. His servant
was wounded in the same engagement.
The
late Master of Kinnaird, who was unmarried, was most popular with
all who knew him, and he will be sadly missed. His untimely death
has cast a deep gloom over the surrounding district.
Extract
from Scottish Referee - Friday 6 November 1914, page 4:
LORD
KINNAIRD'S SON KILLED.
The
death is announced this week of Captain the Hon. Douglas Arthur
Kinnaird, the eldest son of Lord Kinnaird, President of the English
Football Association and President of the Polytechnic Harriers.
Captain Kinnaird, who was 35 years of age, was killed in action
on October 24. His death will be a great blow to Polytechnic sportsmen.
He was a frequent attendant at the executive meetings, and a protagonist
of every form of athletic sport. It is but a few weeks back that
Lieut.-Col. Ian Hogg, son of the founder of the institute, was killed
in action, while Major H. W. Studd, brother to Mr J. E. K. Studd,
president of the institute, has been severely wounded in action.
Extract
from Dundee Courier - Monday 8 March 1915, page 4:
THE
LATE MASTER OF KINNAIRD
Captain
the Hon. Douglas Arthur Kinnaird Master of Kinnaird, 2d Battalion
Scots Guards, of Rossie Priory, Perthshire, and of 10 James's Square,
S.W., who was killed in action “in France or Belgium”
on the 24th October last, aged 35 years, intestate and bachelor,
left unsettled property gross value £10,090 17s 6d, personalty
£973 6s 7d. Letters of administration of his property have
been granted to his father, the Right Hon. Arthur Fitzgerald, Baron
Kinnaird, K.T., of 10 James's Square, S.W., as next of kin. |
KNIGHT |
J
O Coldham |
[1916]
2nd Lieutenant, The Queen’s (Royal West Surrey Regiment.). Killed
in action 30 Nov. 1917 |
KNIGHT |
Philip
C |
[1911]
Private, H.A.C.; 2nd Lieutenant, Somerset L.I. Killed in action
1 July 1916 |
KOHNSTAMM |
Norman
Mortimer J |
No
further information currently |
LAFONE |
Eric
W |
(1914)
Captain, Durham L.I. M.C. M. French Croix de Guerre. Killed in action
15 June 1918 |
LAMBERT |
Henry
M |
[1897]
Captain, 1st Dragoons. Killed in action near Ypres 13 May 1915 |
LANDALE |
Douglas
B |
[1909]
Lieutenant, Rifle Brigade. M. Killed in action 23 Oct. 1914 |
LANG |
Arthur
Horace |
[1909]
Second Lieutenant, 2nd Battalion, Grenadier Guards attached Scots
Guards. Killed in action between 25th and 26th January 1915. Aged
24. Born 25 October 1890, Malabar Hill, Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra,
India. Baptised 12 December 1890, Malabar Hill, All Saints, Bombay
(now Mumbai), Maharashtra, India. Son of Basil and Alice Sophia
Lang, of Royal Oak Hotel, Sevenoaks Kent. Buried in CANADIAN CEMETERY
No.2, NEUVILLE-ST. VAAST, Pas de Calais, France. Plot 12. Row
E. Grave 22. See also Lords
MCC WW1
See
his statistics on CricInfo
Extract
from The Bond of Sacrifice, Volume 2, page 273:
2nd
LIEUTENANT ARTHUR HORACE LANG, SPECIAL RESERVE, GRENADIER GUARDS,
attd. 1st BATTN. SCOTS GUARDS, the son of Basil Lang,
late Advocate-General of Bombay, and Mrs. Lang, Westerham, Kent,
was born in Bombay on the 25th October, 1890.
He was educated at Harrow and Trinity College, Cambridge. He was
a member of the Pitt Club, at Cambridge, of the Conservative Club,
London, and of I Zingari.
In August, 1914, he was gazetted 2nd Lieutenant in the Special
Reserve of the Grenadier Guards, and for a short time was attached
to the 2nd Battalion of that Regiment. Afterwards he was attached
to the 1st Battalion, Scots Guards, and was serving with it when
he was killed in action defending the front trench at Cuinchy,
Flanders, on the 25th June, 1915.
Extract
from Westminster Gazette - Thursday 24 May 1917, page
3:
WILLS.
Second-Lieutenant Arthur Horace Lang, Grenadier Guards, a former
captain of the cricket eleven at Harrow, left “£100
to Harrow School Cricket Club.” His property was worth £15,346.
Extract
from Westminster Gazette - Thursday 24 May 1917, page
3:
CRICKET
AND THE WAR.
OUR FALLEN HEROES.—X.
SUSSEX.
Sec
Lt ARTHUR HORACE LANG (Grenadier Guards, attd Scots Guards) was
reported “missing, believed killed,” and suberquently
returned as “killed” on about Jan. 26, 1915. Born
at Bombay on Oct. 25, 1890, he figured in the Harrow XI. four
years (1906-1909), and in the last two acted as skipper and appeared
for the' Public Schoots v. the M.C.C. to which was elected to
membership in 1910. He was sound batsman and capable wicketkeeper,
in the latter department securing eight victims against Eton in
1907. Proceeding to Cambridge University, he did not secure his
“blue”" till his last yaer (1913). though he
made some good scores in trial games, and 53 v. the M.C.C. at
Lord's, in 1912. Going in first, v. Oxford, he made 28 and 4.
and stumped three, his highest score of the season being 46 v.
Hampshire, at Fenner’s, his average 18.36. From 1907 to
1911 he played for Suffolk, but in 1912 and 1913 transferred his
allegiance to Sussex, for which in the latter he scored 141 v.
Somerset at Eastbourne, and 104 v. Cambridge University, at Fenner's,
though in this case might have been caught in the slips before
he had “broken his duck.” His County Championship
average for ten innings was 30.60, which placed him third on the
list.
Extract
from Birmingham Daily Post - Friday 25 May 1917, page
3:
LATEST
WILLS .
Second
Lieutenant Arthur Horace Lang, the Conservative Club, St. James’s
Street, London, S.W., of the Grenadier Guards, attached to the
Scots Guards; died on active service at La Bassee in France. (Net
personalty £15,306) £15,346
|
LAURENCE |
Dudley
S |
No
further information currently |
LAWRENCE |
Christopher
Hal |
[1913]
2nd Lieutenant, King’s Royal Rifle Corps. Killed in action 13 Oct.
1914 |
LAWRENCE
|
Michael
C |
[1913]
Captain Coldstream Guards. Died 16 Sept. 1916 of wounds received
in action 15 Sept. 1916 |
LAWRENCE |
Oliver
J |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant, London Regiment. (Post Office Rifles). M. Killed
in action at Festubert 26 May 1915 |
LAWSON-JOHNSTON |
Arthur
William |
[1904]
Lieutenant, Buckinghamshire Yeo. And Grenadier Guards. M.C. Died
22 Feb. 1917 of wounds received in action |
LAYMAN |
Frederic
H |
[1876]
Major, R. Defence Corps. Died 3 Oct. 1917 |
LEADER |
Benjamin
Eastlake |
[1896]
Captain,
3rd Battalion, Queen's (Royal West Surrey Regiment) attached 2nd
Battalion, Duke of Wellington's (West Riding Regiment). Killed in
action on the Somme 12 October 1916. Born 17 June 1877. Aged 39.
Son of the late B. W. Leader, R.A., and Mary Eastlake Leader, of
Burrows Cross, Gomshall, Guildford; husband of Isabella Leader (nee
Anderson), of Rosemerrin, Bude, Cornwall. Educated at Charterhouse
and Cambridge. An Artist. No known grave. Commemorated on THIEPVAL
MEMORIAL, Somme, France. Pier and Face 5 D and 6 D. See also St
Buryan, Cornwall and Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey.
From
the Charterhouse Register, Oration Quarter 1891:
Leader,
Benjamin Eastlake. b. 17 June, 1877. (Pageites); Left C.Q., 1896.
Trin. Coll., Cambridge.
B. E. Leader, Esq., Gomshall, Guildford
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1916:
LEADER
Benjamin Eastlake of Rosemerrin Saint Buryan Cornwall
captain 3rd Queen's West Surrey regiment died 12 October 1916
in France on active service Probate London 21
December to William Boyd Anderson writer.
Effects 6219 12S. 10d. Resworn £7053 10s. 4d.
Extract
from De Ruvigny's Roll Of Honour 1914-1918, volume 3,
page 171:
LEADER,
BENJAMIN EASTLAKE, Capt., 3rd (Reserve) Battn. The Queen's
(Royal West Surrey Regt.), eldest s. of Benjamin William
Leader, of Burrows Cross, Gomshall, co. Surrey, R.A.. by his wife,
Mary, dan. of William Eastlake; b. Worcester, 17 June,
1877; educ. Charterhouse; Trinity College, Cambridge, and on leaving
there studied as a Landscape Painter under Sir H. Von Herkomer,
and later at Newlyn; formed part of the Artists' Colony at Lamorna,
near Penzance, being for five years a well-known exhibitor at
the Royal Academy; volunteered his services after the outbreak
of war; was gazetted 2nd Lieut. The West Surrey Reg_ 25 Sept.
1914; promoted Lieut. 20 Nov. following, and Capt. 22 May, 1915;
served with the Expeditionary Force In France and Flanders from
Jan. 1915, and was killed in action at Le Transloy 12 Oct. 1916.
He m. at Glasgow, 8 Sept. 1910, Isabella (1, Grosvenor
Crescent, Glasgow), 3rd dau. of William Boyd Anderson, of Glasgow,
and had two children : Benjamin John, b. 7 June, 1914,
and Alison Mary, b. 1 June, 1916.
Extract
from Evening Mail - Monday 13 November 1916, page 3:
CAPTAIN
BENJAMIN EASTLAKE LEADER, Royal West Surrey Regiment,
killed on October 12, was the eldest son of Mr. B. W. Leader,
R.A., and was 39 years of age. He was educated at Charterhouse
School and Trinity College, Cambridge. He followed his father's
profession and studied at Bushey under Sir H. von Herkomer, and
afterwards at Newlyn. He formed part of the artists' colony at
Lamorna, near Penzance. He married in 1910 Isabella, third daughter
of Mr. W. Boyd Anderson, of Glasgow, and leaves two children.
At the beginning of the war he joined the Royal West Surrey Regiment
and attained the rank of captain. He had been at the front for
nearly two years.
|
LE
BLANC SMITH |
Charles
Ralph |
[1913]
Major, Royal Field Artillery. M.C. |
LE
BLOND |
Royston
Cecil G Du Plessis |
[1906]
Captain, Rifle Brigade. Died 16 May 1915 |
LEEKE |
Charles |
[1906]
Lieutenant, Grenadier Guards. Died 11 April 1916 of wounds received
in action |
LEFROY |
Francis
P |
(1914)
2nd Lieutenant, Royal Engineers. Killed in action 28 April 1916 |
LEVINGE |
Henry
G |
[1883]
Lieutenant-Col., Norfolk Regiment. and Loyal N. Lancashire Regiment.
M. Killed in action in Gallipoli 10 Aug. 1915 |
LEWIN |
Kenneth
R |
[1906]
Lieutenant, D. of Cornwall’s L.I. Killed in action 9 March 1916 |
LEWTHWAITE |
Charles
G |
[1903]
Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. (T.F.). M.C. M. Killed in action
29 July 1917 |
LIAS |
Ronald
J M |
[1909]
Private, Middlesex Regiment. (P.S. Bn.); Lieutenant, R. Sussex Regiment.
Killed in action 23 Feb. 1916 |
LIGHTBODY |
Wilfrid
Petre |
[1911]
Lieutenant, "C" Company, 9th Battalion, Norfolk Regiment.
Missing at Hulluch Quarries, believed killed in action, 26 September
1915. Aged 22. Son of Alfred William and Ethel Petre Newport Lightbody,
of Holmwood, West Byfleet, Surrey. In the 1901 census he was aged
8, born Middlesex, a scholar, pupil at Mary E Speare's school,
resident 5, Mount Ararat Road, Richmond, Richmond upon Thames,
Surrey. In the 1911 census he was aged 18, born Molesey, Middlesex,
a school boarder, resident Charterhouse Godalming, Godalming Rural
Detached, Surrey. No known grave. Commemorated on LOOS MEMORIAL,
Pas de Calais, France. Panel 30 and 31. Also commemorated in St
Marys Church, Oatlands Park, Surrey and Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey and Oatlands Park - WW1 Shrine,
Oatlands Park Surrey.
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1916:
LIGHTBODY
Wilfrid Petre of Penryn Castle-road Oatlands Weybridge
Surrey died 26 September 1915 in France on active
service Probate London 18 August to Ethel Petre
Lightbody (wife of Alfred William Lightbody). Effects £680
2s. 11d.
|
LINGARD |
John
R |
[1903]
Lieutenant, Manchester Regiment.; attd. Lancashire Fusiliers. Killed
in action in Gallipoli 21 Aug. 1915 |
LISTER |
Arthur
H |
[1883]
Lieutenant-Col., R.A.M.C. (T.F.). C.M.G. M. Died 17 July 1916 of
turberculosis |
LLOYD |
Alan
S |
[1907]
Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. M.C. Killed in action 4 Aug.
1916 |
LLOYD |
John
F S |
[1900]
Major, N. Staffs. Regiment. (T.F.). Killed in action 18 June 1915 |
LODER |
Robert
Egerton |
[1906]
[Listed as LODGER on SDGW] Old Etonian. Captain (Staff - 160th
Brigade), 1st/4th Battalion, Royal Sussex Regiment. 53rd Division.
Died of wounds 29th March 1917. Aged 30. Born 10th March 1887,
baptised 18th April 1887 at St Peter, Eaton Square, Pimlico, Middlesex,
son of Edmund Giles and Marion Loder. Son of Sir Edmund and Lady
Loder, of Leonardslie, Horsham, Sussex; husband of Muriel Rolls
Loder, of Clock House, Cowfold, Sussex. Birth of a son to Mr and
Mrs Robert Egerton Loder 1914. Resident of The Clock House, Cowfold.
Educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge. Left Eton College
in 1906. Roll of Honour and Lower Beeding Memorial. Born in Cowfold.
Wounded during the First Battle of Gaza. Mentioned in Despatches
twice Egypt, Gallipoli. In the 1891 census he was aged 11, son
of Edward Loder, resident Leonardslie, Highfield, Lower Beeding,
Horsham, Sussex. Buried in DEIR EL BELAH WAR CEMETERY, Israel.
Section C. Grave 73. ex. Buried in DEIR EL BELAH WAR CEMETERY,
Israel. Section C. Grave 73. See also Lord's
Cricket Members' World War 1 Memorial and also the Cowfold
War Memorial. Also listed on the R E Loder Memorial Window,
Lower Beeding, West Sussex
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1917:
LODER
Robert Egerton of The Clock House Cowfield Sussex
lieutenant temporary captain H.M. Army died 29 March 1917
in Syria Probate London 10 December
to Walter William Otter captain H.M. Army and Charles Williams
lieutenant Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve. Effects
£297524 1s. 8d.
Extract
from Brighton Gazette - Wednesday 24 January 1912, page
7:
Robert
Egerton Loder has been gazetted Second Lieutenant (supernumeray)
in the 4th Battalion, the Royal Sussex Regiment.
Extract
from Northampton Mercury - Friday 15 August 1913, page
3:
MARRIAGE
OF MR. R. E. LODER
A CHARMING SPECTACLE.
The
marriage took place on Saturday afternoon at St. Peter’s
Church, Eaton-square, between Mr. Robert Egerton Loder, only son
of Sir Edmund Giles Loder, Bart., and Lady Loder, Leonardslee,
Horsham, and Miss Muriel Rolls Hoare, eldest daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. James Rolls Hoare, of 43, Mount-street.
The
church was prettily decorated with palms and white flower's, and
the officiating clergy were the Rev. F. Campion, rector of West
Grinstead, and the Rev. the Hon. H. E. Lambart, cousin of the
bridegroom, Mr. James Hoare gave his daughter away, and she looked
very graceful in a robe of soft ivory crepe de Chine, draped with
Brussels lace lent her mother, and a Court train of velvet embossed
brocade was suspended from the shoulders and draped with the same
lace. Over a spray of orange flowers on her hair the bride wore
a thick chiffon veil, the corners embroidered with true lovers’
knots. She was attended by six little children, the three pages
escorting three tiny bridesmaids, who were daintly dressed in
cream net and lace mounted over pale maize silk, with mob caps
of net and lace. The pages wore maize satin knickers with soft
crepe de Chine shirts, and from the bride they received gold monogram
cuff links.
The
pages were Masters Guy Otter, Anthony Barron, and John Campion,
and the bridesmaids Miss Peggy Borron, the bride’s niece,
Aliss Barbara Otter, niece of the bridegroom, and Miss Etheldreda
Burrell, cousin of the bridegroom and daughter of Sir Merrik and
Lady Burrell. Mr. C. J. Williams acted as best man to the bridegroom.
Mrs. Rolls Hoare afterwards welcomed her friends at 48, Mountstreet,
and among those present at the ceremony and reception were Sir
Edmund and Lady Loder, Sir Alerrik and Lady Burrell, the Dowager
Lady Burrell. Major Eustace Loder, Mrs. Barron, Mrs. Otter, Mr.
and Mrs. John Millais, Miss Lees, Miss Glubb, Miss Lyon, Colonel
Hoare, Mr. and Mrs. Clive Boyd, Mrs. Arthur Boyd. Mr. L. St. George,
Miss Innes, and Miss Chaplin Jones.
Later
in the afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Robert Loder left for their honeymoon,
which they will spend motoring in the Lake District. The bride
went away in a dress of Nattier blue charmeuse with black moire
embroidered sash and collar, and a black hat with panache of blue
feathers.
Extract
from Mid Sussex Times - Tuesday 10 April 1917, page 5:
HORSHAM
Many
will deeply regret to learn that Capt. Robert Egerton Loder, Royal
Sussex Regt, (staff Captain of —Infantry Brigade), died
wounds on March 29. He was only son of Sir Edmund and Lady Loder,
of Leonardslee. He was born in March, 1887, and was educated at
Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge, graduating in 1909. He married,
in 1913, Muriel Rolls,. daughter of James Rolls Hoare, of Mounts-street.
Captain Loder, who had served with distinction in the war, was
gazetted to the Staff in May of last year.
Extract
from Mid Sussex Times - Tuesday 10 April 1917, page 5:
LODER—Killed
in action, Captain Robert Egerton Loder, Royal Sussex Regiment,
only son of Sir Edmund Giles Loder, Bart., of Leonardslee
Park, Lower Beeding, aged 30 years .
Extract
from Manchester Evening News - Thursday 13 December 1917,
page 3:
Captain
Robert Egerton Loder, Sussex Regiment of Cowford, Sussex, who
died from wounds in Syria, only son of Sir Edmund Giles Loder,
Bart, left £297,524 gross and £281,191 net.
|
LONGBOTTOM |
Henry |
[1913]
2nd Lieutenant, S. Lancashire Regiment. Killed in action in Gallipoli
9 Aug. 1915 |
LONGRIDGE |
Rev
Archibald Owen C |
[1902]
C.F. 4th Classk R.A.C.D. Died 12 Oct. 1918 of pneumonia following
influenza and gas-poisoning |
LONSDALE |
Arthur
Carr-Glun |
[1910]
Lieutenant, 6th Battalion, King’s Royal Rifle Corps attached to
2nd Battalion, Royal Scots Fusiliers. Killed in action 10 March
1915. Son of the Rev. J. H. and Katharine Carr Lonsdale, The Further
House, Wimborne, Dorset. Scholar of Eton and Radley and undergraduate
of Trinity College, Cambridge. Buried in RUE-PETILLON MILITARY CEMETERY,
FLEURBAIX, Pas de Calais, France. Plot IV. Row A. Grave 9. |
LORY |
Victor
A M |
No
further information currently |
LOVETT |
Rev
Richard D |
[1890]
Pte. Middlesex Regiment. Killed in action July 1916 |
LOYD |
Lewis
F I |
[1898]
Captain, Lovat’s Scouts; Major, Worcestershire Yeo. Died 21 Sept.
1918 of pneumonia |
LUBBOCK |
Hon
Harold F P |
[1906]
Lieutenant And Adjt., W. Kent Yeo.; Lieutenant, Grenadier Guards.
Killed in action 4 April 1918 |
LUCAS |
Keith |
[1898]
Captain, R.F.C. (Hampshire Aircraft Parks, T.F.). Killed in flying
accident 5 Oct. 1916 |
LUPTON |
Francis
A |
[1904]
Major, W. Yorks. Rgt. (T.F.). Killed in action 19 Feb. 1917 |
LUPTON |
Lionel
M |
[1910]
Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. (T.F.). M 2. Killed in action
16 July 1916 |
LUPTON |
Maurice |
[1906]
Captain, W. Yorks. Regiment. Killed in action 19 June 1915 |
LYON |
Edward
L |
[1896]
Major, 18th Hussars; attd. Somerset L.I. M. Died 17 Sept. 1916 of
wounds received in action |
MACARTNEY |
Hussey
Burgh G |
[1893]
Captain, R. Fusiliers. Killed in action 24 June 1915 |
MCEWEN |
James
R D |
(1914)
Lieutenant, R. Scots Fusiliers.; A.D.C. Killed in action 12 Oct.
1916 |
MACKAY |
Eric
Reay |
[1903]
Captain, Argyll and Sutherland Hdrs. Killed in action in Gallipoli
13 June 1915 |
MACKENZIE |
C
Roy |
[1910]
Flt.-Cdr., R.N.A.S. D.S.O. M. French Croix de Guerre. Killed in
action 24 Jan. 1917 |
MACKENZIE |
James
K |
May
be: McKenzie, J. [1914] 2nd Lieutenant, Seaforth Hdrs. Killed in
action 30 Oct. 1915 |
MACLAREN |
Samuel
B |
[1897]
Lieutenant, Royal Engineers. (Signals). Died 13 Aug. 1916 of wounds
received in action |
MACMASTER |
Donald
Cameron D |
[1913]
Lieutenant, Cameron Hdrs. Killed in action 26 Sept. 1915 |
MACMICHAEL |
Michael
William A |
[1913]
2nd Lieutenant, Devon Regiment.; Captain, Essex Regiment. Died 16
Sept. 1916 of wounds received in action |
MACMICKING |
Gilbert
Thomas G |
[1913]
2nd Lieutenant, Cambridgeshire Regiment. Died in Holland 11 Nov.
1918 |
MACMULLEN |
Edmund
R |
[1903]
Captain, E. African Force; A.D.C. M. Killed in action 30 June 1916 |
MACNAGHTEN |
Angus
Charles R S |
[1906]
Lieutenant, Black Watch. Killed in action 29 Oct. 1914 |
MACNAGHTEN |
Sir
Arthur Douglas, Bart |
[1914]
2nd Lieutenant, 8th Battalion, Rifle Brigade. Killed in action 15
September 1916. Aged 19. 7th Bart. Educated at Wellington College
and Trinity College, Cambridge. Son of the Hon. Sir Edward Charles
Macnaghten, 5th Bart., K.C., and Lady Macnaghten, of 26, Sussex
Sq., London W2. His brother Sir Edward Harry Macnaghten, 6th Bart.
also fell. Buried at CATERPILLAR VALLEY CEMETERY, LONGUEVAL, Somme,
France. Plot V. Row B. Grave 1. |
MCNEILE |
John |
[1881]
Lieutenant-Col., King’s Own Scottish Borderers. Wounded and prisoner,
presumed killed in action, 12 July 1915 |
MACNEILL |
Andrew
D |
[1900]
Captain, Royal Garrison Artillery Killed in action 29 July 1917 |
MACPHERSON |
George |
No
further information currently |
MADDOX |
John
Mortimer |
[1915]
2nd Lieutenant, 3rd Battalion attached 10th Battalion, Lancashire
Fusiliers. Killed in action 12 August 1916. Aged 19. Son of the
Rev. John Mortimer Maddox and Hannah Maddox, of St. Mark's Vicarage,
Bury, Lancs. Captain of Bury Grammar School, Bishop Lee Scholar
at Trinity College, Cambridge. No known grave. Commemorated on THIEPVAL
MEMORIAL, Somme, France. Pier and Face 3 C and 3 D. |
MAITLAND |
Hon
Alfred H |
[1890]
Major, Cameron Hdrs. Killed in action 19 Sept. 1914 |
MAITLAND |
Graham
McD |
[1897]
2nd Lieutenant, Irish Guards. Killed in action at Klein Zillebeke
1 Nov. 1914 |
MAITLAND-MACGILL-CRICHTON |
Charles
J |
[1899]
Lieutenant, Seaforth Hdrs.; Major, Gordon Hdrs. Killed in action
25 Sept. 1915 |
MALDEN |
Walter |
[1877]
Captain, R.A.M.C. (1st E. Gen. Hospital, T.F.). Died Nov. 1918 |
MANDER |
D’Arcy
W |
[1888]
Major, Durham L.I. Killed in action 20 Sept. 1914 |
MANN |
Ian
Anderson |
[1913]
Lieutenant (Observer), 25th Squadron, Royal Flying Corps and 5th
Battalion (Territorial), Cameronians (Scottish Rifles). Missing,
believed killed in action during an aerial combat flying in an Royal
Aircraft Factory F.E.2b, serial number 6996, 9 August 1916. Aged
21. Born in Glasgow. Baptised as John but universally known as Ian.
Son of Sir John Mann, K.B.E., and Lady Mann, of "Duncryne,"
Woldingham, Surrey. Awarded the Military Cross (M.C.). Buried in
RUE-PETILLON MILITARY CEMETERY, FLEURBAIX, Pas de Calais, France.
Plot I. Row G. Grave 17. See also Charterhouse
School, Surrey |
MANSEL-PLEYDELL |
John
Morton |
[1903]
2nd Lieutenant, "A" Batter7y, 107th brigade, Royal Field
Artillery.; A.D.C. Died 22 September 1916 of wounds received in
action. Aged 32. Twin son of Canon John Colvile Morton Mansel-Pleydell
and Beatrice Maud Mansel-Pleydell, of 19, Moore St., Cadogan Square,
London. Native of Dorset. Winchester and Trinity College, Cambridge,
B.A. Buried in ST. PIERRE CEMETERY, AMIENS, Somme, France. Plot
V. Row B. Grave 4. |
MAPPLEBECK |
Gordon
Whitfield |
[1898]
Captain, N. Staffs. Regiment. M. Died 30 July 1916 of wounds received
in action |
MARGERISON |
C
Walden |
(1914)
Lieutenant, Border Regiment. M. Died 6 July 1916 of wounds received
in action 1 July 1916 |
MARNHAM |
Hugh
C |
No
further information currently |
MARSDEN-SMEDLEY |
George
Futvoye |
No
further information currently |
MARSH |
Alfred
S |
[1909]
Captain, Somerset L.I. Killed in action 6 Jan. 1916 |
MARSHALL |
Ashby
S F |
[1897]
Section Sanitaire, French Army. Died 25 July 1918 from the effects
of war service |
MARTIN
|
William
F |
[1894]
Major, Leicestershire Yeo. M. Killed in action 13 May 1915 |
MASTER |
George
G O |
[1913]
Lieutenant, Gloucestershire Rgt. (T.F.). Killed in action 25 July
1916 |
MATHER |
Alfred
Lushington |
[1904]
Second Lieutenant, 3rd Battalion, York and Lancaster Regiment formerly
Private Royal Fusiliers. Killed in action 7 January 1917. Aged 32.
Born 18 June 1884. Baptised 12 Jul 1885 in Over Tabley, Cheshire.
Son of Edward Lushington Mather (formerly Vicar of Over Tabley,
Cheshire) and Rose Eleanor Mather, of Over Tabley, Cheshire. Educated
Charterhouse and Trinity College, Cambridge. In the 1891 census
he was aged 5, born Over Tabley, Cheshire, son of Edward L and Rose
E Mather, resident Over Tabley Vicarage, Moss Lane, Tabley Superior,
Altrincham, Cheshire. In the 1901 census he was aged 15, born Over
Tabley, Cheshire, a school boarder, resident Charterhouse Block,
Godalming Rural, Guildford, Surrey. In the 1911 census he was aged
25, born Over Tabley, Cheshire, living on his own means, resident
Beardwood Fold, Blackburn, Lancashire. Buried in VLAMERTINGHE MILITARY
CEMETERY, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium. Plot V. Row D. Grave 8. See
also Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey.
From
the Charterhouse Register, Long Quarter 1899:
Mather,
Alfred Lushington. b. 18 June, 1884. (Verites).
A. L. Mather, Tyberlon, Charlton Kings, Cheltenham.
Extract
from the Southport Visiter - 18 January 1917:
Sec-Lieut
Mather was the younger son of the late Rev E L Mather, 1st Vicar
of Christ Church, Bootle, and afterwards, Vicar of Over Tabley,
Knutsford. He was the grandson of the Rev Richard Leigh, Rector
of Halsall. Sec-Lieut Mather was educated at Charterhouse, and
Trinity College, Cambridge, and joined the Public Schools Brigade
when it was formed, receiving his commission in June 1915.
|
MAXWELL |
William
F J |
[1905]
Lieutenant, King’s Own Scottish Borderers (T.F.). Killed in action
in Gallipoli 13 Aug. 1915 |
MAYBROOK |
Walter
R |
[1913]
Private, London Regiment. (Artists Rifles); 2nd Lieutenant, Wiltshire
Regiment. Killed in action 24 April 1916 |
MELVILLE |
Hugh
C |
[1905]
2nd Liuet., Sherwood Foresters (Notts. and Derby Regiment.). Killed
in action in the Ypres Salient 14 Feb. 1916 |
MERCER |
Eric
D |
[1913]
2nd Lieutenant, Lancashire Fusiliers. Died 2 May 1917 of wounds
received in action |
MERRYWEATHER |
C
W |
[1900]
Major, Lancashire Fusiliers. (W.). M. Killed in action 23 Nov. 1916 |
MEWS |
John
Keith |
(1914)
Captain, London Regiment. (R.Fusiliers.). Died 24 Aug. 1918 of wounds
received in action |
MEYRICK |
Evan
Eckhard |
[1912]
Lance Sergeant 2085, 1st Battalion, Cambridgeshire Regiment. Died
30 July 1916 of sickness contracted on active service. Aged 23.
Son of Edward and Antonie Meyrick, of Thornhanger, Marlborough,
Wilts. Scholar of Trinity College, Cambridge. Buried in LONGUENESSE
(ST. OMER) SOUVENIR CEMETERY, Pas de Calais, France. Plot IV. Row
A. Grave 23. |
MICHELL |
Noel
B |
[1905]
Captain, R. Fusiliers. M. Killed in action 22 March 1918 |
MILBURN |
Richard
G |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant, E. Surrey Regiment. Killed in action 9 Feb. 1915 |
MILEY |
Miles |
[1908]
Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. (T.F.). Died 30 Dec. 1915 of
wounds received in action |
MILLER |
Ernest
C |
[1897]
Captain, Loyal N. Lancashire Regiment. Killed in action 23 Oct.
1914 |
MILLS |
Tom
R |
[1906]
Lieutenant, Manchester Regiment. (T.F.). Killed in action in Gallipoli
4 June 1915 |
MILNE |
Alexander
Richard |
(1914)
Captain, and Adjutant, Hertfordshire Regiment. Killed in action
31 July 1917. Aged 21. Son of Frank Alexander and Alice Emily Milne,
of Summerhill, Barnet, Herts. Educated at Winchester and Trinity
College, Cambridge. No known grave. Commemorated on YPRES (MENIN
GATE) MEMORIAL, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium. Panel 54 and 56. |
MOORE |
Clive
G |
No
further information currently |
MOORE |
Gerald
Alexander Clifford |
[1910]
Lieutenant, 8th Battalion, Cameronians (Scottish Rifles). Died
of wounds 11 July 1915 in Malta, (sustained at Gallipoli 28 June
1915). Aged 24. Born Glasgow 3 March 1892. Only son of Alexander
and Jane Elizabeth (nee Clifford) Moore, of Badgeworth Court,
Cheltenham; husband of Morgan (nee Montgomery) Moore. Accountant
at Kerr, Andersons & Macleod, Glasgow. Educated at, Charterhouse
& Trinity, Cambridge. He was wounded by Turkish grenade splinters
at Battle of Gully Ravine. The 1901 Scottish Census shows the
Moore family (residing at 6 Lancaster Crescent, Glasgow) the family
consisted of; Alexander Moore (Chartered Accountant, aged 45)
and Jane E. Moore (aged 38) and their children, Lorna C. (aged
12) and Gerald C. (aged 9). Lieutenant Moore is named in the Scottish
Roll of Honour in the Scottish National War Memorial, Edinburgh
Castle, Edinburgh; he is also named on the War Memorial Plaques
in the Charterhouse School Chapel, Godalming, Surrey. Buried in
PIETA MILITARY CEMETERY, Malta. Plot B. Row II. Grave 1. See also
Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey.
Extract
from England & Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index
of Wills and Administrations), 1858-1966 about Gerald Alexander
Clifford Moore:
MOORE
Gerald Alexander clifford of 2 Lancaster-crescent Glasgow
lieutenant in Scottish Rifles died 11 July 1915 at Malata Confirmation
of Hilda Esty Marsh spinster. Sealed London 30
October [1915].
From
the Charterhouse Register Vol 2, Oration Quarter 1905:
Moore,
Gerald Alexander Clifford. b. 3 March, 1892: only s. of A. moore,
of Glasgow, Chartered Accountant; (Verites); Shooting VIII, 1907,'08,'09,'10;
Capt., '09,'10; Left C.Q. 1910. Trin. Coll., Cambridge.
G.A.C.
Moore, Esq., 2, Lancaster Crescent, Glasgow, W.
|
MOORSOM |
Alfred
E |
[1912]
Private, R.A.M.C. (T.F.); Lieutenant, Suffolk Regiment. (T.F.).
Died 3 Aug. 1916 of wounds received in action 15 July 1916 |
MORGAN |
Arthur
Conway Osborne |
[1903]
 |
|
Lieutenant,
4th Battery, 3rd North Midland Brigade attd. 5th Battalion, Lincolnshire
Regiment. Killed in action 13 October 1915. Aged 31. Baptised 24
Mar 1885 at Cambridge, All Saints, in Jesus College Chapel, son
of Charlotte Linda and Henry Arthur Morgan, of 5, Rhadegunds, Cambridge.
Son of the Revd. Henry Arthur Morgan, D.D., Master of Jesus College,
Cambridge, and of Charlotte Linda Morgan (nee Barnes), of 12, Cheyne
Gardens, Chelsea, London, Barrister-at-Law, Lincoln's Inn; King's
Gold Medallist, 1903, Winchester College; Chancellor's Gold Medallist,
Trinity College, Cambridge; President of the Union Society, 1906.
Mentioned in Despatches (MiD). In the 1901 census he was aged 11,
born Cambridge, a boarder, scholar, resident Winchester College,
Southgate House, Winchester St Thomas, Winchester, Hampshire. In
the 1911 census he was aged 21, born Trumpington, a Barrister, son
of Henry Arthur and Charlotte Linda Morgan, resident Jesus College,
Cambridge. Enlisted 26 January 1914 at Armoury House, Finsbury,
Lonon, aged 29 yesars, born Trumpington, Cambridge, unmarried, Barrister-at
Law, London, son of Mrs. Charlotte Linda Morgan, of 45, Bramham
Gardens, London S.W., height 5 feet 9 inchers, chest 36 inches,
mobilized 5 August 1914, born 11 January 1885. Buried at CANADIAN
CEMETERY NO.2, NEUVILLE-ST. VAAST, Pas de Calais, France. Plot 13.
Row C. Grave 7. See also Cambridge
Guildhall and Cambridge,
St Fath's School |
MUIR |
Burleigh
Leycester |
[1909]
Captain, III Corps H.Q., Royal Army Service Corps. and Special List
(Courts-Martial Officer). Died 4 November 1918 of pneumonia following
influenza. Son of Sir Richard David Muir, of 3, Temple Gardens,
London, and Lady Muir; husband of Vera Brodie Muir (nee MacQueen)
of 30, Campden House Court, Kensington, London. Educated at Rugby
School and Trinity College, Cambridge. B.A.; Barrister-at-Law, Middle
Temple. Buried in DON COMMUNAL CEMETERY, ANNOEULLIN, Nord, France.
Plot I. Row A. Grave 6. |
MULLENS |
Cyril
John Aashley |
[1915]
Flight Sub-Lieutenant, Royal Naval Air Service. Drowned in action
off the coast of Flanders 5 May 1916. Aged 18. Only son of Sir John
A. Mullens and Lady Mullens, of 6, Belgrave Square, S.W.I. Born
at Barrow Hills, Longcross, Chertsey, Surrey. Educated at Eton and
Trinity College, Cambridge. No known grave. Commemorated on CHATHAM
NAVAL MEMORIAL, Kent. Panel 20. |
MURRAY |
George
Anthony |
[1912]
Major, "D" Battery, 47th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery.
Awarded the Military Cross (M.C.) Died 4 April 1918 of wounds received
in action. Aged 24. Son of Dr. Charles F. K. and Mrs. Murray, of
Kenilworth, Cape Town, South Africa; husband of Margaret Murray,
of 10, Palace Court, Bayswater Rd., London. Educated at Bedales
and Trinity College, Cambridge. Buried in AUBIGNY BRITISH CEMETERY,
Somme, France. Row E. Grave 6. |
MURRAY |
Malcolm
George Douglas |
[1907]
Australian Force. Died 16 Nov. 1918 from the effects of war service |
MURRAY-SMITH |
Arthur
George |
[1905]
Lieutenant, 2nd Life Guards. Died 2 Nov.1914 of wounds received
in action |
NEGROPONTE |
J
Jack |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant, S. Lancashire Regiment. M.Died 29 Oct. 1916 of wounds
received in action |
NELSON |
W
H Vere |
No
further information currently |
NEVILE |
Bernard
P |
[1910]
Captain, Lincolnshire Regiment. Killed in action 11 Feb. 1916 |
NEVILE |
Hugh
G |
[1898]
Lieutenant, S. Wales Borderers. Killed in action 21 Aug. 1915 |
NEWALL |
Jack
Hainsworth Maxwell |
[1914]
Sub-Lieutenant
Z/1779, Drake Battalion, Royal Naval Division, Royal Naval Volunteer
Reserve. Killed in action in France 13 November 1916. Aged 21.
Born 1 October 1895. Son of Marian Perrin Knight Newall, of Wharton
Hall, Winsford, Cheshire, and the late W. N. M. Newall. In the
1901 census he was aged 5, born Huyton, Lancashire, grandson of
John K Armstrong (a widower), son of Marian P K Newall (a widow),
resident Wharton Hall, Wharton, Northwich, Cheshire. In the 1911
census he was aged 15, born Hayton, Lancashire, at school, son
of Marian P K Newall (a widow), resident Wharton Hall, Winsford,
Wharton, Cheshire. Formerly member of the O.T.C. Religious denomination
Church of England. Under Graduate at Trinity College. height 5
feet 9¾ inches, chest 36-38 inches, medium complexion,
brown hair, hazel eyes. Joined Battalion for Duty at Mudros 10
January 1916, embarked on board H.M.T. "Minominee" aat
Mudros 1 June 1916, disembarked at Marseilles 7 June 1916. Buried
in ANCRE BRITISH CEMETERY, BEAUMONT-HAMEL, Somme, France. Plot
IV. Row A. Grave 27.
Extract
from De Ruvigny's Roll Of Honour 1914-1918, volume 2,
page 235:
NEWALL,
JACK HAINSWORTH MAXWELL, Sub.-Lieut. Drake Battn. Royal
Naval Division, R.N.V.R., only s. of the late William
Newall Maxwell Newall, of Liverpool, Merchant, by his wife, Marian
Perrin Knight (Wharton Hall, Winsford, co. Chester), dau. of John
Knight Armstrong, of Wharton Hall, Winsford; b. Huyton,
near Liverpool, 1 Oct. 1895; educ. Charterhouse, and Trinity College,.
Cambridge, where he was a member of the O.T.C., but left to join
the R.N.V.R. as a Private, 12 May, 1915, and was gazetted Sub-Lieut.
14 July, 1915; served with the Mediterranean Expeditionary Force
in Gallipoli from Dec., 1915; took part in the evacuation in Jan.
1016; proceeded to France June, 1916, and was killed in action
on the outskirts of Beaucourt Village 13 Nov. following. Buried
at Hamel. While at Charterhouse he was House Monitor; won both
House and Harpie Colours, and swam for his House; unm.
|
NEWSON |
Walter
Alexander |
[1882]
Major. Born 21 August 1863, 2nd son of Thomas and Rebecca Newson,
of Marlow House, Kingston-on-Thames; husband of Francesca C. P.
Newson, of Alexandra Club, 12, Grosvenor St., London. Baptised
26 August 1864 in East Molesey, Surrey. He was at Charterhouse
[W] 1878 - 1882. He went up to Trinity College Cambridge. He served
in the South African War 1899 - 1902. In the 1881 census he was
aged 17, born East Molesey, Surrey, a school boarder, resident
Sandy Lane, Godalming, Guildford, Surrey. In the Great War he
served with 2nd/3rd (City of London) Battalion (Royal Fusiliers),
London Regiment (Royal Fusiliers). He died of illness while on
active service on 15 April 1917. Aged 53. His grave is at Mont
Huon Military Cemetery, Le Treport, Seine-Maritime, France. Plot
IV. Row A. Grave 1. See also Charterhouse
School, Goldalming, Surrey
From
the Charterhouse Register, Cricket Quarter 1878:
Newson,
Walter Alexander. b. 21 Aug., 1863. (Weekites); Left L.Q., 1882.
Trin. Coll., Camb.; M.A.
W. A. Newson, Esq., Crosswood House, East Moulsey
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1917:
NEWSON
Walter Alexander of 63 Ashley-gardens Westminster Middlesex
major His Majesty's Army died 15 April 1917 in France on active
service Probate London 26 May to Emily Ann Eugenie
Newson spinster.
Effects £171 9s. 4d.
|
NICHOLAS |
Henric
C |
[1900]
Lce.-Corpl., Australian Light Horse. Killed in action 4-6 Aug. 1916 |
NOEL |
Hon
Robert E T M |
[1906]
Captain, R. Fusiliers, attd. Nigeria Regiment., W. African Frontier
Force. Died in E. Africa 2 Feb. 1918 of dysentery and malaria |
NORRIS |
William
F |
[1912]
Lieutenant, Norfolk Regiment. (T.F.); attd. Div. Cyclist Coy. Killed
in action in Gallipoli 25 Aug. 1915 |
O’CONNOR |
A
Cathal |
[1910]
Captain, Norfolk Regiment. M.C. Killed in action 27 July 1916 |
OLIVER |
T
Frederic |
[1905]
2nd Lieutenant, Sherwood Foresters (Notts. and Derby Regiment.)
Died 26 Oct. 1918 of heart failure following pneumonia |
ORDE-POWLETT |
William
Percy |
[1913]
2nd Lieutenant, Yorkshire Regiment. Killed in action 17 May 1915 |
PARKER |
Frank
B |
(1914)
Captain, Yorkshire Regiment. Killed in action in N. Russia after
the Armistice |
PARRY |
Francis
A |
[1901]
Major, R. Warwickshire Regiment. M.C. Killed in action 27 Sept.
1918 |
PARRY |
Norman
C |
[1905]
Lieutenant, York and Lancaster Regiment. Killed in action 27 July
1915 |
PARSONS |
Desmond
C |
[1909]
Captain, Irish Guards. M. Killed in action 15 Sept. 1916 |
PATTESON |
John
D |
[1907]
2nd Lieutenant, 5th Dragoon Guards. Killed in action 13 Oct. 1914 |
PEARCE |
Robert
Swayne |
[1913] Second Lieutenant, 2nd Battalion, Rifle Brigade (The Prince
Consort's Own). Killed in action 9 May 1915. Aged 20. Born 20 August
1895. Son of Sir Edward C. Pearce and Lady Pearce. Joined the Worshipful
Company of Haberdashers as an apprentice to Percy Saxton 1910, son
of Edward Charles Pearce of Shanghai China, and 40, Hyde Park Gate
Kensington. In the 1911 census he was aged 15, born Shanghai, China,
at school, newphew of Harold Edmund and Alice Warne, resident 22,
Primrose Hill Road N.W., Hampstead, London & Middlesex. No known
grave. Commemorated on PLOEGSTEERT MEMORIAL, Hainaut, Belgium. Panel
10. See also Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1918:
PEARCE
Robert Swayne of 5 Fitzalan-road Church End Finchley Middlesex
died on or since 9 May 1915 in France or Belgium Administration
(limited) London 23 November to Horace Gildon Harwood
solicitor the attorney of Edward Charles Pearce. Effects £139
2s. 3d. |
PEMBERTON |
Francis
Percy Campbell |
[1903]
Captain, "C" Squadron, 2nd Life Guards, Houshold Cavalry.
Killed in action near Roulers 19th October 1914. Aged 29. Only son
of Canon and Mrs. Pemberton, of Trumpington Hall, Cambridge; husband
of Winifred Mary Colegate (formerly Pemberton), of 16, Prince's
Gardens, London. Buried in DADIZEELE NEW BRITISH CEMETERY, Moorslede,
West-Vlaanderen, Belgium. Plot VI. Row D. Grave 17. See also Trumpington
War Memorial and also Lords
MCC WW1 and Cambridge,
St Faith's School
Extract
from De Ruvigny's Roll Of Honour 1914-1918:
PEMBERTON,
FRANCIS PERCY CAMPBELL, Capt., 2nd Life Guards, only s.
of the. Rev. Thomas Percy Pemberton (R.L. 26 Feb. 1900, formerly
Hudson), of Trumpington Hall, Cambridge, M.A., late Fellow and Tutor
of Trinity College, Cambridge, Canon and "Sueeentor Canonicorum"
of York Minster, by his wife, Patience Frances Sophia, only dau.
of Capt. William Huntly Campbell, 20th Regiment [by his wife, Frances
Maria Sophia, dau. and h. of Col. Francis Charles James Pemberton,
of Trumpington Hall, and of Pembrey, Carmarthenshire]; b. Gilling
East, co. York, 4 April, 1885; educ. Ludgrove, and Trinity College,
Cambridge; gazetted 2nd Lieut. 2nd Life Guards 12 Feb. 1907; promoted
Limit. 21 Feb. 1909, and Capt. 4 Aug. 1914; took his course at the
Cavalry School at Netheravon 1911-12, and in May of the latter year
was seconded as Cavalry Instructor to the Oxford and Cambridge O.T.C.,
but on the outbreak of the European War was recalled to his Regiment;
went to France with the Household Cavalry Brigade, 3rd Cavalry Division,
Expeditionary Force, on 6 Oct. 1914, and was killed in action near
Moorslede (between Routers and Staden) 19 Oct. following. The force
against them being tremendous, the order to retire was given. They
tried to bring Capt. Pemberton with them, but were unable to do
so, and his body was never recovered. A Corporal of Horse in his
Regiment wrote: "It is unnecessary to say how much we boys
regretted his death, for always he had proved himself one of the
best, an excellent soldier and a grand leader, always thinking of
others before himself and was always in the van. He was a One all-round
sportsman, a splendid cricketer, a keen huntsman, and a very good
shot, and had a great natural and charming gift for music. He was
a playing member of the M.C.C., also of the Cambridgeshire County
Cricket Club, a vice-president and member of the Trumpington Cricket
Club. He m. at Hovingham Parish Church. 30 April, 1912, Winifred
Mary (Hovingham Hall, Malton), eldest dau. of Sir William Henry
Arthington Worsley, of Hovingham Hall, 3rd Bart.; s.p.
Extract
from The Bond of Sacrifice Volume 1:
CAPTAIN
FRANCIS PERCY CAMPBELL PEMBERTON, 2nd LIFE GUARDS, was
the son of Canon T. Percy Pemberton, Prebendary of York Minster,
and of Mrs. Pemberton, Trumpington Hall, Cambridge. He was born
at Gilling East Rectory, Yorks, on the 4th April, 1885. He was educated
at St. Faith's, Cambridge, Mr. Arthur Dunn's, Ludgrove, Malvern
(one term), by private tuition, and at Trinity College, Cambridge.
Captain Pemberton joined the 2nd Life Guards on probation in February,
1907, being gazetted 2nd Lieutenant on the 20th February, and Lieutenant
on the 21st February, 1909. In 1912 he was seconded as Cavalry Instructor
to the Officers' Training Corps of Oxford and Cambridge Universities.
He rejoined his Regiment on the outbreak of the war, being promoted
Captain on the 5th August, 1914.
He was serving in "C" Squadron when he was killed on the
19th October, 1914, at Moorslede, near Roulers, Belgium. He was
a member of the Marlborough, Bachelors', White's, the M.C.C., Pitt
Club and County Club, Cambridge, etc. His recreations included music,
hunting, polo, golf, cricket, lawn tennis, and billiards.
Captain Pemberton married Winifred Mary, daughter of Sir William
Worsley, Bart., and Lady Worsley, of Hovingham Hall, Yorks. |
PENN |
Eric
Frank |
[1897]
Old Etonian. Captain, 4th Battalion, Grenadier Guards. Killed in
action 18th October 1915 at Hohenzollern, near Loos, France. Aged
33. Born 17th April 1878, Westminster, London. Son of William and
Constance Penn, of London; husband of Gladys Penn, of Baldslow Place,
Baldslow, Sussex; his uncle was J
F Green and his brother-in-law C
H M Ebden. Buried in VERMELLES BRITISH CEMETERY, Pas de Calais,
France. Plot I. Row K. Grave 11. Member of the Stock Exchange. See
also Stock Exchange Memorial
and Cambridge
University, Trinity College
See
his statistics on CricInfo
Extract
from the Stock Exchange Memorial Book:
CAPTAIN
ERIC FRANK PENN,
Grenadier Guards, was the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Penn, and
was born in 1878.
He was educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge. Captain
Penn was a distinguished and versatile sportsman. He played cricket
and football for Eton, and he won the School Quarter Mile and two
other events. He gained his Blue for cricket in 1899.
When the South African war began he went to the front with the 3rd
Battalion of the Royal Scots, which he had joined while still at
Eton. He was invalided home in 1901 with the rank of Captain.
He went back to Cambridge and again played against Oxford at cricket.
Later on he played brilliantly for Norfolk County.
On leaving the University he went into the City and became a partner
in the firm of Sir R. W. Carden and Co, and a member of the Stock
Exchange in 1905.
On the outbreak of war Captain Penn joined the Norfolk Yeomanry,
but in his impatience to get into action transferred to the Grenadier
Guards and went to the front with the 4th Battalion as a subaltern.
After the battle of Loos he was promoted to Captain and mentioned
in despatches for distinguished gallantry in the field.
He was killed on 18 October 1915 at the Hohenzollern Redoubt.
Captain Penn during his service in the Army gained the same golden
reputation as an ideal English gentleman, which he had earned all
through his life from his schooldays.
A writer in the “Eton Chronicle” said of him: “Prominent
in games and with a stainless record, always cheerful and full of
grit, he attracted to himself all that was best at Eton. No one
could fail to love and honour him for his noble qualities."
One of his brother officers wrote: “I can never forget what
his example has been to me, and I know that it has helped many along
the road."
Another wrote “He was an exceptionally fine company commander
and his men would have done anything for him."
He married, in 1906, Gladys, daughter of Mr. Charles Ebden of Baldstow
Place, Sussex, by whom he had one son, born posthumously. |
PENN |
Geoffrey
Mark |
[1905]
Old Etonian. Second Lieutenant, 6th Battalion, Rifle brigade (The
Prince Consort's Own) attached Somerset Light Infantry. Killed
in action 11th February 1915. Aged 28. Son of William and Constance
Penn, of 34, Wilton Crescent, Victoria, London. Buried in RIFLE
HOUSE CEMETERY, Comines-Warneton, Hainaut, Belgium. Plot IV. Row
H. Grave 6. See also Lords
MCC WW1
Extract
from The Bond of Sacrifice Volume 2:
2nd
LIEUTENANT GEOFFREY MARK PENN, 6th BATTN. (RESERVE) THE RIFLE
BRIGADE (THE PRINCE CONSORTS OWN), attd. 1st BATTN. PRINCE ALBERT'S
(SOMERSET LIGHT INFANTRY), was the youngest son of William
and Constance Penn, of St. Alban's Court, Dover.
2nd Lieutenant Penn was born on the 20th April, 1886, and was
educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge. He obtained his
commission shortly after the outbreak of the war in August, 1914,
and was killed instantaneously by a sniper while directing trench
works near Pleogsteert, Flanders, on the 11th February, 1915.
|
PENROSE |
Edward
John McNeil? |
[1907]
Captain, R. Irish Fusiliers. M. Killed in action near St Julien
25 April 1915 |
PENROSE
FITZGERALD |
Maurice
J |
[1913]
Lieutenant, The Queen’s (Royal West Surrey Regiment.). Died 26 July
1916 of wounds received in action |
PEPLOE |
Keith |
[1913]
Captain, "B" Company, 2nd Battalion, Oxfordshire and Buckimghamshire
Light Infantry. Killed in action 9 November 1916. Aged 23. Son of
Mr. and Mrs. Henry T. Peploe, of 22, Sloane Gardens, London. Born
at Sevenoaks, Kent. Educated at Marlborough, Sandhurst, and Trinity
College, Cambridge. Buried in MAILLY-MAILLET COMMUNAL CEMETERY EXTENSION,
Somme, France. Row D. Grave 47. |
PERRY |
Evelyn
W C |
[1908]
2nd Lieutenant, R.F.C. Killed in flying accident 16 Aug. 1914 |
PERSSE |
Cecil
de B G |
[1895]
2nd LIuet., 7th Dragoon Guards.; attd. Irish Guards. Died 19 July
1915 of wounds received in action. |
PETERSEN |
William
S |
[1910]
2nd Lieutenant, Life Guards. Killed in action 6 Nov. 1914 |
PHILLIPS |
Ralph
N |
[1896]
Captain, R. Welsh Fusiliers. Died 27 Dec. 1914 of wounds received
in action |
PILKINGTON |
H
Brocklehurst |
[1905]
Captain, Manchester Reg. (T.F.). M. Killed in action in Gallipoli
4 June 1915 |
PINSENT |
David
H |
No
further information currently |
PLATT |
Maurice
C |
[1912]
Sub-Lieutenant, R.N.V.R. (R.N.D.). m. Died 26 Nov. 1918 of illness
contracted during internment |
POLLOCK |
Charles
T A |
[1906]
Captain, Inns of Court O.T.C.; attd. E. Yorks Regiment. M2. Killed
in action 31 March 1918 |
POLLOCK |
Martin
V |
[1906]
Lieutenant, S. Wales Borderers. Killed in action 9 May 1915 |
POPE |
Charles
Alfred Whiting |
[1896]
Captain, Royal Army Medical Corps. Drowned whilst attending the
wounded on British Troopship Transylvania 4 May 1917. Aged 39. Born
26 November 1877. Baptised 28 March 1878 in Dorechester, Dorset.
M.B. Son of Alfred Pope, J.P., F.S.A., and Elizabeth Mary Pope,
of Wrackleford House, Dorset; husband of Marion Ruth (nee Gravener)
Pope, of 7, Sedlescombe Rd. South, St. Leonards-on-Sea, married
14 April 1909 in Fordington, Dorset. Trinity College, Cambridge,
M.A., B.A. One of eleven brothers and four sisters, all of whom
(except one son predeceased) fought or worked for their Country
in the Great War. In the 1901 census he was age 23, born Dorset,
a medical Student, boarding at 4, Bernard Street, St Pancras, London
& Middlesex. No known grave. Commemorated on SAVONA MEMORIAL,
Italy. Also commemorated on Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey.
From
the Charterhouse Register Vol 2, Oration Quarter 1891:
Pope,
Charles Alfred Whiting. b. 26 Nov., 1877. (Lockites); Left C.Q., 1896.
Trin. Coll., Camb.; M.A.; B. Ch.; M.B.-M. R.C. S.; L.R.C.P. (Lond.)
C. A. W. Pope, Esq., South Court, Dorchester
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1917:
POPE
Charles Alfred Whiting of 7 Sedlescombe-road South St.
Leonards-on-Sea died 4 May 1917 at sea Probate Lewes
31 October to Marion Ruth Pope widow.
Effects £4129 4s. 2d.
Extract
from Western Gazette - Friday 15 June 1917, page 2:
CAPTAIN
C. A. W. POPE LOST ON TRANSYLVANIA.
Captain
Charles Alfred Whiting Pope, M.B., R A.M.C., who was reported “missing,
believed drowned,” on May 4th, on the occasion of the torpedoing
of the transport Transylvania, was the fourth of the ten sons originally
serving of Mr. Alfred Pope, Wrackleford House, near Dorchester.
He was educated at Twyford School, Charterhouse, and Trinity College,
Cambridge, and obtained his medical degrees from St. Bartholomew's
Hospital in 1903. He practised in partnership at Rugby, and subsequently
at Hastings and St. Leonard's, and joined the R.A.M.C., soon after
the beginning the war. For about two years he held an Army medical
appointment at Aldershot, and he was his way to take up duty when
he lost his life. Captain Pope, married, in 1908, Marion Ruth, eldest
daughter the late Captain J. J. Gravener, R.N., Avenue House, Dorchester,
who, with two sons and a daughter, survives him.
Extract
from Birmingham Daily Post - Thursday 15 November 1917,
page 7:
Among
other wills proved are the following:
Captain
Charles Alfred Whiting Pope, M.B., Cantab.. M.A., R.A.M.C..
formerly of Penrhoe House, Clifton Road, Rugby, drowned
at sea on active service (net personalty £3,962) ............. |
£4,129 |
Extract
from Western Gazette - Friday 31 May 1918, page 6:
STRATTON.
MEMORIAL
DEDICATED.—On Tuesday evening, in the presence of Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred Pope, Major Rolph Pope, Mrs. Clement Pope, Mrs. R. G.
Bartelot, and other members of the family, a numerous gathering
of the tenants of the Wrackleford Estate, and other friends, the
memorial to the two sons of the Lord of the Manor, who have given
their lives for the Empire, was dedicated in Stratton Church. After
choral evensong, sung by the Rev. I. Eliot, a Lesson being read
by the Rev. R. G. Bartelot (vicar of Fordington), the memorial tablet
was unveiled by Mr. Shepard (churchwarden) during the singing of
the hymn "O God, our help in ages past." A short address
was given by the Rev. I. Eliot on the words which are inscribed
at the base of the memorial, "Glory born of Duty is a Crown
of Light." After the final hymn,"On the Resurrection Morning,"
the National Anthem was sung. The Stratton section of the Volunteer
Battalion of the Dorset Regiment, under the command of Sergt. Clement
Pope, formed a guard of honour. The memorial bronze, which is mounted
on green-lined marble, and fixed on the south wall of the sanctuary,
is of a most unique and effective design. The following is the inscription
—"In loving memory of Percy Paris Pope, M.A., New College,
Oxon, of the Inner Temple, barrister-at-law, 2nd-Lieut. the Welsh
Regiment, sixth son of Alfred Pope, of Wrackleford House, who was
killed in action during an attack on the Hohenzollern Redoubt, 2nd
October, 1915, aged 33. Also of Captain Charles Alfred Whiting Pope,
M.A., M.B., Trinity College, Cambridge, R.A.M.C., fourth son of
Alfred Pope, who was drowned while attending the wounded in the
ship's hospital on the occasion of the British troopship Transylvania
being torpedoed in the Mediterranean 4th May, 1917, aged 39. ' Glory
of Duty is a Crown of Light.' |
PORTER |
Ernest
J |
[1909]
Lieutenant, London Regiment. (Queen’s). Died in German hands 22
Sept. 1916 of wounds received in action |
POWELL |
Rhys
C FF |
[1910]
2nd Lieutenant, Highland L.I. Killed in action at Verneuil 13 Sept.
1914 |
POWELL |
Richard
H |
[1902]
2nd Lieutenant, R. Sussex Regiment. (T.F.). Killed in action at
Richebourg l’Avoué 9 May 1915 |
POWER |
John
W |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant, Somerset L.I.; attd. D. of Cornwall’s L.I.; Lieutenant,
Welsh Guards. Killed in action 10 Sept. 1916 |
PRETOR-PINNEY |
Charles
Frederic |
[1883]
D.S.O. Lieutenant-Col., Rifle Brigade. M. Died 28 April 1917 of
wounds received ikn action 24 April 1917 |
PRING |
Basil
C |
[1906]
Private, Middlesex Regiment.; Lieutenant, Worcestershire Regiment.
and M.G.C. Killed in action 1 July 1916 |
PRINGLE |
Arthur
S |
[1896]
Captain, Cameronians (Scottish Rifles). Killed in action in the
Battle of Loos 25 Sept. 1915 |
PRIOR-WANDESFORDE |
Christopher
Butler |
No
further information currently |
PRYOR |
Robert
S |
[1913]
2nd Lieutenant, King’s Own (R. Lancaster Regiment.). Killed in action
at Ypres 1 May 1915 |
PURSER |
Frank
Dulcken |
[1906]
Lieutenant, Nelson Battalion, Royal Naval Division, Royal Naval
Volunteer Reserve. Killed in action 27 December 1917. Aged 29. Son
of Frank Walter and Marie Louise Purser, of 1, Circus Road Mansions,
Circus Rd., St. John's Wood, London. Scholar of Uppingham School
and Trinity College, Cambridge. Buried in VILLERS-PLOUICH COMMUNAL
CEMETERY, Nord, France. Row B. Grave 1. |
PYM |
Claude
John |
[1911]
Private, Canadian Force; Lieutenant, Irish Guards. Died 27 March
1917 of injuries accidentally received 24 March 1917 |
RAIKES |
Frank
Stewart Waddington |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant, Rifle Brigade. Killed in action 9 May 1915 |
RATTIGAN |
Cyril
S |
[1904]
Captain, R. Fusiliers. Killed in action 13 Nov. 1916 |
RAW |
Rowland |
[1903]
2nd Lieutenant, Lancashire Fusiliers. Killed in action 7 Aug. 1915 |
REED |
Rev
Clifford H |
[1907]
C.F. 4th Class, R.A.C.D. M.C. Killed in action at Messines 7 June
1917 |
REED |
Henry
W T |
[1905]
2nd Lieutenant, Monmouthshire Regiment. Killed in action 2 May 1915 |
REID |
James |
[1909]
Captain, Highland L.I. M. Killed in action 25 Sept. 1915 |
REYNOLDS |
John
W |
[1905]
2nd Lieutenant, York and Lancaster Regiment. (T.F.). Killed in action
near Ypres 7 Aug. 1915 |
RICHARDSON |
Daryl
Stewart |
[1910]
Lieutenant, 3rd Battalion attached 2nd Battalion, Border Regiment.
Killed in action 16 May 1915. Aged 24. Son of William and Ada Richardson,
of Bishops Down Grange, Tunbridge Wells. Educated Charterhouse and
Trinity College, Cambridge. In the 1901 census he was aged 10, born
London, living with his brother, Herbert L Richardson, resident
Grange, Bishops Down Park Road, Tunbridge Wells, Tonbridge, Kent.
In the 1911 census he was aged 20, born London, an Engineering Student,
boarding at 3, Marine Gardens, Eastbourne, Sussex. No known grave.
Commemorated on LE TOURET MEMORIAL, Pas de Calais, France. Panel
19 and 20. See also Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1915:
RICHARDSON
Daryl Stewart of Bishops Down Grange Tunbridge
Wells died 16 May 1915 in N.W. Europe Probate London
18 August to William Richardson engineer. Effects £4909
4s. 5d.
Extract
from London Evening Standard - Saturday 12 June 1915, page
5:
Second
Lieut. Daryl Stewart Richardson, 2nd Battalion Border Regiment,
who was killed in France, May 16-17, was the son of Mr. and Mrs.
William Richardson, of Bishop's Down Grange, Tunbridge Wells. He
was born on February 23rd, 1891, and was educated at Charterhouse
School and Trinity College, Cambridge. He volunteered immediately
the war broke out, and received a commission in the Border Regiment
in September, proceeding to France in December last. He was 24 years
old. |
RICHARDSON |
John
Sherbrooke |
[1895]
Second Lieutenant, 26th (Tyneside Irish) Battalion, Northumberland
Fusiliers. Killed in action 9 April 1917. Aged 40. Born 9 January
1877. Baptised 1 April 1877 in Stapenhill, St Peter, Derbyshire.
Son of Morris and Lucy Anne Richardson, of Hurley House, Hurley,
Marlow, Bucks; husband of Beatrice Paul (formerly Richardson, nee
Cardwell), of "Hillcroft," Sevenoaks, Kent, married July
to September Quarter 1903 in St Martin-In-The-Fields, Middlesex.
In the 1891 census he was aged 14, born Stapenhill, Derbyshire,
a school boarder, resident Charterhouse, P H W Girdlestone, Prince
of Wales Road, Godalming, Guildford, Surrey. In the 1901 census
he was aged 24, born Stapenhill, Derbyshire, an Articled Clerk,
son of Morris Richardson, resident Cranesden, Mayfield, Uckfield,
Sussex. In the 1911 census he was aged 34, born Stokenhill, Derbyshire,
a Solicitor, married for 7 years to Beatrice Richardson, one daughter
and one son, resident Hill Croft, Sevenoaks, Kent. Buried in ROCLINCOURT
MILITARY CEMETERY, Pas de Calais, France. Plot I. Row B. Grave 2.
See also Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey and also Solicitors and Articled Clerks
War Memorial, Holborn, London.
Extract
from the Charterhouse Register, Oration Quarter 1890:
Richardson,
John Sherbrooke. b. 9 Jan., 1877. (Girdlestoneites); Cricket XI,
1895; Left C.Q., 1895. Trin. Coll., Camb.; M.A. -Solicitor, 1901;
Partner in firm of Messrs. Cornell & Richardson.
J. S. Richardsonn, Esq., Sevenoaks.
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1917:
RICHARDSON
John Sherbrooke of Hillcroft Sevenoaks Kent
died 9 April 1917 in France killed in action Probate London
19 July to Batrice Richardson widow.
Effects £3627 5s.
|
RICHARDSON |
John
Watson |
[1900]
Major, 4th (Hallamshire) Battalion (Territorial), York and Lancaster
Regiment. Killed in action 3 May 1917. Aged 34. Born 18 July 1882.
Son of Mr. Samuel Grey Richardson, of Stone Grove, Sheffield; husband
of Elizabeth Blakeney (nee Roberts) Richardson, of Tremona, Hempstead
Rd., Watford, Hertfordshire, married 9 July 1908 in Sheffield, Cathedral
Church of St Peter & St Paul, Yorkshire (West Riding). In the
1901 census he was aged 18, born Sheffield, Yorkshire, Undergraduate
Studying Medicine at Cambridge University, son of Samuel Gray and
Eleanory Mary Richardson, resident Stone Grove House, 22, Town,
Ecclesall Bierlow, Yorkshire & Yorkshire (West Riding). In the
1911 census he was aged 28, born Sheffield, Yorkshire, a Solicitor,
married for 2 years to Elizabeth Blakeney Richardson with one son,
resident 105, Osborne Road, Ecclesall, Yorkshire & Yorkshire
(West Riding). No known grave. Commemorated on ARRAS MEMORIAL, Pas
de Calais, France. Bay 8. See also Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey
Extract
from the Charterhouse Register, Cricket Quarter 1896:
Richardson,
John Watson. b. 18 July, 1882. (Weekites); Left C.Q., 1900. Trin.
Coll., Camb., B.A.-Articled Clerk to a Solicitor.
J. W. Richardson, Esq., Stone Grove, Sheffield.
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1917:
RICHARDSON
John Watson of 105 Osborne-road Sheffield died
3 May 1917 in France killed in action Probate London
17 July to Elizabeth Blakeney Richardson widow Mary Eleanor Richardson
spinster and Samuel Roberts the younger solicitor.
Effects £4407 9s. 9d.
|
RICHARDSON |
Raymond
Driver |
No
further information currently |
RIDLEY |
Henry
Q |
[1901]
Lieutenant, Australian Infy. Killed in action 12 Oct. 1917 |
RIDLEY |
Herbert
L |
[1913]
Captain, R. Dublin Fusiliers. M.C. Killed in action 15 July 1917 |
RILEY |
Arthur
C |
[1901]
Captain, London Regiment. (St Pancras Bn.). Killed in action 15
Sept. 1915 |
RITCHIE |
Robin
B |
[1912]
Captain, Cameronians (Scottish Rifles). M.C. Killed in action 20
July 1916 |
RITSON |
Arthur
S |
[1910]
Gnr., Royal Field Artillery.; 2nd Lieutenant, Durham L.I. Killed
in action 5 Nov. 1916 |
RITSON |
John
A |
[1911[
Captain, S. Lancashire Regiment. Killed in action 23 July 1916 |
RIX |
John
Cecil |
[1895]
Captain, R.A.M.C. Killed in action 6 July 1916 |
ROBERTSON |
Keith
F |
[1908]
Captain and Adjt., Durban L.I., S. African Force, and Rifle Brigade.
M. Killed in action 27 Aug. 1916 |
ROBERTSON |
Ronald |
[1905]
Captain, Highland L.I. Died 13 Sept. 1917 |
ROBINSON |
Richmond
F |
[1898]
2nd Lieutenant, King’s Royal Rifle Corps. Killed in action at Hooge
30 July 1915 |
ROBSON |
Gerald
D |
[1912]
Lieutenant, King’s Royal Rifle Corps. Killed in action 24 Aug. 1917 |
ROSE |
Sir
Frank Stanley Day |
[1896]
[Date of death listed as 26th January 1915 on SDGW] Old Etonian.
Captain, 10th (Prince of Wales's Own Royal) Hussars. Killed in action
or 26th October 1914 (CWGC). Aged 27. 2nd Bart. Son of Sir Charles
Day Rose, 1st Bart.; husband of Lady Daphne Rose, of Hardwick House,
Whitchurch, Oxon. Served in the South African Campaign. Buried in
ZANDVOORDE CHURCHYARD, Zonnebeke, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium. Grave
1. See also Lords MCC WW1
Extract
from The Bond of Sacrifice Volume 1:
CAPTAIN
SIR FRANK STANLEY ROSE, BART., Xth (PRINCE OF WALES'S OWN ROYAL)
HUSSARS, was born on the 27th April, 1877. He succeeded
his father—Sir Charles Day Rose—as second Baronet in
1913, and he was a grandson of the Right Hon. Sir John Rose, P.C.,
G.C.M.G. Sir Frank Rose was educated at Eton and Trinity College,
Cambridge, joining the 10th Hussars in May, 1900, becoming Lieutenant
in June, 1904.
He served with his Regiment in the South African War, being present
at operations in the Transvaal and Cape Colony. For his services
he was mentioned in Despatches ("London Gazette," 17th
January, 1902), and received the Queen's medal with four clasps.
One of the characteristics of the Great War has been the liability
of the cavalry to be employed on dismounted duties, and Sir Frank
Rose was so employed when he was killed, on the 26th October, 1914,
while fighting with his Regiment in the trenches, near Zandvoorde,
where he is buried. These trenches were under heavy shell fire all
day and the casualties were very severe, Lieutenant Turner also
being killed. Sir F. Rose married Daphne, daughter of the late Captain
Henry Brooks Gaskell, of Kiddington Hall, Oxfordshire, and left
three children: Charles Henry, who succeeds him in the Baronetcy,
born October, 1912; Amy, born May, 1911; and Helen Briar, born June,
1915.
He was a member of the Army and Navy Club, Boodle's, and the Royal
Automobile Club, while his chief recreations were music and hunting.
|
ROSSI |
Roberto |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant, Engineers, Italian Army. Died 19 March 1920 from
the effects of active service during the war |
ST
AUBYN |
Morice
J |
[1910]
Major, King’s Royal Rifle Corps. M.C. M. Killed in action near St
Quentin 22 March 1918 |
SALAMAN |
Lewis
H |
[1901]
Seaman, R.N.V.R. (R.N.D.). Killed in action in Gallipoli Dec. 1915 |
SALMON |
B
Bryant |
No
further information currently |
SANDERS |
Leslie
Yorath |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant, Royal Garrison Artillery attached Field Survey Company,
Royal Engineers. Killed in action 10 March 1917. Aged 23. Son of
Sir Charles J. O. Sanders, K.B.E., and Lady Agnes J. Sanders, of
"Lyndhurst," Northbrook Rd., Lee, London. Senior Scholar
of Trinity College, Cambridge. Buried in WARLINCOURT HALTE BRITISH
CEMETERY, SAULTY, Pas de Calais, France. Plot VI. Row C. Grave 12. |
SANDERSON |
Ronald
H |
[1895]
Lieutenant-Col., Royal Field Artillery. M - Mention in Despatches.
Chevalier, Legion of Honour (France). Killed in action 17 April
1918 |
SANGER-DAVIES |
Llewellyn
Herbert |
[1912]
Captain, Durham L.I. Killed in action 1 July 1916 |
SAUNDERS |
George
B |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant, The Buffs (E. Kent Regiment.). Killed in action
15 April 1917 |
SEELY |
Charles
G |
[1913]
Captain, and Adjt., Hampshire Regiment. (T.F.). M. Killed in action
in the Second Battle of Gaza 19 April 1917 |
SEGNITZ |
Hermann
I |
[1911]
Corpl., H.A.C.; 2nd Lieutenant, London Regiment. (St Pancras Bn).
Accidentally killed 25 Sept. 1915 |
SEYMOUR |
Francis |
[1904]
Lieutenant, King’s Royal Rifle Corps. Killed in action at Hooge
30 July 1915 |
SHAW |
Albert |
[1910]
2nd Lieutenant, Northamptonshire Regiment. and Norfolk Regiment.
Killed in action 12 Oct. 1916 |
SHAW |
Raymond
P |
[1905]
Captain, R. Fusiliers. Killed in action in Gallipoli 28 Nov. 1915 |
SHEEPSHANKS |
Charles
John H |
[1904]
Captain, Devon Regiment. Killed in action 17 March 1916 |
SHENNAN |
Douglas
Francis Fairfax |
[1911]
Lieutenant, "D" Company, 4th Battalion, King’s Royal Rifle
Corps. Killed in action near Ypres 8 May 1915. Aged 23. Son of David
Anderson Shennan and Dolores Margarita Shennan, of 28, Chesham Place,
London. Gazetted from Trinity College, Cambridge, 2nd September,
1913. No known grave. Commemorated on YPRES (MENIN GATE) MEMORIAL,
West-Vlaanderen, Belgium. Panel 51 and 53. |
SHEPHERD |
James
M E |
[1914]
2nd Lieutenant, Rifle Brigade; Captain, R.F.C. Killed in action
15 Feb. 1917 |
SILVERTOP |
Francis
S J |
[1901]
Lieutenant, Oxfordshire Yeo. Killed in action 20 May 1917 |
SIMPSON |
Clifford
S |
[1910]
Captain and Adjt., Yorkshire Regiment. Killed in action 10 July
1916 |
SIMPSON |
Roger
C |
[1902]
Major, W. Kent Yeo. Died of pneumonia shortly after the Armistice |
SMITH |
C
Jervoise Dudley |
(1914).
2nd Lieutenant, Grenadier Guards. Killed in action 16 June 1915 |
SMITH |
Gerald
H |
No
further information currently |
SMITH |
John
H Martin |
[1906]
2nd Lieutenant, Spec. List (Intelligence). Died 10 Sept. 1914 |
SMITH |
Julian
H Michael |
[1908]
2nd Lieutenant, Manchester Regiment. Died 17 Sept. 1914 of wounds
received in action |
SMITH |
Peter |
[1912]
Lieutenant, Royal Engineers.; attd. R.F.C. M. Killed in action 28
April 1917 |
SMITH |
Sergius
[Holland] |
Second Lieutenant, 4th Battalion attached 2nd Battalion, South Staffordshire
Regiment. Killed in action 24 November 1915. Born 7 December 1891.
In the 1901 census he was aged 9, born Russia, son of Berthold H
and Nadejda mith, resident Kingsnympton Park, Kingsnympton, South
Molton, Devon. in the 1911 census he was aged 19, born Russia boarding
with his mother Nadejda Smith at 5, Gwendoline Terrace, Woolacombe,
Mortehoe, Devon. Educated Charterhouse and Trinity College, Cambridge
University. No known grave. Commemorated on LOOS MEMORIAL, Pas de
Calais, France. Panel 73 to 76.See also Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey.
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1916:
SMITH
Sergius Holland of 27 The Boltons Kensington Middlesex
died 24 November 1915 in Flanders Administration London
26 May to Nadejda Smith widow. Effects £163 18s. 1d.
|
SNELGROVE |
Sidney
H |
[1910]
Lieutenant, King’s Royal Rifle Corps. Killed in actin at Hooge 30
July 1915 |
SOOLE |
S
Waldegrave |
[1895]
Gnr., Royal Field Artillery. Died 3 Feb. 1917 of cerebro-spinal
meningitis |
SPARTALI |
Cyril |
[1907]
2nd Lieutenant, R. Berkshire Regiment. Killed in action at Loos
13 Oct. 1915 |
SPEER |
Alfred
H T L |
[1913]
Private, R. Fusiliers (P.S. Bn.); Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery.
(T.F.); attd. R.F.C. Killed in action 9 July 1916 |
SPENS |
Andrew
W |
[1890]
Lce.-Corpl., Essex Regiment. Died 7 Aug. 1917 |
SPICER |
Eric
Evan |
[1912]
Captain, London Regiment. (R.Fusiliers.). Killed in action t Oppy
Wood28 March 1918 |
SPIERS |
Archibald
L C |
[1903]
Lieutenant, King’s Shropshire L.I.). Killed in action 26 Sept. 1918 |
SPRAGG |
Charles
Edward Wright |
[1911]
Captain, 4th Battalion, East Yorkshire Regiment. (T.F.). Killed
in action 10 September 1918. Aged 25. Son of the Rev. Thomas J.
Spragg, of Carlton Villas, Lockwood St., Driffield. B.A. and Senior
Scholar of Trinity College, Cambridge. Buried in GOUZEAUCOURT NEW
BRITISH CEMETERY, Nord, France. Plot III. Row D. Grave 5. |
SPRIGG |
Henry
A G |
[1901]
Private, Middlesex Regiment. (P.S. Bn.); Captain, Hampshire Regiment.
(T.F.). Killed in action in Palestine 9 April 1918 |
STALLARD |
Arthur
D |
No
further information currently |
STEPHENSON |
Denys
G |
[1901]
Private, H.A.C.; Lieutenant, Scots Guards. Killed in action 16 May
1915 |
STEWART |
James
A L |
[1911]
Lieutenant, Rifle Brigade. Killed in action at Wieltje 13 May 1915 |
STEWART |
Ronald
J |
[1911]
Lieutenant, Seaforth Hdrs. M.C. M. Died 28 Jan. 1916 of wounds received
in action in Mesopatamia13 Jan. 1916 |
STEWART-JONES |
Thorold
Arthur |
[1892]
Captain R. Sussex Regiment. (T.F.). Killed in action 9 May 1915 |
STORRS |
Henry
L |
No
further information currently |
STRAIN |
John
Loudon |
[1915]
Captain, Royal Garrison Artillery M - Mentioned in Despatches. Killed
in action 31 July 1917. Aged 20. Son of William Loudon Strain and
Dorothy Maud Strain, of "Plaisance," Lancaster Avenue,
Wimbledon Hill, London. Undergraduate, Trinity College, Cambridge.
Educated at Westminster School. No known grave. Commemorated on
YPRES (MENIN GATE) MEMORIAL, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium. Panel 9. |
STRUTT |
Anthony
H |
No
further information currently |
STUART |
Charles
E |
[1902]
Captain, Suffolk Regiment. (Cyclist Bn., T.F.); attd. York and Lancaster
Regiment. Died 15 March 1917 of wounds received in action 12 March
1917 |
STUDD |
Rev
Lionel F |
[1909]
Captain, London Regiment. (Rangers). Killed in action 14 Feb. 1915 |
SULIVAN |
Eugene
G |
[1911]
Captain, E. Surrey Regiment. Killed in action 8 May 1917 |
SUMMERS |
Alfred
S M |
[1905]
Captain, 19th Hussars; attd. R.F.C. M. Killed in action 15 Sept.
1916 |
SUTHERLAND |
Alexander
G |
[1907]
Pte. Gordon Hdrs. Missing, presumed killed in action 23 March 1916 |
SUTTON |
Hubert
J |
[1905]
Lieutenant, Welsh Guards. Killed in action 27 Sept. 1915 |
TURNBULL |
Thomas
L G |
No
further information currently |
SWANWICK |
R
Kenneth |
[1903]
Lieutenant, Gloucestershire Regiment. Killed in action 15 Sept.
1914 |
TATHAM |
Geoffrey
B |
[1902]
Captain, Rifle Brigade; Brigade Major. M.C. Killed in action 30
March 1918 |
TATHAM |
Laurence
C S |
[1913]
2nd Lieutenant, Devon Regiment. and R.F.C. Killed in action 10 Jan.
1918 |
TAYLOR |
G
R M Stanbury |
[1914]
Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. (T.F.). Died 30 Sept. 1917 of
wounds received in action |
TAYLOR |
George
W |
[1910]
Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. Died 9 Nov. 1917 0f gas poisoning |
TAYLOR |
Lewis
Enfield |
[1901]
[Not listed on CWGC] Captain, Madras Guards, Corps of Engineers,
Madras Railway Corps (Indian Defence Force). Died of enteric fever
while stationed in Madras 3 December 1917. Born 14 June 1883. Second
son of Alfred Taylor, of Startston, Norfolk. Went up from Charterhouset
to Trinity College, Cambridge. a civil engineer on the Madras and
South Mahratta Railway. In 1908 he became a Captain in the Madras
Volunteer Corps. See also Charterhouse
School
Extract
from the Charterhouse Register, Cricket Quarter 1897:
Taylor,
Lewis Enfield. b. 14 June, 1883. (Weekites); Left C.Q., 1901.
Trin. Coll., Cambridge.
L. E. Taylor, Esq., Starston Place, Harleston, Norfolk
|
TENNANT |
Charles
Grant |
[1901]
Second Lieutenant. Born 23 July 1882, only son of James and Henrietta
Grant Tennant, of Fairlie, Ayrshire. He was at Charterhouse [g]
1895 - 1901. He won an Exhibition to Trinity College, Cambridge.
He was later with Alexander Fergusson & Co. of Glasgow, Lead Manufacturers.
In the Great War he was commissioned into the Seaforth Highlanders
and joined 4th Bn. He was killed in action on 9 May 1915. Aged 33.
No known grave. He is commemorated on LE TOURET MEMORIAL, Pas de
Calais, France. Panel 38 and 39.
See also Charterhouse
School
Extract
from the Charterhouse Register, Oration Quarter 1895:
Tennant,
Charles Grant. b. 23 July, 1882. (Girdlestoneites); Senior Scholar;
Left C.Q., 1901. Trin. Coll., Cambridge.
C. G. Tennant, Esq.. Fairlieburne, Fairlie, Ayrshire.
He
bequeathed £250 to the school for an English essay in English
and in classical literature alternately; also a silver cup to
be held in Girdllestoneites for as long as the house is known
by that name.
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1915:
TENNANT
Charles Grant of Fairlieburn Fairlie Ayrshire
2nd lieutenant 4th battalion Seaforth Highlanders died on active
service 9 May 1915 Confirmation of James Tennant.
Sealed London 27 October.
N. P. J. Turner, Esq., Pentreheylin, Llanymynech.
Extract
from Bond of Sacrifice: Officers Died in the Great War
1914-1916, volume 2, page 465:
2nd
LIEUTENANT CHARLES GRANT TENNANT, 4th BATTN. (TERRIT.) SEAFORTH
HIGHLANDERS (ROSS-SHIRE BUFFS, THE DUKE OF ALBANY'S),
who was born on the 23rd July, 1882, at Lowfell, Co. Durham,
was the only son of James Tennant, Fairlie, Ayrshire: he was
a cousin of Lord Glen-conner and of the Rt. Hon. H. J. Tennant,
M.P., Under-Secretary of State for War.
He was educated at Charterhouse, Godalming, of which he was
a Senior Scholar, and at Trinity College, Cambridge, where
he gained an exhibition. He joined the 4th Battalion Seaforth
Highlanders as 2nd Lieutenant in October, 1914, and went with
it to France early in November. After four months' service
he was offered a Captaincy in another company, but preferred
to remain with his own men. He was killed on the 9th May,
1915, at Neuve Chapelle in an attack on the German trenches.
Before joining the Army 2nd Lieutenant Tennant was a Director
of the Tharsis Sulphur and Copper Company, and of Alexander
Fergusson & Co., Ltd., of Glasgow.
Extract
from De Ruvigny's Roll of Honour 1914-1918, volume
1, page 347:
TENNANT,
CHARLES GRANT, 2nd Lieut., 4th Britt. Seaforth Highlanders
(T.F.), only s. of James Tennant, of Fairlie, Ayrshire,
and formerly of Newcastle-on-Tyne, J.P., by his wife, Henrietta
Grant, dau. of Alexander Andrew Fergusson; b. Lowfell,
co. Durham, 23 July, 1882; educ Charterhouse, Godalming, where
he was a senior scholar, and Trinity College, Cambridge, where
he was an exhibitioner; and on finishing his education became
a Director of the Tharsis Sulphur and Copper Co., Ltd., and
of Alexander Fergusson & Co., Ltd., Glasgow, Lead Manufacturers.
On the outbreak of war in Aug. 1914, he volunteered and joined
the Public Schools Battn. and was gazetted 2nd Lieut. to the
4th Battn. Seaforth Highlanders, 1 Oct. 1914; went to France,
5 Nov. 1914, and was killed in action near Neuve Chapelle,
9 May, 1915; unm. His Commanding Officer wrote: "After
less than four months soldiering his name was sent to the
War Office for promotion to Capt.; that fact shows what a
born soldier he was. On every occasion that we were under
fire he was always the same, cool and collected. He declined
promotion, as he wished to remain with the men with whom he
had trained."
|
TENNANT |
George
C S |
No
further information currently |
TENNANT |
William
Galbraith |
[1897]
Lieutenant. Born 8 March 1879, 1st son of John and Margaret Tennant,
of 19, The Boltons, West Brompton, London, husband of the Hon.
Winifred Chapple Norton, 3rd daughter of 5th Lord Grantley. He
was at Charterhouse [D] 1893 - 1896. He went up to Trinity College,
Cambridge and became a rancher in Argentina. In the Great War
he joined Lord Strathcona’s Horse (Royal Canadians). He was killed
in action on 25 May 1915. His grave is at CHOCQUES MILITARY CEMETERY,
Pas de Calais, France. Plot IV. Row B. Grave 14. See also Charterhouse
School
Note:
Lord Strathcona’s Horse was formed in Canada in 1900 for service
in the Boer War. After that war’s end it disbanded, then re-formed
in 1909. At the outbreak of the Great War the Regiment was mobilised
and began its training in England. By 1915 it was serving as infantry
in France.
|
TENNYSON |
Hon
Alfred A |
[1910]
Captain, Rifle Brigade; G.S.O. 3. Killed in action 21 March 1918 |
TERRY |
Robert
J A |
[1888].
M.V.O. Major, R. Sussex Regiment.; Brigade Major. D.S.O. M. Killed
in action 3 Oct. 1915 |
THOMAS
|
Trevor |
No
further information currently |
THOMPSON |
Francis
C |
[1907]
Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. Died 3 Oct. 1917 of wounds received
in action 2 Oct. 1917 |
THORNHILL |
G
Robert |
[1910]
Lieutenant, The Buffs (E. Kent Regiment.). Killed in action 22 Oct.
1914 |
THORNTON,
DSO, MC |
Noel
Shipley |
[1902]
Sergt., R. Fusiliers (P.S. Bn.); Major, 6th Battalion attached 7th
Battalion, Rifle Brigade (The Prince Consort's Own). Died of wounds
10 April 1918. Aged 34. Born 24 December 1883 at Yocldeton, Shrewsbury.
Son of the Rev. John and Mrs. Thornton; husband of Norah Thornton,
of Ivyhouse Farm, East Malling, Kent. Awarded the Distinguished
Service Order (D.S.O.) and Military Cross (M.C.). Buried in ABBEVILLE
COMMUNAL CEMETERY EXTENSION, Somme, France. Plot III. Row E. Grave
29. See also Charterhouse
School
Extract
from the Charterhouse Register, Oration Quarter 1882:
Thornton,
Noel Shipley. b. 24 Dec., 1883. (Gownboys); Left C.Q., 1902. Trin.
Coll., Cambridge.
N. S. Thornton, Esq., Hawkley, Liss, Hampshire.
Extract
from England & Wales Government Probate Death Index
1918:
THORNTON
Noel Shipley of Ivy House Farm East Mailing Kent
major Rifle Brigade died 10 April 1918 in France Probate London
23 August to Norah Frances Thornton widow. Effects £2732
9s. 7d.
Extract
from the Distinguished Service Order 1916-1923, page
298:
THORNTON,
N. S. (D.S.O. L.G. 3.6.18), Lt. (T/Major), Rif. Bdge.
(att. 7th Bn.) ; M.C. He died on 10.4.18 at 2nd Stationary
Hospital, Abbeville, of wounds received in action while in
command of his Regiment on 4 April.
Extract
from Morning Post - Tuesday 21 July 1908, page
7:
An
engagement is announced between Noel Shipley Thornton, of
Norton Fisheries, Baldock, youngest son of the Rev. John
Thornton, of Betchworth, Surrey, and Norah Frances, youngest
daughter of John Henry Bovill, of Buckland, Betchworth,
Surrey.
Extract
from Dorking and Leatherhead Advertiser - Saturday
30 July 1910, page 6:
MISS
N. F. BOVILL & MR. N. S. THORNTON
Betchworth,
Tuesday, was the scene of a wedding in which the parties
were connected with two of the best known and esteemed
families in the district. It was, therefore, only to be
expected that the happy event should evoke the greatest
possible interest, and the fact that the bride was Miss
Norah Frances Bovill, the youngest daughter of Mr. John
Bovill, of Broome Perrowe, Buckland, and the bridegroom
was Mr. Noel Shipley Thornton, the son of the Rev. John
Thornton, of “The Meadows,” Betchworth, added
considerably to the pleasurable interest attaching to
such an event.
The ceremony took place in the pretty old church of St.
Midhael’s, Betchworrh, and for the happy occasion
it had been prettily adorned with flowers, the chancel
steps being decorated with ferns and lilies. From the
entrance to the churchyard up to to the church door, an
awning was erected, and from the open sides of this a
large crowd witnessed the arrival and departure of the
bride and the guests. lnside the church there was a large
attendance of friends and well-wishers of the happy couple,
and during the time of waiting the organist (Mr. C. J.
Whittington) played the Prelude and Fugue in Major from
Bach, and the birdal March and duet from“Lonengrin.“
As
the bride, on the arm of her father, entered the church,
the hymn, “Love Divine, all loves excelling,”
was sung, the singing being led by the choir. Very charming
the bride looked in a beautiful dress of soft cream satin,
veiled in chiffon and trimmed with bugle and pearl trimming
and old lace. She wore a fine net veil, lent by Mrs. Arthur
Fisher, and her ornaments were diamond and pearl earrings,
the gift of Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Gordon Clark, and she carried
a bouquet of cream roses.
She
was attended by four bridesmaids, Mrs. Miss Bovill (sister).
Miss Mildred Heatcote, Miss Madeleine Du Buisson, and
Miss Margaret Charrington. They wore pretty dresses of
pale mauve satin, veiled in blue ninon, trimmed with silver
with beige tegal straw hats trimmed with mauve convolvuli
and grass. They wore garnet broodhes, the gift of the
bridegroom, and they carried bouquets of white lilies.
The
officiating clergyman was the Rev. John Thornton, the
father of the bridegroom, assisted by, the Rev. Walter
Brock, Rector of S. Pierre dn Bois, Guernsey, an uncle
of the bride, and Canon C. E. Sanders, Vicar of Betchworth.
The
best man was Mr. Gerald Gornock Taylor.
[..continued]
Extract
from Dorking and Leatherhead Advertiser - Saturday
30 July 1910, page 6:
BETCHWORTH.
MEMORIAL
TABLET.—A most beautiful alabaster tablet
with Connemara marble frame has been placed on the south
wall near the font in St. Michael’s Church to the
memory of Major Noel Shipley Thornton, Rifle Brigade,
who gave his life for King and country on April 10th,
1918. The inscription is as follows: —“In
proud and loving memory of Noel Shiplev Thornton. D.S.O.,
MC, Major. Rifle Brigade. Died 10th April, 1918, of wounds
received six days previously, aged 34. He enlisted on
the outbreak of war, and rose from the ranks to be Adjutant,
and finally to command the 7th Battalion Rifle Brigade,
at the head of which he was mortally wounded in front
of Villers Bretonneux; Le Basee, 1915; Flanders, 1916;
Arras and Paschendaele, 1917; St. Quentin and the Somme,
1918. 'Faithful unto death.'” The tablet was dedicated
on Christmas Eve by the Vicar of St. Michael’s,
in the presence of Mrs. Noel S. Thornton, widow, and her
little son, Mrs. J. Thornton, the mother of the deceased
officer, and others.
Extract
from the Supplement to the London Gazette, 26 July
1918, page 8850:
Lt.
(T./Maj.) Noel Shipley Thornton, Rif. Bde., Spec. Res.
For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty. He stopped
stragglers and organised them into formed bodies and defended
a most exposed position for three hours under heavy artillery
fire and machine-gun barrage. Some days later he saved one
of his companies from being cut off. He continued to give
a magnificent example of courage and leadership until badly
wounded.
|
TILLARD |
Thomas
A |
[1902]
Lieutenant, Norfolk Yeo.; Captain (A.), R.F.C. Killed in action
6 Dec. 1916 |
TISDALL |
Arthur
Walderne St Clair |
[1909]
Sub-Lieutenant, Anson Battalion, Royal Naval Division, Royal Naval
Volunteer Reserve. Awarded the Victoria Cross (V.C.). Killed in
action in Gallipoli 6 May 1915. Aged 24. Son of Rev. Dr. Tisdall,
D.D. (Vicar of Deal), and his wife, Marian L. Tisdall, of St. George's
Vicarage, Deal, Kent. Scholar of Trinity College, Cambridge; B.A.
(Double First Class Classical Honours); Chancellor's Gold Medallist,
Cambridge; First Class Clerk, Civil Service (Treasury). No known
grave. Commemorated on HELLES MEMORIAL, Turkey (including Gallipoli).
Panel 8 to 16.
An
extract from The London Gazette, No. 29530, dated 31st
March, 1916, records the following
During
the landing from the S.S. River Clyde at V Beach, in the Gallipoli
Peninsula, on the 25th April, 1915, Sub. Lieut. Tisdall, hearing
wounded men on the beach calling for assistance, jumped into the
water, and, pushing a boat in front of him, went to their rescue.
He was, however, obliged to obtain help, and took with him on
two trips, Ldg. Smn. Malia; and on other trips, Ch. P.O. Perring
and Ldg. Smn. Curtis and Parkinson. In all, Sub. Lieut. Tisdall
made four or five trips between the ship and the shore, and was
thus responsible for rescuing several wounded men under heavy
and accurate fire. Owing to the fact that Sub. Lieut. Tisdall
and the platoon under his orders were on detached service at the
time, and that this officer was killed in action on the 6th May,
it has only now been possible to obtain complete information as
to the individuals who took part in this gallant act. Of these,
Ldg. Smn. Fred Curtis, DEV/1899/C, has been missing since the
4th June, 1915." (Since confirmed "missing in action",
commemorated on the Helles Memorial)
|
TOLLEMACHE |
Arthur
Henry W |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant, Royal Engineers.; attd. R.F.C. Killed in action
19 July 1916 |
TOLLER |
George
R |
[1890]
Lieutenant, Lincolnshire Regiment. Died 27 July 1917 |
TOMLINSON |
Frederic
Roger John |
[1910]
2nd Lieutenant, S. Staffs. Regiment. Killed in action near Ypres
26 Oct. 1914 |
TOMPSON |
Alan
Hawtin |
[1899]
[Alan Hawree Tompson on SDGW] Second Lieutenant, Special reserve
attached to 4th Battalion, Grenadier Guards. Killed in action 27
September 1915. Aged 35. Embarked France 15 August 1915. Son of
John Alfred and Marie Louise Tompson; husband of Gladys Tompson
(nee Bullough), of Glenlyon. In the 1881 census he was aged 1, son
of John Alfred and Marie Louise Clifford Tompson, born Denham, Buckinghamshire,
resident The Priory, Denham. In the 1891 census he was a son, aged
11, born Denham, resident The Priory, Denham. In the 1901 census
he is a son, aged 21, born Denham, resident Dromenagh (?), Iver,
Buckinghamshire. No known grave. Commemorated on LOOS MEMORIAL.
Panel 5 to 7. See also Glen
Lyon War Memorial and Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey
From
the Charterhouse Register Vol 2, Cricket Quarter 1894:
Tompson,
Alan Hawtin. b. 23 Jan., 1880: 2 s. of Alfred Tompson, of Iver
Heath; (Robinites-Verites); Senior Scholar; Cricket XI, 1897,'98,'99;
Capt., '99; Football XI, 1898-'99; Left C.Q. 1899. Exhibitioner
Trin. Coll., Camb.; B.A.;- Sheep Farmer.
A.H.
Tompson, Esq., Nairobi, East Africa..
Note
from the Times newspaper of 20 October 1915 under heading
"Fallen Officers."
Lieutenant Alan Tompson of 4th battalion Grenadier Guards who
was killed on September 27th was the son of Mr. John Arthur Tompson
of Dromenagh, Iver Heath. He was educated at Charterhouse and
Trinity Cambridge where he took a scholarship and several distinctions.
He was well known in British East Africa, having gone there 11
years ago and taken up land. He served 6 months in the East Africa
Mounted Rifles.
Extract
from Cambridge University Alumni, 1261-1900 about Alan
Hawtin Tompson :
Name:
Alan Hawtin Tompson
College: TRINITY
Entered: Michs. 1899
Born: 23 Jan 1880
Adm. sizar at TRINITY, Sept. 30, 1899. [2nd] s. of John Alfred,
of ‘Dromenagh,’ Iver Heath, Bucks. (and Marie Louise
Clifford, dau. of T. Kimber). B. Jan. 23, 1880, at Denham, Uxbridge.
School, Charterhouse. Matric. Michs. 1899; B.A. 1902. A sheep-farmer
in Nairobi, British East Africa. Married, 1915, Gladys, dau. of
John Bullough, of Kinloch Castle, Rhum. Served in the Great War,
1914-19 (Second Lieut., East African Mounted Rifies and Grenadier
Guards); killed in action, Sept. 27, 1915. Brother of the next.
(The Times, Oct. 20, 1915.)
Extract
from Bucks Herald - Saturday 23 October 1915, page 8:
Killed.—
Lieut. Alan Tompson, 4th Batt. Grenadier Guards (killed in action
September 27), was the second son of the late John Arthur Tompson,
of Dromenagh, Iver Heath.
Extract
from Bucks Herald - Saturday 23 October 1915, page 8:
TOMPSON.—Killed
in action in France, on Sept. 27th,Second Lieutenant Alan Tompson,
4th Grenadier Guards, son of the late John Arthur Tompson, of
Dromenag,. Iver Heath.
Extract
from Windsor and Eton Express - Saturday 23 October 1915, page
3:
IVER
HEATH.
Killed
in Action.
Lieutenant
Alan Tompson, 4th Grenadier Guards, who was killed on September
27, was the second son of Mr. John Arthur Tompson, of Dromenagh,
Iver Heath. He was educated at Charterhouse and Trinity, Cambridge,
where he took a scholarship and several distinctions. He was well-known
in British East Africa, having gone there 11 years ago and taken
up land. He was one of the first to see the great possibilities
of that country. He served for six months in the East African
Rifles before returning to England, where he joined the Grenadier
Guards, going to France two months later.
|
TROTTER |
Colin
L |
[1909]
Lieutenant, King’s African Rifles. Died 22 Jan. 1918 |
TROTTER |
Kenneth
S |
[1911]
2nd Lieutenant, Rifle Brigade. Killed in action 26 April 1915 |
TROUTON |
Edmund
A |
[1910]
Lieutenant, R. Inniskilling Fusiliers. Killed in action 1 July 1916 |
TROUTON |
Frederic
T |
[1910]
Captain, Cameronians (Scottish Rifles). Killed in action 25 Sept.
1915 |
TRUSCOTT |
Francis
G |
[1912]
Lieutenant, Suffolk Regiment. (Cyclist Bn., T.F.); attd. R.F.C.
M.C. M. Killed in action 6 April 1917 |
TUKE |
Rev
Francis H |
[1886]
Killed in action 20 July 1916 |
TURNER |
Arthur
C |
[1900]
Private, R. Fusiliers; 2nd Lieutenant, Rifle Brigade. Killed in
action 16 Jan. 1918 |
UPJOHN |
William
M |
[1903]
Captain, Welsh Guards. Killed in action 24 Aug. 1918 |
VAN
PRAAGH |
Ralph
B |
(1914)
2nd Lieutenant, King’s Royal Rifle Corps. Killed in action 9 April
1917 |
VARLEY |
Leonard |
[1911]
Lieutenant, D. of Wellington’s (W. Riding Regiment., T.F.). Killed
in action 12 Nov. 1915 |
VERNON |
William
H |
[1914]
Lieutenant, London Regiment. (R. Fusiliers.). Killed in action near
Les Boeufs 7 Oct. 1916 |
VERRALL |
Christopher
Francis |
[1907]
Lieutenant, R. Sussex Regiment. M Killed in action 22 Dec. 1914 |
VICKERS |
Robert |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. (T.F.). Died 10 Dec. 1917
of wounds received in action |
WAKEFORD |
Edward
Kingsley |
[1912]
Lieutenant, 7th Battalion, Leicestershire Regiment. Killed in action
16 July 1916. Aged 22. Son of Edward and Elizabeth Threapland Wakeford,
of 37, Bennett Park, Blackheath, London. Educated at Clifton College
and Trinity College, Cambridge. B.A. and Wrangler. Born at Plymouth,
Devon. Buried in FLATIRON COPSE CEMETERY, MAMETZ, Somme, France.
Plot VI. Row K. Grave 12. |
WALKER |
George
F |
[1895]
Private, R. Fusiliers (P.S. Bn.); 2nd Lieutenant, York and Lancaster
Regiment. (T.F.). Killed in action 7 Dec. 1916 |
WALROND |
Victor |
[1908]
Major, Royal Field Artillery. M 2. Killed in action 26 April 1917 |
WALSH |
Percival |
[1914]
Lieutenant, Loyal N. Lancashire Regiment. M. Died 8 July 1916 of
wounds received in action |
WALTERS |
Graham
Y L |
[1913]
Lieutenant, Irish Guards. Died 15 Sept. 1916 of wounds received
in action |
WARD |
Robert
O C |
[1900]
Captain, The Buffs (E. Kent Regiment.); Major, Tank Corps. M 2.
Killed in action 20 Nov. 1917 |
WARDLEY |
Geoffrey
Charles Norton |
[1910]
Lieutenant, Royal Garrison Artillery Died 24 July 1916 of wounds
received in action |
WARE |
Francis
H |
[1891]
Captain, London Regiment. (Kensington Bn.). Killed in action 1 July
1916 |
WASBROUGH |
William
L |
[1910]
2nd Lieutenant, Loyal N. Lancashire Regiment. Killed in action 25
Sept. 1915 |
WATKYN-THOMAS |
Alwyn |
[1910]
Captain, Highland L.I. Missing, presumed killed in action, 13 Nov.
1916 |
WATNEY |
William
H |
[1898]
Lieutenant, Rifle Brigade. Killed in action 10 May 1915 |
WATSON-TAYLOR |
Arthur
Simon |
[1902]
2nd Lieutenant, London Regiment. Killed in action 14 Sept. 1917 |
WEBB |
John
Boyer |
[1913]
Lieutenant, N. Staffs. Regiment.; attd. Bedfordshire Regiment. Killed
in action near Ypres 21 April 1915 |
WEBSTER |
Joseph
F |
[1912]
2nd Lieutenant, Black Watch; attd. Gordon Hdrs. M. Killed in action
30 Oct. 1914 |
WEDGEWOOD |
Arthur
F |
[1895]
Captain, N. Staffs Regiment. (T.F.). Killed in action 14 March 1917 |
WEGG-PROSSER |
Cecil
F J |
[1911]
2nd Lieutenant, R. Sussex Regiment. and Rifle Brigade. Killed in
action 3 Sept. 1916 |
WELDON,
CVO, DSO |
Sir
Anthony Arthur , Bart |
[1881]
Brevet Colonel. Born 1 March 1863, 1st son of Sir Anthony Crosdil
Weldon, husband of Lady Winifred Bruce (nee Varty-Rogers) Weldon
of 17A, Great Cumberland Place, Marble Arch, London, married Janury
to March Quarter 1902 in St. George Hanover Square Registration
District, London. He was at Charterhouse [P] 1877-1879, then at
Trinity College, Cambridge. In 1885 He was commissioned into the
Leinster Regiment. He followed a regular army career and served
in the South African War, he was awarded the Distinguished Service
Order (D.S.O.). In 1900 he succeeded his father as 6th Baronet and
returned to civilian life. From 1908 he was State Steward and Chamberlain
to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland and in 1913 Lieutenant of County
Kildare. He was appointed Commander of the Royal Victorian Order
(C.V.O.). In the Great War he served with 4th Bn., Leinster Regiment.
He died in a private hospital in Dublin on 27 June 1917, aged 54.
According to his obituary in The Times, he commanded a battalion
of his Regiment during the ‘Irish rebellion’, presumably the 1916
Easter uprising. His name appears on the C.W.G.C. Register. According
to the Sunday Mirror, Sunday 1 July 1917, "He had
seen many years of military service, and was a fine sportsman."
The Charterhouse Register states him to have died ‘on active service’
He is buried at ATHY (ST. JOHN'S) OLD CEMETERY, Republic of Ireland,
in the family vault. See also Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey
Extract
from the Charterhouse Register, Long Quarter 1877:
Weldon,
Anthony Arthur. b. 1 March, 1863. (Pageites ); Left O.Q., 1879.
Trin. Coll., Camb.; B.A., 1884.-Joined 4th Batt: Leinster Regt.,
1885; Major, 1899; A.D.C. to F.M. Viscount Wolseley (Commander-in-Chief),
1895-1900; served in S. African War with Natal Field Force,°
1899, 1900; D.S.O.- 6th Baronet, 1900.-D.L.; J.P. (Kildare &
Queen's County).
Major Sir A. A. Weldon, Bart., D.S.O., Kilmorony, Athy,
Co. Kildare.
Extract
from the Distinguished Service Order 1886-1915,
page 181:
WELDON,
SIR ANTHONY ARTHUR, Major, was born in London 1 March,
1863, eldest, son of the 5th Baronet. and Elizabeth, daughter
of the late Colonel Arthur Kennedy. He was educated at Charterhouse,
and at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he took his B.A.
in 1884; joined the 4th Battn. Leinster Regt. in 1885, and
became Major 13 Oct. 1889; was A.D.C. to F.M. Lord Wolseley,
Commander-in-Chief, 1895-1900; served in the South African
Campaign, 1899-1900, as Special Service Officer, with the
Natal Field Force, under Sir Redvers Buller; as Railway Staff
Officer, Lines of Communication, afterwards attached to the
Army Service Corps. Operations in Natal, 1899; Relief of Ladysmith,
including actions at Colenso, Spion Kop, Vaal Kranz; operations
on Tugela Heights (14 to 27 Feb. 1900 ), and action at Pieter's
Hill; operations in Natal, March to June, 1900. He was mentioned
in Despatches [London Gazette, 8 Feb. and 10 Sept. 1901],
received the Queen's Medal with two clasps, and was created
a Companion of the Distinguished Service Order [London Gazette,
27 Sept. 1901]: "Sir Anthony Arthur Weldon, Bart., Major,
4th Battn. Royal Canadians (Leinster Regt.). In recognition
of services during the operations in South Africa." The
Insignia were presented by the King 17 Dec. 190]; the Warrant
sent 24 Jan. 1902. He was created a C.V.O., 1911. He was Deputy-Lieutenant,
Queen's County; Justice of the Peace, Queen's County and County
Kildare; State Steward and Chamberlain to the Lord-Lieutenant
of Ireland. He married, in 1902, Winifred, daughter of the
late Colonel Varty Rogers, of Broxmore Park, Romsey, late
of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers and His Majesty's Bodyguard
of Gentlemen-at-Arms; and they had three sons. Sir A. A. Weldon
died 29 June, 1917, and was succeeded in the baronetcy by
his eldest son, Anthony Edward Wolseley Weldon, born 1 Dec.
1902.
Extract
from National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations),
1918:
WELDON
sir Anthony Arthur of Kilmorny Athy Queens County
C.F.O. D.S.O. H. M. L. baronet died 29 June 1917 at the
military Hospital 33 Upper Fitzwilliam-street Dublin Probate
Dublin to lady Winifred Bruce Blakeney
Weldon widow. Effects £181 14s. 1d. in England.
Sealed London 26 February.
Extract
from The Times - Saturday 30 June 1917, page
3:
OBITUARY.
COL. SIR ANTHONY WELDON.
Colonel
Sir Anthony Arthur Weldon, sixth baronet, his Majesty's
Lieutenant for County Kidare, died, yesterday, in Dubliin.
He was born in 1863, and succeeded to the baronetcy in
1900. He was educated at Charterhouse and Trinity College,
Cambridge, and joined tho 4th Battalion of the Leinister
Regimnent in 1885, seeing service with the Natal Field
Force under Sir Redvers Buller in the South African War.
From 1895 to 1900 he was aide-de-camp to Lord Wolseley.
In 1908 he becaune a member of the Household Staff of
the Lord Lieutenant (Lord Aberdeen), and was Estate Steward
and Chamberlain for some years. During the present war
he was in command of a battallon of the Leinster Regiment,
and did good service at Limerick during the Irish rebellion.
In 1900 he received the D.S.O., and in 1911 the C.V.O.
He married Winifred,daughter of the late Colonel Varty
Rogers, and is succeeded by his son Antliony Edward.
Extract
from Dublin Daily Express - Saturday 30 June
1917, page 6:
OBITUARY
LIEUT.-COL. SIR A. WELDON C.V.O., D.S.O.
We
regretto announce the death, which occurred last evening
at Surgeon Wheeler’s Privaio Hospital of Lieut.-Colonel
Sir Anthony Arthur Weldon. Bart., H.M.L., C.V.O., D.S.O.
The deceased gentleman had been ailing for several weeks
past, aud the end was not unexpected.
Sir
Anthony Weldon was the sixth baronet of a creation dating
from 1723, and represented a family of great antiquity,
the original founder of which settled Northumberland
at the time of the Conquest, and was the common ancestor
of the Weldons of Rahinderry, Swanscombe in Kent, Shottesbroke
in Bcrkshire, and Thorby in Northamptonshire. One Hugh
Weltden was "sewer" to King henry the Seventh,
and his son Edward became Master of the Household to
henry the Eigth, while his grandson, the first family
to bear the name iof Anthony, waS appointed Clerk of
the Spicery and Board of Green Cloth by Queen Elizabeth,
who, it is alledged, granted the family the right to
use her bust as one of their crests as a special mark
of her Royal favour, a privilege which has been handed
down to the present day. Born in March 1963 [sic
- s/b 1863] Sir Anthony was educated at Charterhouse,
which he left in 1881 for Trinity College, Cambridge,
where he took his B.A. degree in 1884. His earliest
ambition was to go to the Bar, and he accordingly began
rewading law, only abandoning his studies at the express
wish of his father, who was residing abroad and wished
his son to live at home. On returing to ireland Sir
Anthony joined the 4th Batt. Leinster Regiment 9Quee's
County Militia), and shortly afterwards made the acquaintance
of Lord Wolseley, at the time commanding the Forces
in ireland, who, to the very natural gratification of
the young Militia subaltern, invited him on several
occasions to act as an extra aide-de-camp on his staff
at the irish Army manoeuvres. During the remainder of
Lord Wolseley's term in Ireland Sir Anthony spent a
great deal of time at the Royal Hospital on Headquarters
staff duty, and in 1895, when Lord Wolseley was appointed
Commander-in-Chief of the Army, Sir Anthony accompanied
him to London, and had the distinction of being the
first Militia officer to be employed by the C.I.C. at
the War Office, his appointment lasting till Lord Wolseley's
retirement in 1900. On the outbreak of the Boer War
in 1899 Sirt Anthony voluteered for active service,
and went out to South Africa "to spend his leave,"
journeying to Cape Town in the ship that took out Sir
Redvers Buller and his staff. There was not much doubt
of the authorities finding plenty of use in South Africa
for a smart young officer like Sir Anthony (who suceeded
to the baronetcy in Jan uary, 1900 on the death of his
father), and one, moreover, who came to them straight
from the War office. So the two and a half months "leave"
extended to seven or eight before Lord Wolseley got
his aide-de-camp back again. Sir Redvers Buller too
Sir Anthony on at once, and employed him as special
service officer with the Natal Field Force, in which
capacity he was present at the battle of Colenso and
at all the great engagements that followed, including
Spion Kop and Pieter's Hill. One of his saddest experiences
was the death of his friend, "Freddy" Roberts,
with whom he remained to the last. A happier memory
is the Relief o Ladysmith, at which Sir Anthny was present
under Lord Dundonald, and he stayed on at ladysmith,
looking after stores and hospital supplies, until June,
1900, when he was invalided home owing to ptomaine poisoning,
which very nearly proved fatal. When well enough Sir
Anthony resumed his duties at the War office, remanining
until Lord Wolseley's retirement in the following October.
He then went to Dover to join his regiment, taking practicl
command in the absence of the Colonel, Lord Castletown,
whose retirment promotoed Sir Anthony to the colonelcy.
In February, 1902, Sir Anthony married Miss Winifred
Varty-Rogers, daughter of the late Colonel Varty-Rogers,
of Broxmore Park, Romsey, late Dublin Fusiliers and
H.M. Bodyguard of gentlemen-at-Arms; and he consequently
decided not to go out to South Africa again but to bring
his bride home and settle down. Kilmorony is a fine
old house, pleasantly situtated on high ground overlooking
the river Barrow, the windows and terraces commanding
charming views of the river and the valley. The beautiful
gardens were laid out chiefly by Sir Anthony's mother,
but he himself and Lady Weldon have done much to improve
both the house and place, and he had lately gone in
for exensive fruit culture ..er the Irish Department
of Agriculture planting several acres in apple trees.
When at Kilmorony he farmed a good deal, and thoroughly
enjoyed hunting, shooting, and fishing. The offices
of State Steward and Chamberlain were, until Lord Aberdeen's
time, entirely distinct; but his Excellency considered
it advisable to amalgamate the two departments under
one responsible head, and the scheme was found to work
admirably and greatly to lessen the labour. Lord Liverpool
was the first to hold dual appointment, with Sir Anthony
Weldon as his Vice-Chamberlain; and on his resignation
the then Viceroy at once offered the vacant post to
Sir Anthonym whi held it until the departure of the
Marquis of Aberdeen from ireland. He was for many years
Deputy Lieutenant for Queen's County, and in 1913 he
was appointed H.M.L. for County Kildare. Since the outbreak
of the war the deceased gentleman has been actively
employed in various military duties. He leaves two sons.
|
WELSH |
Anthony
R |
[1902]
Lieutenant, Yorkshire Regiment. (T.F.). M. Died 19 Feb. 1916 of
wounds received in action |
WEST |
Charles
S |
[1908]
Cdr., R.N.V.R. (R.N.D.). D.S.O. M 3. Killed in action 30 Dec. 1917 |
WESTBY |
Percival
St George Charles |
[1908]
Captain, Royal Field Artillery. (T.F.). Killed in action 23 Sept.
1917 |
WESTMACOTT |
Frederick
Charles |
No
further information currently |
WHATFORD |
George
L |
[1896]
Captain, 66th Punjabis, Indian Army. Killed in action at the Persian
Gulf 22 Nov. 1915 |
WHEATCROFT |
George
H |
[1907]
2nd Lieutenant, Royal Garrison Artillery Killed in action 13 Aug.
1915 |
WHIDBORNE |
George
F |
[1909]
Lieutenant, Coldstream Guards. M.C. M. Died 24 Oct. 1915 of wounds
received in action |
WHITAKER |
Frederick |
[1893]
Lieutenant, R.A.M.C. Died 28 Oct. 1916 |
WHITE |
Lynton
W |
[1905]
Lieutenant, 1st Dragoon Guards.; attd. 2nd Dragoon Guards. (Queen’s
Bays). Died 4 Sept. 1914 of wounds received in action at Nery 1
Sept. 1914 |
WHITE |
Ronald
E |
[1909]
2nd Lieutenant, Royal Engineers. (T.F.). Died 5 March 1915 of wounds
received in action at Ypres 4 March 1915 |
WHITEHEAD |
John
R G |
[1908]
2nd Lieutenant, R.F.C. Killed in flying accident 3 Aug. 1916 |
WIGGIN |
George
R |
[1907]
Lieutenant, Worcestershire Yeo. Killed in action in Egypt 23 April
1916 |
WILDING |
Anthony
Frederick |
[1902]
Captain, Armoured Car Division, Royal Marines. Killed in action
in Gallipoli 9 May 1915. Aged 31. Former Wimbledon Tennis Champion,
1907 (Doubles), 1908 (Doubles), 1910 (Singles & Doubles), 1911
(Singles), 1912 (Singles) & 1913 (Singles). Educated New Zealand;
Trinity College, Cambridge, B.A. Called to the English Bar, Inner
Temple, 1906; qualified Barrister and Solicitor of Supreme Court
of New Zealand, 1909. A member of The All England Lawn Tennis Club,
Queen's. Buried in RUE-DES-BERCEAUX MILITARY CEMETERY, RICHEBOURG-L'AVOUE,
Pas de Calais, France. Plot II. Row D. Grave 37. |
WILLANS |
Robert
St J |
[1896]
Lieutenant, Northumberland Fusiliers. Killed in action 9 Nov. 1914 |
WILLIAMS |
Colin
E |
[1900]
2nd Lieutenant, Royal Army Service Corps. Killed in action 17 Oct.
1917 |
WILLIAMS |
Edward
G |
[1907]
Lieutenant, Grenadier Guards. Killed in action 12 Aug. 1915 |
WILLIAMS |
George
T |
[1911]
Lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. Died 19 April 1918 of injuries
accidentally received |
WILLIAMS |
Gordon |
[1908]
Captain, Welsh Regiment. M. Died 15 Nov. 1918 of pneumonia following
influenza contracted on active service |
WILLIAMS |
J
Herbert |
No
further information currently |
WILLIAMS |
Noel
D |
[1910]
Lieutenant, S. Lancashire Regiment. and Gen Staff (Intelligence).
M. Killed in action 22 Oct. 1918 |
WILLIAMS |
Richard
D Garnons |
[1874]
Lieutenant-Colonel, R. Fusiliers. Killed in action 25 Sept. 1915 |
WILLOUGHBY |
Francis
G Godfrey |
[1908]
Captain, Rifle Brigade. Killed in action 9 Aug. 1915 |
WILLOUGHBY |
Sir
John Christopher, Bart |
[1884]
Major, Royal Army Service Corps. D.S.O. M 2. Died 16 April 1918
of illness contracted on active service in E. Africa |
WILLS |
Oliver
B W |
[1911]
Lieutenant (A.), Royal Air Force. M.C. Died 10 Nov. 1918 of wounds
received in action |
WILLS |
Robert
Bruce Melville |
[1908]
Captain, 2nd (Wessex) Field Company, Royal Engineers. (T.F.). M
- Mentioned in Despatches. Killed in action 15 February 1915. Aged
24. Recommended for V.C. Son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Melville Wills,
of Bracken Hill, Leigh Woods, Bristol, and of "Killilan,"
Ross-shire; husband of Beryl (Daisy) E. Wills, of Birdcombe Court,
Wraxall, Somerset. Educated at Charterhouse, and Trinity College,
Cambridge. In the 1891 census he was newborn, born Bristol, son
of Walter M and Louisa G Wills, resident Alfarnaes, Elton Road,
Bristol, Gloucestershire. In the 1901 census he was aged 10, born
Bristol, Gloucestershire, son of Walter M and Louisa G Wills, resident
Bracken Hill, Leigh Woods, Long Ashton, Somerset. In the 1911 census
he was aged 20, born Bristol, a Cambridge Undergraduate, boarding
at Tynycornel Hotel, Talyllyn Corris, Talyllyn, Merionethshire,
Wales. No known grave. Commemorated at YPRES (MENIN GATE) MEMORIAL,
West-Vlaanderen, Belgium. Panel 9. See also Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey and also All Saints
Church War Memorial, Wraxall Avon
Extract
from Bond of Sacrifice: Officers Died In The Great War 1914-1916,
volume 2, page 513-514:
CAPTAIN
ROBERT BRUCE MELVILLE WILLS, 2nd WESSEX FIELD COMPANY, ROYAL ENGINEERS
(T.F.), serving with an Imperial Service Unit, was the
second son of W. Melville Wills, of Leigh Woods, Somersetshire,
and Killilan, Ross-shire.
He was born on the 26th May, 1890, at Clifton, Bristol, and was
educated at Charterhouse and Trinity College, Cambridge, where
he was in the O.T.C. for three years (1908-11), and where he took
an Honours Degree in the Mechanical Sciences Tripos. He was gazetted
2nd Lieutenant in the R.E. (T.F.) in June, 1911, and passed first
on the list of his year after his course of instruction at Chatham
; he was promoted Lieutenant in September, 1913, and Captain in
September, 1914. He was killed on the 15th February, 1915, at
St. Eloi, while helping to carry out a wounded officer, who lay,
the sole occupant, in a trench Captain Wills and his men had been
sent to repair.
Captain Wills married Beryl Emmeline, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
John R. Sutton, of Clifton, Bristol, and left one daughter, Ione
Bruce Melville, born after her father's death in July, 1915. Captain
Wills' recreations were stalking, shooting, fishing and hunting.
|
WILSON |
Augustus
George Maryon |
[1900]
Trooper, Australian Light Horse. Killed in action 15 May 1915 |
WILSON |
John
S |
[1914]
Lieutenant, S. Staffs. Regiment. M. Died 12 Oct. 1917 of wounds
received in action |
WILSON |
Laurence
C |
[1914]
2nd Lieutenant, Norfolk Regiment. Died 12 Aug. 1915 of wounds received
in action 7 July 1915 |
WILSON |
Ralph
Edwyn |
[1911]
Lieutenant, 2nd Battalion, Royal Scots (Lothian Regiment). Died
28 September 1915 of wounds received in action 25 September 1915.
Son of Harold and Anna Wilson, of Westerlee, St. Andrews, Fife.
Educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge. Buried in ETAPLES
MILITARY CEMETERY, Pas de Calais, France. Plot I. Row A. Grave 5. |
WINCH |
Gordon
Bluett |
[1895]
Major, Royal Field Artillery. Died of wounds 10 April 1918. Aged
42. Born 26 December 1876 at Chatham. Son of George Winch and
Mary Bluett Winch; husband of Gertrude Dale (nee Uzielli) Winch,
of "Ridgecote", Sevenoaks, married January to March
Quarter 1904 in Marylebone Registration District, London, Kent.
In the 1881 census he was aged 4, born Chatham, Kent, son of George
Winch, resident 2, New Road, Chatham, Medway, Kent. In the 1891
census he was aged 14, born Chatham, Kent, a scholar, son of George
and Mary Winch, resident The Terrace, Sea View, St Helens, Isle
of Wight, Isle of Wight & Hampshire. In the 1901 censu he
was aged 24, born Chatham, Kent, an underwriter for Lloyds, resident,
with his brother Arthur, at 26, The Avenue, Beckenham, Bromley,
Kent. In the 1911 census he was aged 34, born Chatham Kent, an
Insurance broker at lloyds, married to Gertrude Dale Winch weith
two sons, resident Ridgecote, Vine Court Road, Sevenoaks, Kent.
Awarded the Distinguished Service order (D.S.O.). Buried in HAVERSKERQUE
BRITISH CEMETERY, Nord, France. Row E. Grave 16. See also Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey
From
the Charterhouse Register, Oration Quarter 1891:
Winch,
Gordon Bluett. b. 26 Dec., 1876. (Hodgsonites); Left L.Q., 1894.
Trin. Coll., Camb.; B.A.-Promoter & First Secretary of Cambridge
Football League.-Stock Exchange, 1901; in firm of Messrs. Levien
& Winch.-Barrister, 1902.
G. B. Winch, Esq., New Oxford & Cambridge Club, S.W.
Extract
from the Distinguished Service Order 1916-1923, page
369:
WINCH,
G. B. (D.S.O. L.G. 1.1.18); s. of late G. Winch;
m. Gertrude Dale, d. of the late T. Uzielli; educ. Charterhouse;
Trinity College, Cambridge. He joined the H.A.C. in 1905;
in 1013 he was commissioned in the 5th London Brigade; in
March, 1915, he went to France and fought at Givenchy, Festubert,
La Bassee and Loos, at which latter place he commanded his
battery; in 1916-17 he was home for seven months' training
a battery, and during this period he obtained his majority;
in Feb. 1917, he went to the front again; was mentioned in
Despatches, and was awarded the D.S.O. for gallantry in the
field at Langemarck, in Dec. of that year. He died on 9 April,
1918, of wounds.
Extract
from Thanet Advertiser - Saturday 27 April 1918,
page 3:
Major
Gordon Bluett Winch died on April 10th from wounds received
the day before. Forty-one years of age, he was the youngest
son of the late Mr. George Winch, of Chatham. He was an old
Territorial officer, and had his major's commission in the
Yeomanry ten years ago. He will be remembered as one of the
officers who attended the Yeomanry camps at Ramsgate and Margate.
Extract
from Whitstable Times and Herne Bay Herald -
Saturday 26 October 1918, page 1:
Major
Gordon Bluett Winch. D.S.O.. of Ridge Cote. Vine Court
Road, Sevenoaks, of the R.F.A., whose death occurred on
active service in France or Belgium on the 10th April
last, left estate valued at £24,569. Mr. George
Bluett Winch, of Chatham, his brother, is the surviving
executor.
Extract
from Sevenoaks Chronicle and Kentish Advertiser
- Friday 11 October 1918, page 5, and Kent & Sussex
Courier - Friday 11 October 1918, page 5:
LOCAL
WlLL.—Major Gordon Bluett Winch, D.S.O., of Ridge
Cote, Vine Court-road. Sevenoaks, of the R.F.A., whose
death occurred on active service in France or Belgium,
on the 10th April last, has left estate valued at £24,569
14s. 8d., with net personalty £17,521 1s. 8d. Mr.
George Bluett Winch, of Chatham, Kent, his brother, is
the surviving Executor.
Extract
from Birmingham Daily Post - Friday 11 October
1918, page 2:
WILLS
AND BEQUESTS
Amongst
the latest wills proved are the following:
Gross |
Major Gordon Bluett Winch, D.S.O., of Sevenoaks, of
the R.F.A., whose death occurred on active service
(net personalty £17,521) . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . .
|
£24,569 |
Extract
from South Eastern Gazette - Tuesday 30 April 1918,
page 8:
THE
LATE MAJOR G. B. WINCH.
Major
Gordon Bluett Winch, D.S.O., R.F.A., of Ridgecote, Sevenoaks,
youngest son of the late Mr. George Winch, of Chatham, whose
death from wounds we reported last week, was educated at Charterhouse
and Trinity College, Cambridge, and whilst at the latter,
was one of the originators of the present League Field Club.
In 1905 he joined a field battery of the H.A.C., and eventually
obtained the rank of Sergeant, but, having regard to the rules
as to age in that corps, was unable to obtain a commission.
In 1913 he was offered and accepted a commission in the —London
Brigade, and In 1915 he went to France and fought at Givenchy,
Festubert, La Bassee, and Loos, at which latter place he commanded
his battery. In 1916-17 he was home for seven months training
a battery for foreign service, and during this period he obtained
his majority. In February, 1917, he went to France again,
was mentioned in despatches, and was awarded the D.S.O. for
gallantry in the field at Langemarck in December of that year.
His Colonel writes: — "Needless to say, he is a
tremendous loss to me, and was a tower of strength in every
way. On the day of the big attack he worked simply wonderfully,
and solely by his gallantry and example kept his battery in
action under severe conditions. It is so difficult to write
and say how much I miss him, as he has served with me practically
throughout the war, and I know I shall never meet a braver
or better soldier."
Extract
from Faversham News - Saturday 27 April 1918, page
3:
DEATH
OF MAJOR G. B.
WINCH, D.S.O., R.F.A.
We
regret to state that an official intimation has reached Mrs.
Winch, of Ridgecote, Sevenoaks, that her husband, Major Gordon
Bluett Winch, succumbed on April 10th to wounds received the
day before. Forty-one years of age, Major Winch was the youngest
son of the late Mr. George Winch, of Chatham. He was an old
Territorial officer, and had his major's commission in the
Yeomanry ten years ago. He was a brother of Colonel G. B.
Winch, who for a short time was joint Master of the Tickham
Foxhounds and resided at Norton Court.
|
WINCH |
Ronald
Bluett |
[1914]
2nd Lieut., R. East Kent Yeo. Accidentally killed 16 April 1915
|
WINDSOR-CLIVE |
Hon
Archer |
[1909]
Lieutenant, Coldstream Guards. Killed in action 25 Aug. 1914 |
WINTHROP-SMITH |
Bernard
Ridley |
[1900]
Lieutenant, Scots Guards. Died 15 Nov. 1914 of wounds received in
action |
WOODHOUSE |
Edward
J |
[1903]
Lieutenant, I.A.R.O., attd. Cavalry. Died 18 Dec. 1917 of wounds
received in action 1 Dec. 1917 |
WOODLAND |
Clement
A |
[1903]
Asst. Paymaster, R.N.V.R.; Lieutenant, N. Staffs. Regiment.; attd.
King’s Own (Yorkshire L.I.). Died 1 April 1918 of cerebro-spinal
meningitis |
WOODROFFE |
Neville
L |
[1911]
Lieutenant, Irish Guards. M. Killed in action 6 Nov. 1914 |
WOOLF |
Cecil
Nathan Sidney |
[1907]
2nd Lieutenant, Special Reserve attached to 20th Hussars. Died 29
November 1917 of wounds received in action 27 November 1917. Aged
30. Sixth son of the late Sidney Woolf, Q.C., and of Mrs. Sydney
Woolf, of Barkston Gardens Hotel. Kensington, London. Fellow of
Trinity College. Cambridge. Buried in GREVILLERS BRITISH CEMETERY,
Pas de Calais, France. Plot VIII. Row E. Grave 8. |
WOOTTON |
John
W |
[1910]
Captain, Suffolk Regiment. m. Died 11 Oct. 1917 of wounds received
in action |
WORDSWORTH
|
Osmund
Bartle |
[1906]
2nd Lieutenant, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry and
Lieutenant, 21st Company, Machine Gun Corps (Infantry). Killed in
action 2 April 1917. Aged 29. Son of the Rev. Christopher Wordsworth
(Chancellor of Sarum Cathedral), and Mary Reeve Wordsworth, of St.
Nicholas, Salisbury, Wilts. Educated at Winton and Trinity College.
M.A. (Camb.). No known grave. Commemorated at ARRAS MEMORIAL, Pas
de Calais, France. Bay 10. |
WORKMAN |
Edward |
[1905]
Lieutenant. Born 4 December 1887, only son of Frank and Sara Workman,
of “The Moat,” Strandtown, Co. Down. Native of Belfast. He was at
Charterhouse [B] 1900 - 1905, he went up to Trinity College, Cambridge
then joined his father’s shipbuilding company. In the Great War
he was commissioned into Royal Irish Rifles, he joined 5th Bn. and
was later attached to 2nd Bn. He was Mentioned in Despatches (MiD)
and awarded the Military Cross (M.C.). He died of wounds on 26 January
1916. His grave is at ETAPLES MILITARY CEMETERY, Pas de Calais,
France. Plot I. Row B. Grave 21. See also Charterhouse
School, Godalming, Surrey. |
WORMALD |
Drury
F P |
[1904]
Captain, Royal Garrison Artillery (T.F.) and Gen. Staff. Died 4
Nov. 1918 of septic pneumonia |
WORMALD |
Guy |
[1902]
Captain, Lancashire Fusiliers. Killed in action 14 Sept. 1916 |
WRIGLEY |
Christopher
James Oswald |
[1913]
Trooper, K. Edward’s Horse. Killed in action 26 May 1915 |
WYATT |
Geoffrey
W P |
No
further information currently |
WYKES |
Edward
P |
No
further information currently |
WYNNE-JONES |
Morys |
[1905]
Lieutenant, 36th Company, Royal Engineers. Killed in action 29
October 1914. Aged 27. Son of the Rev. J. W. Wynne-Jones, of Tre
Iorwerth, Valley, Anglesey. In the 1891 census he was aged 3,
son of John William Wynee-Jones, resident The Vicarage, Constantine
Road, Llanbeblig, Carnarvon, Caernarvonshire, Wales. In the 1901
census he was aged 13, born Caernarvonshire, Wales, a school boarder,
resident Charterhouse Block, Godalming Rural, Guildford, Surrey.
No known grave. Commemorated on YPRES (MENIN GATE) MEMORIAL, West-Vlaanderen,
Belgium. Panel 9. See also Charterhouse
School, Godalmng, Surrey and Caernarfon
Extract
from Bond of Sacrifice: Officers Died In The Great War 1914-1916,
volume 1, page 207:
LIEUTENANT
MORYS WYNNE-JONES, ROYAL ENGINEERS, of Treiorwerth,
Anglesey, who was killed in action near Zandvoorde on the 29th
October, 1914, was the son of the Rev. J. W. Wynne-Jones, Vicar
of Carnarvon, and the Hon. Jessie F. Wynne-Jones, daughter of
the late Lord Aberdare.
He was born at Carnarvon on the 13th May, 1887, and was educated
at Fonthill, Charterhouse, and Trinity College, Cambridge, where
he took his degree of B.A., becoming later a member of the Institute
of Civil Engineers. He was subsequently on the staff of the
Mexican Eagle Oil Co., Tampico.
Originally in the Special Reserve, R.E. (Supplementary Officers),
which he joined in June, 1912, as 2nd Lieutenant, he returned
unsummoned from abroad on the declaration of war, and in September,
1914, was gazetted Lieutenant in his corps. ("London Gazette,"
20th May, 1915).
Extract
from De Ruvigny's Roll of Honour 1914-1918, volume 1,
page 210:
WYNNE-JONES,
MORYS, Lieut., 54th Field Coy. Royal Engineers, only
s. of the Rev. John William Wynne-Jones, of Trelorwerth,
Anglesey, Vicar of Carnarvon, by his wife, the Hon. Jessie Frances
née Bruce, dau. of Henry Austin, 1st Baron Aberdare; b.
Carnarvon, 13 May, 1887; educ. Fonthill, Charterhouse, and Trinity
College, Cambridge, where he rowed in his college boat and won
his oar. He graduated B.A. 1909, and after passing his A.M. Inst.
C.E. examination, was for nearly two years an engineer on the
Cardiff Railway, under the late Lord Merthyr, being subsequently
appointed one of the engineers of the Mexican Eagle Oil Co., at
Tampico, Mexico. He had joined the Special Reserve of Officers
of the Royal Engineers as 2nd Lieut. 26 June, 1912, and on the
outbreak of war, without waiting to be summoned, he at once returned
to England. He was promoted Lieut. 4 Oct. 1914 ; left for France
4 Oct. 1914, with the 7th Division, and was killed in action at
Zandevoorde, during the 1st Battle of Ypres on the 29th of the
same month ; unm. Capt. (now Major) Guy Williams, commanding
54th Field Coy., wrote that they were called upon to counter-attack
with the Yorkshire Regt. at a point where the Germans had broken
through the British firing line.
Lieut. Wynne-Jones was leading his section when the enemy's shrapnel
found them, and he was killed instantaneously. The Coy. feel his
loss very much. He understood his men and his job. I miss him
personally as an excellent and most efficient subaltern and as
a good friend." Capt. R. M. Burgoyne, 2nd Royal Scots Fusiliers,
now a prisoner in Germany, also wrote of two engineer officers,
Lieut. Wynne-Jones and Lieut. J. M. Smeathman, who, he said, "Did
a lot of good work for them. both as engineers and infantry, always
being ready to take a rifle and bear a hand. They were two very
gallant fellows."
Extract
from London Evening Standard - Saturday 7 November 1914,
page 6:
Second
Lieut. Morys Wynne-Jones was killed in action on October 29. He
was the only son of the Rev. J. Wynne-Jones, vicar of Carnarvon,
and nephew of Lord Aberdare.
|
YARROW |
Eric
F |
[1913]
2nd Lieutenant, Argyll and Sutherland Hdrs. M. Killed in action
near Ypres 8 May 1915 |
YEO |
Leslie
Farquhar |
[1911]
Lieutenant, S. Staffs. Regiment. Died 10 March 1915 of wounds received
in action |
-
“For
most conspicuous bravery. When in charge of a party consisting of
scouts and Royal Engineers engaged in the demolition of
the enemy’s wire, this officer displayed great gallantry and
disregard of all personal danger. In order to ensure the absolute
success of the work entrusted to him, 2nd Lt. Dunville placed himself
between an N.C.O. of the Royal Engineers and the enemy’s fire,
and, thus protected, the N.C.O. was enabled to complete a work of
great importance. 2nd Lt. Dunville, although severely wounded, continued
to direct his men in the wire-cutting and general operations until
the raid was successfully completed, thereby setting a magnificent
example of courage, determination and devotion to duty to all ranks
under his command. This gallant officer has since succumbed to his
wounds.” –Supplement to The London Gazette, 2 Aug. 1917.
-
“During
the landing from the S.S. `River Clyde’ at V Beach in the Gallipoli
Peninsula on the 25th April, 1915, Sub-Lieutenant Tisdall, hearing
wounded men on the beach calling for assistance, jumped into the water
and, pushing a boat in front of him, went to their rescue. He was,
however, obliged to obtain help, and took with him on two trips Leading
Seaman Malia and on other trips Chief Petty Officer Perring and Leading
Seamen Curtiss and Parkinson. In all Sub-Lieutenant Tisdall made four
or five trips between the ship and the shore, and was thus responsible
for rescuing several wounded men under heavy and accurate fire.”
–Supplement to The London Gazette, 31 March, 1916.
Last
updated
23 July, 2022
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