
BUXHALL
WAR MEMORIAL
World
War 1 - Roll of Honour with detailed information
Compiled and copyright © Keith Evans - 2010
The
memorial is to be found in St Mary Church, Brettenham Road, Buxhall.
It takes the form of two brass memorial tablets, dedicated 18 January
1920, hang on the wall in the aisle opposite the pulpit. The memorial
plaques are made from two melted down German shell cases brought back
from the Marne by Miss A. E. Hill they are mounted on wood from a walnut
tree that blew down near the Church in 1915, the founders were Messrs
C Richardson & Son, the memorial was constructed by Mr J Castell.
The press report stated that one, inscribed ‘Buxhall Roll of Honour’,
recorded the name of all who served whilst the second, inscribed ‘Roll
Call’ bore the names of the fallen. The memorial was uneiled by
Major-General Sir Stuart W Hare, K.C.M.G., C.B., and dedicated by Rev
H Copinger-Hill, Rector of Buxhall 18 January 1920. Those who served
are not listed here only those who gave their lives. The names listed
here have been sorted into alphabetical order for ease of reading and
research.
Extract
from Bury Free Press - Saturday 24 January 1920, page 8:
BUXHALL’S
FINE RECORD.
A Memorial Service.
A
very large congregation assembled on Sunday tat he Parish Church for
the unveiling of two memorial tablets, one inscribed the "Buxhull
Roll Honour,” surmounted with the base of a large German shell
case, recording the names all who served, and, below, a second “brass”
bearing the title “Roll Call,” with the names of the fallen.
Before service all were delighted hear the Church bells (which had
been silent nearly six years) peal forth once again. Ringers came
to help from Stowmarket, Rattlesden and two were of the old Buxhall
quintette. The bugler the 1st Troop B.P. Scouts sounded the ’’fall
in” at 2.15 p.m., when all available ex-soldiers in the parish
assembled under Major H. T. Copinger-Hill, M.C., to march to church,
led by the Scouts’ drum and bugle band. Drawn up at the porch,
the band played the men and the Buxhull Girl Guides into church and
then sounded the salute as Major-General Sir Stewart Hare. K.C.M.G.,
C.B . passed them in a smaller process on of Parish Councillors (Mr.
J. A. Clover, chairman), sidesmen, churchwardens with their wands
office, officers in uniform and the Rector (Rev. H. Copinger-Hill).
After a short evensong, a printed service was adhered to for the actual
unveiling. The churchwardens and the Rector conducted the General
and his officers to the chancel step, where the cord across a large
Union Jack was handed to him by Mr. Clover. The flag fell gracefully
to hang quite naturally from a tall staff, the General spoke, and
after the Rector had read the dedicatory prayer handed the memorials
over to the care of the churchwardens and the members of the Parish
Council. The brasses hang on the wall in the aisle opposite the pulpit.
The work on the brasses was carried out by C. Richardson and Son (London),
and the woodwork Mr. J. Castell (Swan and Son, Buxhall). Miss A. E.
Hill brought back the shell cases from the battlefield of the Marne
for the brasswork, while the walnut wood is from a tree blown down
near the church in the blizzard of March, 1915. Just before the unveiling
the band played a fanfare (under Scoutmaster H. Turner), and later
sounded the “Last Poet” and the “Revelle.”
The crescendo the drums was much admired and talked of after service.
The Rector preached a very common-sense sermon, especially appealing
to the children of the parish, seated immediately in front of the
memorials, to remember the day and carry on the traditions and stories
of deeds, etc., connected with the names. Miss Eva Hawtin presided
at the organ. The offertory, which was a very good, one, was given
to the St. Dunstan’s Home for Blinded Soldiers.
After service the men. Guides and Scouts paraded on the church lawn
at the back of the Rectory. After inspection of all present, the General,
who took a great interest in the Guides as it was his first meeting
with any of their units, presented a Meritorious Service Medal to
Sergt. A. W. Gosling, late of the R.G.A., telling his hearers that
the D.C.M. and M.S.M. were, not easily won and meant that the recipient
was a man above the ordinary ruck. The Major in command then asked
permission to speak on behalf of all present, and said how honoured
the parish should be by the presence of one who had led the E. Anglian
Division, in the last Crusade in Palestine. After “dismissal”
the General was kept busy with introductions. Besides the officials,
the following were brought to notice: Mr. R. Nunn (whose five sons
served in the war, for which record he had received a letter from
the King), Mrs. T Sparkes (who lost a son in Palestine), Mr. J. Castell
(responsible for framing the memorials), etc. A short visit was then
paid to the belfry, bell-ringing being a novelty to a Scotchman.
The officers present were: Col. Harrison Topham. D.S.O., late C.R.E.
Cambridge, the Major in command, Lt. A. E. Davies, late Surrey Regt.,
and Capt. Moncrieff, with Lt. F. Burton, late R.N., in mufti.
The Scouts were looked after at tea their comrades in the Guides.
The smart appearance of these latter (under Mrs. Copinger-Hll, Capt.,
and Miss A. Nunn, Patrol Leader) was much commented on.
One noticed sad hearts here and there—an official who mourned
a favourite son. an old bell-ringer with two sons gone, another old
lady whose grandson’s end was quite unknown. Yet all showed
signs of pride in the sacrifice that they and others throughout the
country had been called upon to make. The Roll Honour shows: M.C.
and bar, M.C., O.B.E., M.M. (2), D.C.M. and M.S.M. (2), besides two
commissions won and names bearing N.C.O. rank. The Roll Call was proportionately
heavy: Archibald Bertie Alexander (1st Suffolks), Victor John Clarke
(W. Yorks.), Albert Folkard (2nd Welsh Regt.), William Girt (R. Scots
Fusiliers), Frederick Uriah Gladwell (Northumberland Fusiliers), James
Hurrell (3rd Suffolks), Albert Leeks 7th Suffolks, Robert George Mirrington
(Suffolks), Cecil William Sawyer (K.O. Shropshire L.I.). George Harold
Smith (Lc-Cpl., Suffolks) and his brother William John (Signaller,
M.G.C.), Frederick Ladson Steggles (Australian L. Horse), George Arthur
Turner (9th Bedfords), Walter Jeremiah Williams (R.A.F.).
 |
|
IN
COMMEMORATION
OF THE
GREAT WAR
1914-1919
PARISH
OF BUXHALL
ROLL OF HONOUR
Names
of those served (not included here)
BUXHALL
ROLL CALL
"THEIR NAME LIVETH FOR EVERMORE"
ALEXANDER |
Archibald
Bertie |
Private
55268, 8th Bn. N. Staffs. Regt., 56th Bde., 9th Div., formerly 59419
Stafford Cyclist Regt. Born at Gt. Blakenham. Son of Harry & Ellen
Alexander. In 1911 the family were living in Buxhall. Died of sickness
4th Dec. 1918, aged 19. (Admitted to No. 24 General Hospital, Etaples
in the early hours of 4th December, said he had been gassed about
a month previously. Died at 7.15 a.m. Cause of death ‘Nephritis’).
Buried Etaples Military Cemetery, Pas de Calais, France. Grave ref.
XLVII. A. 18. |
ANDERSON
|
Archibald
James |
Sergeant
23117, 153rd Siege Bty., 9th (Mobile) Bde., Royal Garrison Artillery,
4th Army. Born Calcutta. Son of William & Sarah Anderson, his father
being a Sgt. Major, RGA. Archibald left a widow and child. In 1911
he was serving as a Gunner with the 96th Coy., R.G.A. Died of wounds
Fri. 30th Aug. 1918, aged 26. Buried St. Sever Cemetery Extension,
Seine-Maritime, Rouen. Grave ref. R. II. G. 15. |
CLARKE
|
Victor
John |
Private
46512, ‘A’ Coy., 4 Platoon, 1/5th Bn. W. Yorks. Regt., 146th Bde.,
49th Div., formerly 172636, Royal Field Artillery. Born Buxhall.
Son of John & Amelia Clarke of Manor Farm, Henham. Husband of Winifred
and father of Nora, of Spring Cottage, Buxhall. Missing presumed
killed 25th April 1918, Age 22. Battle of Mount Kemmel (his Bn.
was in Front Line trenches astride the Vierstraat Road on the outskirts
of Wytcheate. The Germans broke through the French on their right
capturing Mount Kemmel and much of the Front Line). Remembered at
the Tyne Cot Memorial to the Missing, Panels 44 and 162. |
FOLKARD |
Albert |
Private
4281, 2nd Bn. Welsh Regt., 3rd Bde., 1st Div. Born Rattlesden. Nephew
of Mrs. Eliza Dykes of Fenn Street, Buxhall. In 1911 he was a Private
serving with the 1st Bn. Welch Regiment in Abbassia, Cairo, Egypt.
Killed in action 14th Sept. 1914, aged 38. 1st Battle of the Aisne,
12th to 15th September. (On 14th Sept. his Bn. was in action near
the village of Vendresse about 1 mile south of the Chemin des Dames).
Remembered at La Ferté-sous-Jouarre Memorial. |
GIRT |
William |
Private
59349, 11th Bn. Royal Scots. Fusiliers, 178th Bde., 59th Div., formerly
1590 and 240185 5th Suffolk Regt. Born Bildeston. Son of Mrs. Girt
of Buxhall. In 1911 he was a 27 years old unmarried Salvation Army
Officer living at 34, High Street, Brentford. Killed in action 30th
Sept. 1918, aged 35. (On 28th September 59th Div., part of II Corps.
entered the phase known as ‘Advance to Victory’, Passchendaele Ridge
was taken on the 29th, William was killed the following day as the
attack continued. He was originally buried in Lestrem Communal Cemetery
Extension, Row B, Grave 5. After the war he was brought from that
cemetery to his final resting-place). Buried Y Farm Military Cemetery,
Bois-Grenier. Grave ref. L4. |
GLADWELL |
Frederick
Uriah |
Private
17/570, 17th Bn. (N.E.R. Pioneers), Northumberland Fusiliers. GHQ
Railway Construction Troops. Born Rattlesden. Son of James Edward
& Sarah Anna Gladwell, native of Rattlesden. In 1911 the family
were living at Red Brick Cottage, Buxhall. Died Sunday 29th July
1917, aged 25. Buried Gwalia Cemetery, Ypres. Grave ref. I.G.1. |
HURRELL |
James |
Private
3/8706, 1st Bn. Suffolk Regt., 84th Bde., 28th Div. Born Rattlesden.
Son of Robert & Sarah Hurrell. In 1911 James was a farm labourer
boarding with the Ford family at Noah’s Ark Farm, Buxhall. Killed
in action Sat. 24th April 1915, aged 24. 2nd Battle of Ypres. (2
days after the first German Gas attack his Bn. filled a gap on the
left of the Canadians near St. Julien. It was the Suffolk’s first
experience of gas. In 4 days the 1st Suffolk’s suffered 400 casualties).
Remembered at the Menin Gate, Ypres. Panel 21. |
LEEKS
|
Albert
|
Private
24552, 7th Bn. Suffolk Regt., 35th Bde., 12th Div. Born Buxhall.
Son of Susannah Leeks. In 1911 Albert and his widowed mother were
living near the Mill, Buxhall. Killed in action 12th Oct. 1916,
age 32. Battles of the Somme (Transloy). (See George Harold Smith).
Remembered at the Thiepval Memorial, Pier and Face 1c and 2a. |
MERRINGTON
(sic) |
Robert
George |
Private
18521, 1st Bn. Suffolk Regt., 84th Bde., 28th Div. Born Buxhall.
George R. E. Mirrington was the son of Emma Mirrington. In 1911
George and his mother lived in Buxhall. Died of malaria 27th Aug.
1916, aged 26. Salonika. (1st Suffolk’s landed in Salonika on 29th
Nov. 1915, by mid 1916 they were operating in a malarial hotspot,
the Struma valley). Buried Lahana Military Cemetery, Greece. Grave
reference II.B.9. |
SAWYER
|
Cecil
William |
Private
20772, 1st Bn. King’s Shropshire Light Infantry, 16th Bde., 6th
Div., formerly 33561, Suffolk Regiment. Born Buxhall. Son of John
& Emma Maria Sawyer of Buxhall. In 1911 he was living with his parents
and siblings at the Post Office, Buxhall. Died as a prisoner of
war 14th May 1918. Age 22. (Although shown as 1st Bn. KSLI most
of the transferred Suffolk Regiment men died with the 5th Bn., which
in the reorganisation of early 1918, was disbanded. Cecil was probably
in the only Coy. to be absorbed by the 1st Bn. and possibly taken
prisoner some time around 21-23rd March). Buried Braine-Le-Comte
Communal Cemetery. Grave ref. I.B.4. |
SMITH
|
George
Harold |
Corporal
12208, ‘C’ Coy. 7th Bn. Suffolk Regt., 35th Bde., 12th Div. Born
Buxhall. Son of William & Eliza Smith of 5 Council Cottages, Buxhall;
brother of Wilfred John Smith who also died (see below). In 1911
the family were living near the Church in Buxhall. Killed in action
11th Oct. 1916, aged 21. Battles of the Somme (Transloy). (7th Bn.
suffered more than 500 casualties during its attack on Bayonet Trench
and Luisenhof Farm). Remembered at the Thiepval Memorial, Pier and
Face 1c and 2a. |
SMITH |
Wilfred
John |
Private
31022, 12th Battalion, Suffolk Regt., 121st Bde., 40th Div. or
43rd Bde., 14th Div. from 17th June 1918. Died as a Prisoner of
War in Schneidemuhl Camp, East Prussia, 10th December 1918. Aged
25. Born Buxhall, Suffolk, enlisted Stowmarket. Son of William
and Eliza Smith, of 5 Council Cottages, Buxhall; brother of George
Harold Smith who also fell (see above); husband of Annie Vivian
Smith with one son, Arthur, sadly Arthur became an orphan when
his mother died in 1916 and his father 1918. Buried in BERLIN
SOUTH-WESTERN CEMETERY, Brandenburg, Germany. Plot II. Row B.
Grave 9.
|
STEGGLES |
Frederick
Ladson |
Trooper
2829, 7th Australian Light Horse Regt. Born Rattlesden. Son of Ellen
Jane Sparkes (nee Steggles) of Mill Cottage, Buxhall. In 1901 Frederick
and his family were living at Cottage, Road to Howe Water, Buxhall.
By 1916 he had immigrated to Australia. Killed in action 25th Sept.
1918, aged 27. Battle of Amman (Frederick was the only fatality
in an attack by the 7th Australian Light Horse). Buried Damascus
Commonwealth War Cemetery, Grave/Memorial reference C.49. |
TURNER
|
George
Arthur |
Private
26615, 2nd Bn. Bedfordshire Regt., 89th Bde., 30th Div. Born Wattisfield.
Son of Daniel & Elizabeth Turner of Buxhall. In 1911 the family
were living at Valley Farm, Buxhall. Died of wounds 24th Dec. 1916,
aged 27. Buried Warlincourt Halte British Cemetery, Saulty. Grave
ref. IV.E.8. |
WILLIAMS |
Walter
Jeremiah |
Private
3rd Class 294980, No. 2 Stores Depot, Royal Air Force. Born Buxhall.
Son of Thomas & Louisa Williams, husband of Lillian Williams of
Ashley Villa, Childer Rd., Stowmarket. He left a widow and son.
In 1911 he was a Stationer and Newsagent living with his family
at 6 Stratford Road, Kensington. Died of pneumonia Fri. 4th Oct.
1918, aged 38. (At the end of the war No. 2 Stores Depot, RAF was
located in Regents Park, London). Buried in Buxhall St. Mary Churchyard,
close to the South gate. |
Not
on Roll of Honour but with Buxhall connections. |
EUSTON |
Wilfred
James |
Private
32848 2nd Bn. South Lancashire. Regt. (Prince of Wales’s Volunteers),
75th Bde., 25th Div., formerly Private 33182, ‘A’ Coy., 1st Bn.,
Gloucs. Regt. Born Buxhall. Son of George & Kate Euston, of High
Rd., Gt. Finborough. In 1911 the family were living at Hadleigh
Road, Buxhall. Missing presumed killed 11th April 1918, aged 21.
Battles of the Lys (it’s known that 2 Coy’s. of 2nd Bn. were in
the Front Line on the morning of 11th when the enemy launched 3
attacks on Romarin, S.W. of Ploegsteert. Later that day the Front
Line was pulled back to save being overrun). Remembered at the Ploegsteert
Memorial, Panels 6 and 7. |
WILLIAMS |
Walter
Leslie |
Private
59497, 6th Bn. Northamptonshire. Regt., 54th Bde., 18th Div. Born
Buxhall. The son of Harry & Rose Ellen Williams. In 1911 the family
were living at Pye Hatch, Buxhall. Died Sunday 29th Sept. 1918,
aged 19. Battle of Epehy (arriving in France around mid September
this was almost certainly his first action, his Bn. was close to
Ronssoy Wood supporting an American attack). Remembered at the Vis-En-Artois
Memorial, Pas de Calais, Panel 7. |
R.I.P.
Last
updated:
19 July, 2021
|