SILSOE
WAR MEMORIAL
World War 1 & 2 - Roll of Honour with detailed
information
Compiled and copyright © 2000 Lynda Smith
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The Memorial outside the
church was of stone that was rapidly becoming unreadable The War Memorial
is in the process of being re-carved and cleaned and is nearly finished;
now all is legible in addition there is, within the church, a beautifully
inscribed board with a further list of men.
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Photographs
Copyright © Lynda Smith 2004 |
Inscription on the Memorial
Board inside church
TO
THE GLORY OF GOD
IN MEMORY OF THE
MEN OF SILSOE
WHO FELL IN THE GREAT WAR
1914 – 1918
IN
HEARTS AND
MEMORY ENSHRINED
WITH GOD THEY
LIVE FOR EVER
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1914-1918 |
AMBRIDGE |
Ernest John |
Acting Corporal 516394, Labour Corps. Born and
resident Silsoe, enlisted Ampthill. Killed in action 13th September
1918 in France and Flanders. Formerly 17217 Royal Garrison Artillery.
Buried in Hersin Communal Cemetery Extension, Pas de Calais, France.
Grave III.E.12 |
BANGS |
Leonard |
possibly Leonard
Edward BANGS, Rifleman 3963, 9th (County of London) Battalion, (Queen
Victoria's Rifles), London Regiment. Enlisted London, resident Tottenham.
Died of wounds 5th July 1915 in France & Flanders. Age 21. Son
of William H. and Susan Bangs, of 9, Waltheof Avenue, Lordship Lane,
Tottenham, London. Buried in Etretat Churchyard, Seine-Maritime,
France. Grave II. D. 21. [This is the only L BANGS on the CWGC
and SDGW so it would seem hilghly likely this is him]. |
CORNWELL |
Jack |
John George CORNWELL. Private 6930 11th Bn Royal
Fusiliers. Died Thurs 29 June 1916 aged 22. The son of William John
& L Cornwell of Silsoe. Commemmorated Dive Copse British Cemetery,
Somme. Ref. II.A.21. See also Hitchin
War Memorial and Hitchin
Grammar School WW1 Memorial
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CLAYSON |
John William |
possibly Private
26072 'C' Company, 7th Bn. Royal Berkshire Reg. Formerly 1st/5th Bn.
Bedfordshire Regiment. Killed in action Tuesday 24 April 1917 aged
22. Born Wellingborough, Northants, enlisted Reading and resident
Ampthill. Son of John & Julia Clayson of The Gardens, Dashwood,
Gravesend, Kent. Also served at Gallipoli. No known grave. Commemorated on Dorian Memorial,
Greece. |
DUNHAM |
Ernest William |
Private 150366 16th Bn Canadian Infantry (Manitoba
Regt). Died Mon 4 Sept 1916 aged 22. son of James & Sophia Dunham
of 19 High Street, Sils(c)oe, Bedfordshire. Commemmorated Vimy Memorial,
Pas de Calais. |
FAHEY |
Albert |
possibly Private
12470, 7th Battalion, Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry. Born South
Lambeth, London, enlisted St Pancras, London, resident Whitehall,
London. Killed in action 31st March 1916 in France & Flanders.
No known grave. Commemorated on on the Ypres (Menin Gate) Memorial, Ieper, West-Vlaanderen,
Belgium. Panel 20. [This is the only A FAHEY on the CWGC and
SDGW so it would seem hilghly likely this is him]. |
FENNEMORE |
Herbert Henry |
[On
CWGC & Soldiers Died CD recorded as Herbert Henry FENNEMORE]
Private 33387. 1st Btn. Hampshire Regiment. Killed in action Saturday
31st August 1918 aged 41. Born Silsoe, enlisted Christchurch, Hampshire.
Son of Francis Eliza Fennemore of Silsoe. Husband of May Fennemore,
109 Bargates, Christchurch, Hants. No known grave. Commemorated on Eterpigney British
Cemetery, Pas de Calais. Ref. B.15.
Also No known grave. Commemorated on on his parents grave:
In
Loving Memory
Of
FRANCIS FENNEMORE
Who died July 7th 1904
Aged 64 years
So He Giveth His Beloved Sleep
Also
His Beloved Wife
ELIZA FENNEMORE
Who died February 1st 1911
Aged 72 years
“Peace Perfect Peace”
Also
their beloved son
HERBERT
Killed in action in France August 31st 1918.
“Until the day breaks”. |
GUDGION |
William Henry |
Private M2/181153. 906th M.T. Company, Army Service
Corps. Died at sea Friday 4th May 1917 aged 39. Born, enlisted and
resident Burgh Heath, Surrey. Son of William Gudgion of Rose Cottage,
Silsoe. Hunband of Charlotte Harding (formerly Gudgion) of Fair
View, Abbots Road, Cheam, Surrey. No known grave. Commemorated on on Savona Memorial,
Italy.
Information from
Les Gudgion, Lower Hutt, New Zealand. Born
13th May 1878. 33 Richard Street, Islington, London.
On
3rd May 1917, the Transylvania, a troopship, sailed from Marseille
to Alexandria with a full complement, escorted by the Japanese destroyers
Matsu and Sakaki. On 4th May The Transylvania was torpedoed, close
to Cape Vado in the Gulf of Genova, by German Submarine U-63. The
Matsu came alongside the Transylvania and began to offload the troops
whilst the Sakaki circled to force the submarine to remain submerged.
After a second torpedo hit, the Transylvania sank immediately. In
total 414 men lost their lives.
The
bodies recovered at Savano (just north of Cape Vado), were buried
two days later, from the hospital of San Paulo, in a special plot
in the town cemetery. Others are buried elsewhere in Italy, France,
Monaco and Spain. Savona Town Cemetery contains 85 Commonwealth
burials from the First World War, all but two of them casualties
from the Transylvania. Within the cemetery is the Savona Memorial
which commemorates a further 275 casualties who died when the Transylvania
sank, but whose graves are unknown. |
HERBERT |
Auberon Thomas |
Captain
22nd Sq. Royal Flying Corps & Hampshire Yeomanry (Carabiniers).
Died Friday 3rd November 1916 aged 40. 8th Baron Lucas & 11th Baron
Dingwall. Son late Hon. Auberon Edward Molyneux Herbert. No known grave. Commemorated on H.A.C. Cemetery, Ecoust-St.-Mein, Pas de Calais. Ref. VIII.C.17
From
the Balliol College War Memorial Book, Volume 1 -
Auberon
Thomas Herbert, Lord Lucas and Dingwall
AUBERON
HERBERT was born in May 1876, the only son of the Honourable Auberon
Herbert by his marriage with the sister of the last Earl Cowper.
He was educated at Bedford Grammar School, and, after some time
in the house of Mr. A. L Smith, entered Balliol in October 1895
He had never rowed at school, but he was a fine natural athlete,
and found a place in his last two years in the University boat,
as well as in the famous Balliol Eight of 1899, which contained
five Blues. He had very little of the ordinary sportsman about him;
his tastes were rather those of the gipsy, and he had an astonishing
knowledge of birds and beasts and every wild thing. Far better than
the ritual of games he loved his private adventures in the byways
of the countryside. He did not do much in the schools, taking a
Third Class in Modern History, but his most intimate friends were
scholars like Cuthbert Medd and Raymond Asquith, and he developed
a great love of poetry and music. For politics at that time he cared
not at all. With his petulant mouth and great wondering eyes he
had the air of one who was amused and a little puzzled by life.
At
the outbreak of war in 1899 he was off at once to South Africa,
taking the first chance he got, which was that of Times correspondent.
There he was abundantly happy. He was not specially interested in
military affairs, but he loved the spacious land and the adventurous
life. When I think what dull things I was doing last year,' he wrote
to a friend, 'I am staggered by the luck which has brought me here.'
Presently, advancing too far forward in an action, he got a rifle
bullet in his foot. The wound was mismanaged, and when he came back
to England his leg had to be amputated below the knee. To most men
of his type such a loss might well have been crippling. To him it
simply did not matter at all. He rode and played tennis and stalked
just as before. He must have had bad hours, but he refused to be
depressed even for a moment by a small thing like the loss of a
leg.
Presently,
under Raymond Asquith's guidance, he, who had been at Oxford a member
of the Canning Club, became a Liberal candidate for Parliament.
His uncle died in the summer of 1905, and he succeeded to the baronies
of Lucas and Dingwall, and became the owner of several great houses.
He was neither oppressed by, nor unappreciative of, his new possessions,
but he always preferred his home at Picket Post in the New Forest.
Then there befell him the most fantastic fate. When the Liberal
Government came into power, as one of the few Liberal peers, he
was marked down for preferment. He became Mr. Haldane's private
secretary in 1908 and later Under-Secretary for War, and in 1911,
for a short time, Undersecretary for the Colonies. He was never
a good speaker, but his honesty and natural courtesy pleased even
his opponents.
In
1911 he went as Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Agriculture,
where he was a real success, for he was a true countryman, knowing
at first hand what most politicians are only told. In 1914 he entered
the Cabinet as President of the Board of Agriculture, and held the
post till the formation of the Coalition in May 1915. It was an
odd destiny for a gipsy- to be a Cabinet Minister in spite of himself
at thirty-eight.
When
he left the Cabinet he found what he had always been seeking. Though
he was many years over age, he managed to join the Royal Flying
Corps, where his wonderful eye and nerve stood him in good stead.
Soon he became a most competent pilot. He was for a short time in
Egypt, and was back in England in the spring of 1916, engaged in
instructing recruits. He was offered the command of a squadron,
but refused till he had gained experience on the Western front.
He went out to France in October of that year, and in a flight in
stormy weather over the German lines was reported missing. Early
in December news came from the German side that he was dead. When
our troops advanced to victory in the autumn of 1918 they found
his grave.
There
can have been few careers with such abundant fulfilment. He had
his full share of success, and when that palled on him he could
always fall back upon the things that do not pall-the kindly earth
and the kindly air. He had found the secret of happy living, in
which the fires of youth never burn low, and the ardour and adventure
of life are never dimmed. As his epitaph we may well add to Maurice
Baring's beautiful elegy Stevenson's prose "In the hot fit of life,
a-tiptoe on the highest point of being, he passes at a bound on
to the other side. The noise of the mallet and chisel is scarcely
quenched, the trumpets have hardly done blowing, when, trailing
with him clouds of glory, the happy-starred, full-blooded spirit
shoots into the spiritual land."
IN
MEMORIAM. A. H.
O
liberal heart fast-rooted to the soil,
O lover of ancient freedom and proud toil,
Friend of the gipsies and all wandering song,
The forest's nursling and the favoured child
Of woodlands wild-
O brother to the birds and all things free,
Captain of liberty!
Deep in your heart the restless seed was sown
The vagrant spirit fretted in your feet
We wondered could you tarry long,
And brook for long the cramping street,
Or would you one day sail for shores unknown
And shake from you the dust of towns, and spurn
The crowded market place - and not return.
You found a sterner guide;
You heard the guns. Then, to their distant fire,
Your dreams were laid aside
And on that day, you cast your heart's desire
Upon a burning pyre;
You gave your service to the exalted need,
Until at last from bondage freed,
At liberty to serve as you loved best,
You chose the noblest way. God did the rest.
MAURICE
BARING.
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JONES,
DSO |
Lumley [Owen Williames] |
Brigadier General Commanding 13th Brigade 5th Division
Essex Regiment. Died on 14th September 1918. Aged 41. Son of Richard
Edward and Catharine Jones, of Cefn Bryntalch, Abermule, Montgomeryshire.
Chevalier of the Legion of Honour (France), Officer of the Order
of St. Maurice and St. Lazarus (Italy). Buried in Bagneux British
Cemetery, Gezaincourt, Somme, France. Ref. V.F.24. |
LAIRD |
Frederick Harry |
Corporal 8976. Ist Bn. Bedfordshire Regiment. Died
Thursday 10th December 1914 aged 28. Son of Fred & Sophia Laird
of 88 Bover Street, Bedford. Husband of Julia Laird of High Street,
Silsoe. No known grave. Commemorated on Ypres (Menin Gate) Memorial, Ieper, West-Vlaanderen,
Belgium. Panel 31 & 33 |
MANN |
Cyril Thomas |
Private 31136 Bedfordshire Yeomanry. Struck by
a shell, injuring his spine, killing himk instantaneously Saturday
30 March 1918 aged 21. Born and resident Flitton, enlisted Bedford.
Son of Alfred and Lizzie Mann, of Wardhedges, Flitton. No known
grave. Commemorated on Poziers Memorial, Somme, France. Panel 7.
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MARTIN |
Eustace Charles |
Private
G/28123. 16th Battalion Middlesex Regiment. Killed in action in
France & Flanders on 1st December 1917. Born Gravenhurst. Lived
Ampthill. Enlisted Bedford. No known grave. Commemorated on : Cambrai Memorial, Louverval,
Nord, France. Panel 9.
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PRATT |
Charles Henry |
Driver 528134, 1st Mounted Division, Signal company,
Corps Royal Engineers. Resident Silsoe, enlisted Bedford. Died 14th
October 1918 in Egypt. |
UPTON |
Walter [Edward][Chase] |
Corporal 24817, 2nd Battalion, South Wales Borderers.
Born Silsoe, enlisted Chester. Age 26. Son of Mrs Emille Upton of
18 Upper Northgate Street, Chester. Killed in action 1st July 1916
in France & Flanders. Formerly 46564, Royal Army Medical Corps.
Buried in Y Ravine Cemetery, Beaumont-Hamel, Somme, France. Grave
C.49 |
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1939-1945 |
BROWN |
Donald Arthur |
Flying Officer 133716. 90 Sqdn. Royal Air Force
Volunteer Reserve. Died Thursday 18 November 1943 aged 24. Son of
Frank William & Annie Margaret Brown of Silsoe. Comm: Runneymede
Memorial, Surrey. Panel 123 |
SHIRLEY |
R C |
No further information currently. |
SQUIRES |
A H |
No further information currently. |
Buried/No known grave. Commemorated on in churchyard but not on memorial |
BOTTOMS |
William George Herbert |
Driver
T/7960178. Royal Army Service Corps. Died on 29th September 1945.
Aged 38. Son of Herbert and Mary Jane Bottoms; husband of Elsie
Winifred Bottoms, of Flitwick, Bedfordshire. No known grave. Commemorated on : Brookwood
Memorial, Surrey. Panel 16. Column 2.
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CRAIG |
John
Donald |
Flight
Lieutenant 128700. Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve. Died on 23rd
April 1946. Aged 39. Son of James Archibald and Ursula Marie Craig,
of Eversholt. Buried in Silsoe (St. James) Churchyard. N.E. corner,
near north boundary.
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CUNNINGHAM |
John James |
Private
339. 1st Battalion Seaforth Highlanders. Died of wounds on 2nd February
1915. Born Barony, Lanarkshire. Enlisted Glasgow. Buried in Silsoe
(St. James) Churchyard. Ref. 1.
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DALTON |
John |
Private
7299. 1st Battalion Prince Albert’s Somerset Light Infantry.
Died on 7th December 1914. Aged 32. Born St Joseph’s, Swansea.
Lived Swansea. Enlisted Neath. Husband of Druscilla Campbell (formerly
Dalton), of 5, Skinner St., Swansea. Buried in Silsoe (St. James)
Churchyard. Ref. 5.
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DENNIS |
Hubert Charles |
Private 11430394. Pioneer Corps. Died on 13th June
1946. Aged 40. Son of John Thomas Dennis and Hephzibah Dennis, of
Silsoe; husband of Doris Dennis, of Silsoe. Buried in Silsoe (St.
James) Churchyard. S.E. corner. |
DORMAN |
George Edward |
Private
4026, 3rd Battalion, Australian Infantry, A.I.F. Enlisted Paddington,
New South Wales. Died on 14th July 1916. Buried in Silsoe (St. James)
Churchyard. Ref. 4.
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FOSTER |
Loftus Frank |
Lance
Corporal 10680. 2nd Battalion The King’s Own Royal Lancaster
Regiment. Died on 9th May 1915. Aged 22. Born Barham, Canterbury.
Enlisted Dover. Son of Mrs. Sarah J. Lawrence, of 8, Queen St.,
Dover. Buried in Silsoe (St. James) Churchyard. Ref. 2.
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HAND |
Edward |
Gunner
17448. Royal Field Artillery. Died on 14th July 1919. Born and enlisted
Bristol. Buried in Silsoe (St. James) Churchyard. Ref. 3.
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HAYES |
Philip
Radford |
Private
5956293, 5th Battalion, Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire Regiment.
Died as a POW at sea 14th October 1944. Aged 31. Husband of Anne
Mable Hayes (nee Wiffin), of Shillington, Bedfordshire. No known grave. Commemorated on on SINGAPORE MEMORIAL, Karnji War Cemetery, Singapore. Column 63.
(See also Shillington
Village)
There
is a tablet on a Wiffin memorial which reads:
In
memory of
my dear husband
Philip Radford Hayes
who died prisoner of war
in Japan 14th Oct. 1941
aged 31 years / In God's keeping
[Details
kindly supplied by Roger Bradshaw] |
PETTY |
G. C. |
Private
T4/236740. Army Service Corps. Died on 15th March 1918. Buried in
Silsoe (St. James) Churchyard. Ref. 6. (Not on CD)
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Also
buried in the churchyard |
ORFORD,
MC. DCM. |
Edgar Francis |
To
the Beloved Memory
Of
Edgar Francis Orford
M.C. D.C.M.
Captain & Adjutant
10th (Service Battalion)
South Wales Borderers
(1st Gwent)
Who died 17th March 1936
Aged 57 years
“Life’s work well done”.
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13 June 2004
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