BARNES |
Ronald |
No
further information currently available |
BENTLEY |
Cecil
J |
No
further information currently available |
BENTLEY |
Doris
L |
No
further information currently available (discharged) |
BOGGIS |
Basil |
No
further information currently available |
BUNTON |
Dennis
V |
No
further information currently available |
BUNTON |
Jack |
No
further information currently available |
CLARKE |
Eric |
No
further information currently available |
CLAYDEN |
Stanley |
No
further information currently available |
COOTE |
Gronway |
No
further information currently available |
DAFF |
Ronald |
No
further information currently available |
DURRANT |
Kenneth
A R |
No
further information currently available |
DURRANT |
Raymond
O V |
No
further information currently available |
GIBBS |
Lilian |
No
further information currently available |
GIBBS |
Stanley |
No
further information currently available |
GRUNDY |
Beatrice |
No
further information currently available |
GRUNDY |
Dorothy
M |
No
further information currently available |
GRUNDY |
George |
No
further information currently available |
GRUNDY |
Percy |
No
further information currently available |
HALL |
Charles
A |
No
further information currently available |
HARDY |
Frank |
No
further information currently available |
HARRISON |
Derek |
No
further information currently available |
HARRISON |
Geoffrey |
No
further information currently available |
HAYES |
Frederick
E |
No
further information currently available |
HINTON |
Joyce |
No
further information currently available |
HOY |
Harold
Cecil |
No
further information currently available |
KILLINGBACK |
Dennis |
No
further information currently available |
LING |
Raymond |
No
further information currently available |
PONDER |
Basil
Walter |
No
further information currently available |
ROBSON |
Bruce |
No
further information currently available |
SHARDLOW |
Gilbert |
No
further information currently available |
SHARDLOW |
Leonard |
No
further information currently available |
SMITH |
Claude |
No
further information currently available |
TURNER |
Arthur |
No
further information currently available |
TURNER |
Peggy |
No
further information currently available |
TURNER |
Percy |
No
further information currently available |
UNDERWOOD |
Frank |
No
further information currently available |
WESLEY |
Jack |
No
further information currently available |
WILLETT |
Charles |
No
further information currently available |
WILLETT |
Edward |
No
further information currently available |
WILLETT |
Joan |
No
further information currently available |
WILLIS |
Rose |
No
further information currently available (discharged) |
WOOLEY |
Frederick
J |
No
further information currently available |
WESLEY |
Dorothy |
No further
information currently available |
CYPRUS
Commemorative
plaque on church wall
|
HAYLOCK |
Keith
R |
Acting
Corproal 23091051, 'B' Comapny, 1st Battalion, Royal Norfolk Regiment.
Killed when a forest fire swept across their position near Prevassa
in the Troodos Mountains during operation 'Lucky Alphonse' 17th
June 1956. Aged 19. Resident Steeple Bumpstead, Essex. Buried in
Wayne's Keep Military Cemetery, Nicosia, Cyprus. Plot 21 Row A Grave
4. Funeral of those who died in the forest fire incident laid to
rest in a mass grave 20th June 1956 in Wayne's Keep Military Cemetery,
Nicosia.

THE
EOKA conflict in Cyprus is certainly one of Britain's "forgotten
wars". It lasted between April 1, 1955 and officially ended
on December 24, 1959. At its height, more than 30,000 British troops
were assigned to combat EOKA, the Greek Cypriot terrorist organization
commanded by Colonel George Grivas of the Greek Army and funded
by the Orthodox Church led by Archbishop Makarios.
During
the hunt by the 1st Bn The Norfolk Regt in Cyprus for EOKA terrorists,
and particularly for Grivas, OPERATION ALPHONSE commenced in June
1956. After a week it was decided that mortar and machine gun fire
be brought to bear on certain valleys in the cordon area with the
aim of forcing terrorist groups to keep on the move and thus be
more likely to give their presence away.
Whether
or not mortar fire was the cause will never be confirmed but it
was at the time believed by some members of the Battalion to have
started a forest fire on 16 June. The next morning, 17 June, a strong
wind blew up and the fire spread at an alarming rate. All patrols
and cordon parties in the area of the blaze were deployed to help
put it out but it was impossible to do so. It burned at a frightening
speed, rushing up new valleys and re-entrants as if they were chimneys.
One Pl Commander who was involved said that the fire spread on occasions
at a speed of at least 30 miles an hour. It was a terrifying experience.
It seemed that those who fled before the fire perished whereas those
who ran at right angles to its path or even into still smouldering
areas through which it had passed, survived.
At
mid-day a fire-fighting party from B and D Coys, together with a
Pl from 1st Bn The Gordon Highlanders, were trapped in their vehicles
in the flames and 21 men were killed or died afterwards from multiple
burns. The Bn lost 5 men, Cpl K R Haylock from B Coy, Pte R Beaumont,
Pte CJ Gosling and Pte WG Wright from D Coy and Pte Billy Woods
of HQ Coy. |