Sunday 22 December 2019

M2/167531 Pte F Bird, ASC - BWM & VM pair plus ASC brooched collar (sweetheart?) badge. Shrapnel wound 31 March 1918 whilst attached to 111th Siege Battery.

M2/167531 Pte F Bird, ASC - BWM & VM pair plus ASC brooched collar (sweetheart?) badge. Shrapnel wound 31 March 1918 whilst attached to 111th Siege Battery.


Frederick Bird was a chauffeur,  aged 26 years 7 months on attestation. He attested for General Service on 11 December 1915 at the recruitment office at Dunmow in Essex. He gave his address as Shremhall Priory Cottage, Lakeley, later changed to the College Mews, Hertford Heath, Hertfordshire. He gave his next of kin as his wife, Beatrice Maud (née Turner), whom he married at Hertford Heath on 11 August 1915. Frederick, having sought to have his service deferred, was posted to the Army Reserve the following day, 12 December.

He was mobilised on 8 April 1916 and appointed to the Army Service Corps - Motorised Transport, being sent to the ASC Motor Transport Reserve Depot, Grove Park on 10 April, his attestation being approved at Grove Park on 11 April 1916. He was sent to France with surprising speed, being sent out as 'spares' on 22 April 1916.

Once there, after a short stay at base depot, he was attached to 111th Siege Battery Royal Garrison Artillery (which went out on 11 May 1916) as a motor lorry driver. 111 Siege Battery was armed with 6" Howitzers.

After spending some time near Arras and serving on the Somme near the start of the great offensive, the battery was in action on 22 May 1917 at Soyer Farm west of Ploegsteert, cutting wire in preparation for the Battle of Messines Ridge, and then again around Boesinghe from 14 July to some time in August 1917 as part of the Artillery support for the Third Battle of Ypres. The following extract quoting Lieutenant Allfree of the 111th battery relates to the journey to the battery positions at Boesinghe to the north of Ypres, near the ruins of the village, and with the Steenbeek canal to the east: 

"On 13 July [1917], Allfree and his battery got their movement order and were trucked to their billets in the village of Reninghelst, south of Poperinghe. Told to move his guns into position that night, he set off in a jeep [sic], towing his gun carriage behind it, up the road out of Poperinghe. His lorries had already departed. Diverted by shellfire to Elverdinghe, he soon caught up with his trucks, which had stopped by the side of the road. The drivers were reluctant to continue: shelling up ahead had knocked out several vehicles and horse-drawn wagons. Allfree could hear the rounds exploding but 'I had to go on.  So I spoke to each of the lorry drivers and told them what they had to face...' He ordered them to 'get on with all speed, and not to stop for anybody or anything'. It was crucial to get the guns and supplies forward by daybreak, before the lorries became visible targets. 

His driver proceeded carefully: the spokes on the wheel of the gun they towed had 'jarred loose'... They soon reached the scene of the shelling ahead - disembowelled horses and smashed-up wagons and lorries and the smell of blood and high explosive'. There was so much traffic the German guns couldn't miss striking a lorry if they got the range of the road right. Allfree drove around the mess. The shells burst just behind and ahead of his vehicle. Then the gun carriage's axle came loose on the potholed road, and he abandoned it. He arrived without any of his guns, which were brought up the next day."

In November 1917 the battery was part of 27 Heavy Artillery Group and in position at Le Verguier  near St Quentin. The battery was subsequently at Epehy (about 10 miles to the north), and caught up in the opening day of the German Spring offensive, 21 March 1918, when as part of the Germans' plan to cripple the British counter-battery work the gun lines and OPs were deluged with high explosives and gas, which combined with the prevailing heavy mist to create dreadful conditions for the British defenders.  

Writing again, Allfree noted the conditions as follows "...outside in the sunken road [next to the battery positions]...[i]t was still almost dark and there was a thick mist. Shells were falling everywhere. It was a perfect hell...the eyepieces of the respirator got fogged immediately and you could see nothing... the layers...could not see the lamps on the aiming pickets owing to the mist. I sent a man out with an electric torch to lay on, but even this could only be seen with difficulty". Soon the targets were coming ominously closer ("Presently a target came through from the Major...It represented an alarmingly short range with a 6" howitzer... soon my difficulty was to get a sufficiently low elevation on the guns to hit the targets and yet to clear the bank in front of the guns.") In the end, one gun had to be left behind, and the battery's horses transport pulled the remainder out.  A few hours later, however, when the battery had once again to pull out, the battery's guns were only saved, when the FWD lorries did not turn up, by commandeering the horse team of a sister battery.

Ten days later Private Bird was wounded - a Gun Shot Wound to the right thigh resulting in a fractured femur - on 31 March 1918. 

He returned home on 3-4 June 1918 and was placed under treatment at the War Hospital, Reading, at some point going into the books of the RASC Clearing Office, Blackheath. His character form (Army Form W.3226) as signed by Officer Commanding 40 Brigade, ASC, on QE June 1918 gave his sobriety as good and noted that he was intelligent and reliable.

He was finally discharged from Reading War Hospital as an invalid - equipped with suit, overcoat, cap collar and tie - on 22 September 1919. His discharge from the Army, under paragraph 392 (XVIa) of King's Regulations - no longer physically fit for war service - was accomplished at the same time. He was aged 30, and his address on discharge was 1 Crown Terrace, Hockerill, Bishops Stortford, Hertfordshire. His wound was judged as 70% disabling, and he was pensioned at 28/- weekly for 26 weeks from 23 September 1919, plus a 7/- allowance for his wife Beatrice. He received his Silver War Badge, number B317593, in October 1919.

73184 Pte James Tait, 10th and 1/8th Battalions, Durham Light Infantry WiA

73184 Pte James Tait, 10th and 1/8th Battalions, Durham Light Infantry
James Tait, born in Moor Row, Cumberland, attested his willingness to serve for the duration of the war on 13 December 1915, having been medically examined on 9 December.  He was 27 and a half at the time, married and employed as a labourer although,  perhaps surprisingly, his physical development was described as "poor". He was posted into the Army Reserve the following day.

He was not finally mobilised until 14 August 1917, when he was posted for duty at Newcastle-upon-Tyne to 'D' Company of the 5th (Reserve) Battalion, Durham Light Infantry. By this time he was employed as a miner. He was medically graded Class A. As part of his preparation for active service, he was vaccinated on 17 and 28 August 1917,  and seen by the Oculist on 31 October, who recorded that no glasses were ordered and that he was fit for class 'A'. Pte Tait embarked for France on 22 December 1917, disembarking and being sent to 'E' Infantry Base Depot at Etaples the following day. Upon arrival he was posted, according to his Casualty Form, to the 5th Battalion, DLI (presumably from the context the 1st/5th, at that time serving with 50th Division). However, within three days, and presumably whilst still at Base Depot, he was re-posted, under Army Order 204/16, to the 10th battalion, which  he joined in the field on 27 December 1917. At this time the battalion, having spent the autumn and winter at Passchendaele, was at Zudausques in the Pas-de-Calais, where they had spent much of the month resting and training, and in keeping the Christmas holiday on 31 December, when the whole division was out of the line. The battalion had suffered 110 other rank and 5 officer casualties during its stay in the Passchendaele sector, on top of heavy losses at Inverness Copse in August, and Private Tait was no doubt re-posted to help make up these losses.  
Having proceeded to ‘Edgehill’ near Beur-Somme on 2 January, the battalion occupied itself with further training and inspections amid the snow and freezing weather. Responding to a brigade order of 21 December, the battalion also took the opportunity, on 10 January, to reorganise its companies on a basis of four companies of four platoons each, just in time to receive a further order to reorganise on a three platoon per company basis on 15 January. Military activity was broken up by a range of competitions including cross-country runs, a brigade wiring competition (won by ‘C’ Company’s wiring team) and Army Rifle Association competitions at battalion, brigade and divisional level on 12, 16 and 18 January respectively, No.5 Platoon, ‘B’ Company winning the first two and coming second in the latter. 

On 22 January the battalion moved out, arriving in Mesnil-le-Petit and Mesnil-St-Nicaise on 23 January. This was probably Pte Tait's first experience of the full devastation wreaked by war, the battalion war diary noting that they were moving through evacuated country with most of the villages “burnt out by the Boche”. On 26 January the battalion took over the line at Montescourt from the French 414th Regiment; this appears to have been a disappointment, the trenches being recorded as very muddy and needing fire-steps making. For Pte Tait this was probably a relatively gentle introduction to trench warfare, with only desultory enemy shelling and some aerial activity recorded in the battalion's war diary until the battalion was relieved on 1 February.

In February 1918 there was a general reorganisation of the infantry component of the British Army to make better use of the dwindling stocks of manpower. This manpower crisis had affected many battalions in one way or another - the 10th battalion itself, for example, had received few reinforcements since September the previous year, after the fighting at Inverness Copse. The chosen solution was to move from a twelve battalion per division structure to nine, achieved by the breaking up of the more junior battalions, and the 10th battalion was one of those chosen. On 2 February, whilst in camp at Haute Tombelle, the order was received and on 4 February 1918, after nearly three years’ service on the Western Front, the 10th Battalion was disbanded. The men paraded at 6am on the 4th February and were split into a number of parties, ‘A’ Company going to 1/5th DLI , ‘B’ Company to the 2/7th (probably a mistake in the war diary for 1/7th) and 1/8th DLI, ‘C’ Company to the 15th and 1/8th DLI, and ‘D’ Company to the 1/6th and 1/8th DLI. 2nd DLI got the runners, best NCOs and the band. 

Private Tait was one of the party sent to join the 1/8th battalion, 150th Brigade, 50th (Northumbrian) Division, in his case 'B' Company under Captain Holdsworth. At this time the battalion was in the Passchendaele sector.

He spent relatively little time with his new battalion, suffering two bouts of inflammation of the connective tissue (ICT) in his arms in February and March which took him away on 23 February, whilst the battalion was in GHQ Reserve at St Martin-au-Laert. After a stay at 10 Convalescent Depot, Escault and E Infantry Base Depot, Etaples, he returned to his unit on 20 April 1918, shortly after its participation in the Battle of the Lys. Within not much more than a month of his return he was wounded at Soissons, suffering a Gun Shot Wound (bullet) to the right thigh on 27 May 1918, during Operation Blücher-Yorck (or the Battle of the Aisne 1918 to the British), an action in which the battalion was effectively destroyed. The Battle commenced with an exceptionally heavy and carefully targeted gas and High Explosive bombardment of 3,700 guns at 1am, with the assault itself, supported by tanks, following at 4am. The 8th battalion, along with the 6th, was in the front line, emplaced on lower ground East of the Californie Plateau on the Chemin des Dames,  and was swiftly overwhelmed. Pte Tait was one of 70 wounded recorded in the War diary for that day, 7 other ranks being killed and a further 371 missing - mostly captured. After passing through the hands of the 1/3rd Northumbrian Field Ambulance, he passed through the casualty evacuation chain via the 1st Australian General Hospital, Rouen and Hospital Ship St David across to England. He was at the Military Hospital, West Bridgford,  Nottinghamshire between 31 May 1918 and 8 August, then at 'C' Division, King's Lancashire Military Convalescent Hospital, Blackpool until 17 September. His wound was reported as healed and improved with massage and physical training. Having been on the books of the Regimental Depot since his return to England he was transferred to the 3rd (Reserve) Battalion on 26 September and seen by the Battalion Medical Officer on 29 September 1918. Here, at St John's Hospital, South Shields he was medically graded Bii. Then, following a medical board at Ripon his discharge was approved on 17 October 1918 and he was transferred to Army Reserve Class 'P' on the same day. This indicated that he was regarded as one ‘whose services are deemed to be temporarily of more value to the country in civil life rather than in the Army’ and entitled to a pension owing to length of service or, in this case, disability upon discharge. He was graded as 20% disabled and granted a pension of 5 Shillings and Sixpence a week for 52 weeks from 18 October 1918. He was also entitled to the Silver War Badge, Number B293164. He was finally discharged under Para 392 xvia of King's Regulations on 26 April 1919 whilst on strength of 3rd (Reserve) Battalion,  Durham Light Infantry. Upon appearance before a further medical board on 10 September he received a supplementary war gratuity of £5.

86020 Serjeant Henry George Bacon MM, 155 Siege Battery, Royal Garrison Artillery

86020 Serjeant Henry George Bacon MM, 155 Siege Battery, Royal Garrison Artillery


Henry George Bacon was born in Paddington, in early 1883 to Alfred, a house painter (formerly of Sudbury in Suffolk), and Martha. At that time they were living at 16 Southern Street, Paddington. In the 1911 census he was still living with his parents and was employed as an insurance collector.
On 25 September 1915 he married Dorothy Mary Jane  Bacon (née Scales) at St. Paul's Church, Paddington. His profession was described as insurance agent.

By the time he enlisted they were living at 44 Elgin Avenue, Maida Vale. He worked as an agent with the Prudential Assurance Company.

A Derby man, he attested his willingness to serve at Paddington on 8 December 1915, aged 33 years 10 months. After attesting for deferred  ('Class A') service and receiving the customary day's pay, he was posted to the Army Section 'B' Reserve the following day. 

Following a medical examination at Paddington on 6 May he was mobilised, after five months in the Reserve, on 19 May 1916, and was posted to No.1 Depot, RGA as a Gunner. His attestation was approved by the Commanding Officer at Fort Burgoyne, Dover the same day. He was allocated the regimental number 86020.

Within a month he was posted, on 3 June 1916, to 155 Siege Battery, under the command of Major Philip James Arthur Montague (MC and Croix de Guerre). The battery formed at Newhaven on 23 May 1916 and was equipped with four 6" 24cwt Howitzers. Judging from the Specialist Military Qualification recorded on his Soldier's Protection Certificate, Bacon was probably trained as a Layer for the battery's complement of 6" Howitzers. As such his role would have been traversing, elevating and cross-levelling the piece so that its shells landed on the appointed target, giving instructions as to moving the piece's trail, and having custody of the dial sight and clinometer. 

He was appointed Unpaid Acting Bombardier (Date illegible 18 ? ??), probably at Lydd before the battery proceeded overseas. Given his qualification as Layer, it seems likely that he was No.1 (in charge) of a section manning one of the battery's howitzers.
He went overseas on 28/29 August 1916 with his battery via Southampton, entering the France and Flanders theatre at Havre the following day. Whilst there the 6" batteries appear to have been primarily engaged in counter-battery work, destruction of earthworks,  interdiction of crossroads and transport lines, etc.

On 16 January 1917 he attended a 2nd Army cookery course of a fortnight's duration.

In mid-February the battery was with 52nd Heavy Artillery Group, in positions south of Erquinghem, and suffered 9 casualties when the position was shelled by enemy 5.9s.

He was promoted to Bombardier on 16 March 1917, probably when the battery was at Vlamertinghe. Whilst there the battery was quite active, one notable day being 6 April, when the battery put down 552 rounds on the German 'Damstrasse' position, in a successful shoot which saw many rounds actually fall into the trench works. The middle of the following month saw the battery serving as instructional siege battery at the Second Army Artillery School at Tilques, near Saint-Omer.

The battery saw service at the Battle of Messines, from 1 June, moving into positions near Locre and unloading 3,400 shells by 3.30am on 31 May, setting up its Observation Post on Kemmel Hill and registering its four guns on Hun Farm. Its roles included destructive bombardments, wire cutting and bombarding Messines and Wytschaete villages, targeting strongpoints and practice barrages, including some mostly successful  aeroplane-guided shoots on hostile batteries. 

Henry George was appointed Acting Corporal and then confirmed  in rank on 28 July 1917, whilst the battery was at Grand Bois. This was after the battery had joined the 41st Heavy Artillery Group on 8 June 1917. The group was being used in support for the coming Battle of Polygon Wood, a phase of the Third Battle of Ypres. The support provided included direct support to infantry attacks through counter-battery shelling, such as for the 6 and 10 November Canadian attacks on Passchendaele Village. 

In early December he enjoyed some leave to the UK; during this period (on 4 December) he was also granted his class I professional pay.

Around 3 January 1918 the battery joined 36th (Australian) Heavy Artillery Group (Brigade from 5 February),  RGA, 2nd Army. The battery was at near Oosttaverne in the Ypres Salient at the time. It was principally occupied with counter-battery work, particularly in conjunction with 54 Siege Battery. In mid-February the battery was made up to six Howitzers.

The brigade appears to have remained in the Oosttaverne position until the opening stages of the Battle of the Lys on 9 April ('Operation Georgette' to the Germans). In the days before the battle opened, the battery was  particularly employed in suppressing Trench Mortars. 

Coincident with the start of the battle, on 9 April 1918 Henry was appointed Acting Sergeant (Paid). 
After the battle opened, fire shifted to pre-arranged schemes including Counter-battery Lines South and 'Defend Armentieres'. On the 10th the battery was subjected  to shelling and gas bombardment, Captain Dyke being killed bringing ammunition to the guns, and the order was given to withdraw the guns to Army Battle Zone positions.  By 6 pm all but one gun, which was too difficult to pull out, had gone. A detachment under Lt Martin fought the lone gun until the enemy were within a few hundred yards of the position and an order came at 9 pm to destroy it and withdraw, which they safely did. After this the battery was almost constantly in action, regularly shifting its position (to the Lettenberg, or 'Little Kemmel Hill', on the 11th and near Locre on the 13th) as Second Army withdrew to a shorter and more defensible line off the Passchendaele Ridge, but keeping up fire by day and not infrequently by night too. Indeed, in its entry for 14 April the war diary notes that that night the majority of the men enjoyed their first sleep for four days. The battery was employed in counter-battery, harassing and other fire on enemy positions, transit points and concentrations plus barrages and gas shell shoots. On 15 April at 4.30pm it carried on firing through particularly heavy shelling,  in spite of communications with Brigade being cut and the officers having to replace wounded men at the guns. The brigade had a similarly difficult time from 1.40am on the 25th, with much gas being used on them, probably in connection with the fighting around Mont Kemmel.  On 28 April, in the vicinity of Scherpenberg, it was in the unusual position of being well forward of the field batteries  (which had had to be positioned to the rear to clear the crest of the ridge in front). The following day, the Germans called-off Operation Georgette. 

It was almost certainly during this period that Henry George won the Military Medal, which is named to him as Corporal (Acting Sergeant) serving with 155 Siege Battery. The award, by the Corps Commander, was notified to the battery commander by wire on 12 May 1918, with the congratulations of both the Corps Commander and Brigadier-General Commanding VIII Corps Heavy Artillery. In the absence of a citation it is not clear for what the medal was awarded. It may have been for a single act of gallantry  (for example in withdrawing the guns under fire on 10 April, or whilst with the Martin detachment - an action for which Lieutenant Ronald Martin was himself awarded the Military Cross) or, like the DCM awarded to Sjt W J Elms of the battery, for gallantry and devotion to duty over ten days' operations. Two other Corporals (Acting Sergeants) from 155 Battery were awarded the Military Medal in the same Gazette and although their consecutive schedule numbers are nearly 3,000 away from Henry George's, it is possible that they were awarded for the same action or actions.

On 19 August 1918 Henry George was confirmed in the rank of Sergeant. 

His Military Medal was gazetted in the London Gazette Issue 30873, dated 29 August 1918. 


Towards the end of September the battery was pulled out of its position on Pilkem Ridge and rested in Hazebrouck whilst new positions (which the gunners then built, levelling the ground and installing a platform of railway sleepers) were scouted-out on Messines Ridge, close to the scene of the previous battle, at Gapaarde, opposite Wervicq. 

Henry George suffered a Gas Shell wound (seemingly Mustard Gas) on or about 15 October 1918, probably in or around the above position. At this time the brigade was heavily employed in firing gas-shell concentrations on suspected enemy positions, neutralising machine gun posts and firing in support of the Infantry crossing of the Lys. He was passed along the casualty evacuation chain to No.4 Stationary Hospital, Arques, being admitted on 17 October and discharged back to duty on 29 October 1918. He finally rejoined his unit, via a casualty clearing station, on 2 November 1918. At that time the brigade was in the vicinity of Dottignies, near Tourcoing, engaged in neutralising fire and instructional shoots.

He enjoyed a further fortnight's leave in the UK,  via Calais, between 19 December and 2 January 1919.

Following a medical examination in the field on 2 February 1919, Henry was posted to the Home Establishment for release before being demobilised on transfer to the Army 'Z' Reserve on 9 March 1919. He was medical category A1 on discharge. His address on demobilisation had changed to 64 Elgin Avenue, Maida Hill, London.

His Specialist Military Qualification was recorded on his Soldier's Protection Certificate as 'L'  6" (interpreted as Layer, 6" [Howitzer])

He is recorded on the Prudential Assurance Roll of Honour 1914-18.

Henry George Bacon died in Willesden,  Middlesex, on 11 June 1943, aged 60. His effects were left to his widow, Dorothy.

65158 Bombardier Charles Edwin Banbrook, RFA, died of wounds Somme 1916

65158 Bombardier Charles Edwin Banbrook, RFA


Charles Edwin Banbrook was born in Clerkenwell on 18 July 1891 to Charles Edwin Banbrook (a cab driver) and Mary J Banbrook, née Brathwaite (an envelope folder). By 1901 the family was living at 320 Bartholomew Buildings, [probably Seward Street] in the parish of St Luke's, Clerkenwell, and young Charles was still at school. He first served in the 19th Battalion, County of London Regiment (St Pancras Rifles), having enlisted at Camden Town in July 1908 aged 17 under the regimental number 338. At the time he was a van guard with the London & North Western Railway (until discharged on 24 December 1910 for disobeying Foreman's instructions). He attended his annual training in 1908 through to 1910.

In the 1911 census he was shown as a labourer, living with his mother and stepfather, Daniel (a provender carman also with the London and North Western  Railway) at 103 Weedington Road, Kentish Town, about four miles north and west of the family's 1901 address.

Whilst still a Territorial, he enlisted as a Regular in the Royal Field Artillery at London on 4 May 1911, for his "three and nine", receiving the new regimental number 65158. He gave his age as 19 years ten months on enlistment and by now was employed as a Town Carman (carrier), having served two years 276 days in the Territorial Force. His first posting was to No.1 Depot, RFA, followed by a posting to 143rd Battery (presumably part of 43rd (Training) Brigade) and then, following a reorganisation, to 41st Battery in August 1913. Places served included Woolwich and Aldershot and his service was interrupted by suffering a compound fracture of the right tibia and fibula incurred on 5 February 1912 at Aldershot which hospitalised him for over a month, followed by Appendicitis in January to May 1914 which delayed his discharge after the appointed three years of service. He was finally transferred to the Army Reserve on 4 May 1914. His character was given as Very Good and he was described as as a "Good clean hard working & sober man". He had been employed as a waiter in the officer's mess. He was aged just short of twenty-four.

As an Army Reservist he was subject to immediate recall in the event of a general mobilisation and upon the outbreak of war  accordingly was mobilised at Hilsea, near Portsmouth (presumably No.3 Depot, RFA) on 5 August and posted to the 49th Battery of the 40th Brigade Royal Field Artillery at Bulford the following day.

His date of entry into the French theatre was 19 August 1914, as a Gunner with 40th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery, attached to 3rd Division. The Brigade travelled via Southampton to Le Havre and would have concentrated with the division around Aulnoye and Avesnes, as part of Smith-Dorrien's II Corps. 

Gnr Banbrook (as he then was) would have seen action with the 49th Battery at Mons on 23 August 1914, when the battery went into action on the Binche to Mons Road, on the slopes of Bois La Haut. The divisional artillery had the task of supporting the infantry who were holding the line of the Mons-Conde Canal, and in particular the bridges at Ghlin and Nimy. 49th Battery was firing north and north-east and engaging targets on the German 17th  Division's line of advance at ranges of less than 1 mile. Together, the infantry's rifle fire and machine gun sections* and the artillery worked to good effect, holding the enemy until mid-afternoon, when the enemy, crossing by way of pontoons and improvised bridges, forced them to withdraw.

*notably the MG section of the 4th Royal Fusiliers, which won two Victoria Crosses on the day.

The Great Retreat then took II Corps south, to Le Cateau, where General Smith-Dorrien determined to make a stand. At Le Cateau on 25-26 August the German and British batteries engaged each other until a lack of ammunition forced the British artillery to disable and abandon nearly forty field guns. Sgt Alfred George of 120th Battery, RFA describes the scene: "We got into action with that 3rd [Gnr Banbrook's division] and 4th Divisions about 1.30 p.m. just as the Huns were getting the range on the 6th Battery RFA, several shells of the Huns hitting the guns and wagons and killing most of the gunners. We found that for about two miles to our right and left was British artillery and we knew then it would be an artillery duel.  Every gun of our army was firing as fast as possible and by reports we did awful damage but the German guns were 10 to 1 so you can imagine which had the best chance. All our gunners stick it as long as possible, but we were being gradually beaten by force and numbers...We could see ammunition wagons trying to replenish getting about half-way to the gun, then a couple of shells would burst blowing the drivers and  horses to smithereens...About 3.30 p.m. the Germans were advancing upon us so rapidly that the General Staff could see it was useless trying to stop the furious advance, so a General Retirement was ordered and it was every man for himself."

Gnr Banbrook would also probably have fought in this action before taking further part in the Great Retreat, which took the division south until it ended up in positions south-west of Coulommiers on 5 September. At some point during the retreat, however, problems from Gnr Banbrook's appendix operation must have presented themselves, and on 9 September he was admitted to 9th General Hospital, Nantes, with an old appendix wound and adhesion and subsequently evacuated home. For this service, he was entitled to the August-November 1914 clasp to his 1914 Star.

He returned again to theatre, on the strength of 113th Brigade, 25th Divisional Artillery via Southampton to Havre, on 25/26 September 1915. This time he was a Corporal, having been promoted whilst at Home. The 113th was a howitzer brigade at the time, each of its four batteries being equipped with four 4.5" field howitzers. It appears that he may have still been on the headquarters staff of the Brigade (to which he had been posted in July) at this point, however by early December 1915 he appears to have been on the strength of 'B' Battery, which moved to become 'B' Battery, 131st (Howitzer) Brigade on 4 December.

The 131st Brigade had been part of the 2nd Canadian Division since September 1915 and remained with the 2nd Canadian until some time in June 1916. Cpl Banbrook reverted to Bombardier at his own request on 1 February 1916: there is a note on his record certifying that the reversion was at his own request and not to escape trial by Court-Martial. A posting to the 131st Brigade's 'C' Battery followed just over a week later. Over the following two months the Division took part in the Actions of St Eloi Craters in March/April 1916. 

On 17 May the battery underwent a further change to become 'C' Battery, 18th Brigade, part of the Lahore Divisional Artillery, this brigade being attached to 3rd Canadian Division. In early June 1916, the 3rd Canadian Division took part in the Battle of Mount Sorrel (Hill 62), with support from the Lahore Divisional Artillery. The planned attack was pre-empted by the Germans and the 3rd Division's commander was killed, resulting in Brigadier-General Edward Spencer Hoare Nairne of the Lahore Divisional Artillery temporarily taking over command whilst the front stabilised. 

After just over five months with this battery Bdr Banbrook was posted again, this time to 'D' Battery, 11th Brigade RFA, also a Lahore Divisional Artillery formation, then part of the 4th Canadian Division. This posting took effect on 20 July 1916, in the midst of the Battle of the Somme.

By 22 August 1916 the 11th brigade was in the La Boiselle area, tenporarily attached to 4th Australian Division, which was engaged in the fighting on the Pozieres Ridge and by Mouquet Farm. The war diary of brigade headquarters noted "22nd Quiet most of day until 5.20pm when heavy shelling in R.34 a [?] at 5.30pm shelling in those quarters ceased but increased heavily all over our own front. 6.48 POZIER[E]S heavily shelled. Intense bombardment by us until 7.20pm. when all was reported quiet. Front heavily shelled at 9.45 p.m. we retaliated until 11.45 p.m when [?] O reported situation normal".  On this date Bdr Banbrook died at 44 Casualty Clearing Station, Puchevillers, a few miles behind the front lines, of wounds incurred in action earlier that day. 

Puchevillers was a main railhead for the delivery of ammunition and evacuation of casualties from the Casualty Clearing Station there, as well as a centre for training of troops, including practice trenches. Bdr Banbrook lies buried at Puchevillers British  Cemetery, Somme. Tragically, his mother wrote as late as 4 September 1916 enquiring after his whereabouts and whether he had been transferred to England through wounds. At the foot of the headstone his mother caused the following to be written:

OUR BELOVED CHARLIE
DIED THAT WE MAY LIVE IN PEACE
SORROWING MOTHER

For his service he was entitled to the 1914 Star with Clasp & Roses, British War Medal, Victory Medal and Memorial Plaque.

His mother's address (his father having died in 1902) was 61 Warden Road, Kentish Town, London. His effects went principally to his mother, Mrs Mary Jane Robinson, with a small legacy to his sister of the full blood, Nellie B Banbrook.

Private (Acting Lance-Corporal) Herbert Joseph Raven, 2nd/5th Durham Light Infantry, Salonika. Battle Honour: Macedonia

Private (Acting Lance-Corporal) Herbert Joseph Raven, 2nd/5th Durham Light Infantry, Salonika. Battle Honour: Macedonia


Herbert Joseph Raven was a commercial traveller by trade and married with three children, born in Stoke Newington in 1883 and living in Edmonton, Middlesex. He was medically examined at St Pancras on 28 June 1915 (?) and then called up for service and attested on 7 June 1916, being posted to the Army B Reserve the following day. He was aged 33 1/2 when called up. His medical grade at enlistment was retrospectively recorded on Army Form Z.22 as "B1" (whilst it is possible this may reflect his grade on demobilisation it would also be consistent with his eventual posting to a Garrison unit). 

After serving the obligatory one day with the Colours on enlistment, he was then mobilised the following month, on 7 July, and posted to 5th Durham Light Infantry the following day. From there he went on 9 July to 25th (Provisional) Battalion (formed in 1915 from Home Service personnel of Territorial units the 4th East Yorkshire Regiment and 5th DLI, and later to become 27th Battalion, DLI) before being posted on to the 2/5 DLI, a second line Territorial Battalion then based at Catterick, on 15 July. The battalion was under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel P. W. Williams-Till. This sequence of posting is not untypical as the Provisional battalions were made up of a combination of existing Home Service Territorials (eg men who had not volunteered or had been found unfit for service overseas, drawn from the 2nd and 3rd line Territorial Battalions of the DLI) and new Conscripts. Part of their role was physical conditioning to render men fit for drafting overseas, working alongside units of the Training Reserve. Pte Raven was given the Service number 5142.

His home service ended on 5 November 1916 when - it having received order to proceed overseas - he was posted with 2nd/5th DLI for Salonika where it was to become a Garrison Battalion there (a class of formations not normally expected to serve in the front line due to the men's age or low medical category). On 6 November he embarked for Salonika via Southampton, Havre and Marseilles, arriving on 17 November 1916 and serving there until 7 January 1919, when he once more returned home. 
Upon arrival at Salonika, 2/5 Durham Light Infantry became headquarters troops for XVI Corps (British Salonika Force). They, along with their sister battalion, 2/9 DLI, spent the first few months of their time in Salonika on guard and road-making duties and undergoing inspections, as would be expected of a formation comprising largely of men classified, like Pte Raven, in medical category B1. In January 1917 they were encamped, presumably quite uncomfortably, in tents at Kilo 71 (K71), partway down the western slope of the Struma Valley in or near what is now the village of Kalokastro, amidst the snow. K71 was also the site of 2/3 Northumbrian Field Ambulance from September 1916, then of 40th Casualty Clearing Station until July 1918 and, with the usual melancholy logic, now hosts the Commonwealth War Graves Commission Struma Military Cemetery.

Whilst the battalion was fulfilling its garrison role, on 1 February 1917 Pte Raven was attached to No.143 Army Troops Company, Royal Engineers,  returning to his Unit on 7 March 1917. The Army Troops Companies were concerned with improving the physical infrastructure to support the army's movements and in this area were particularly concerned with roads, bridging and water supply. In April 1917 143 AT Coy was based at, or possibly moving between, K62 1/4 and K58, a little further back down the Seres Road towards Salonika, so he may not have had too far to go. There are other records of other 2/5 DLI men being attached to this unit for a time so it may not have been an uncommon occurrence. He would have received his new service number of 201576 at around this time, as part of the general renumbering of Territorial infantry units which took place in March 1917.

Meanwhile, on 1 March 1917 the battalion was moved to 228th Brigade, an independent formation within the British Salonika Force associated with 28th Division, with which 2/5 DLI would be acting as front-line troops. The brigade was moved to the front line in light of a shortage of manpower, its deployment allowing the release of one of the fighting brigades, the  83rd, for an eastward move, to the Doiran sector in preparation for the Spring offensive and the First Battle of Doiran.

The other battalions in the brigade, also Garrison Battalions, seem to have been similar in composition to the 2/5th, as per the following description by one of the 28th Division's staff officers:  "Physically the brigade was in a terrible state. They were splendid crocks ... Some were almost blind, some almost deaf, and the 22nd Rifle Brigade ... had more than sixty men over sixty years old". As a typical example of Tommy humour, it is said that because of its slow rate of marching, the 228th became known as the 'Too Too Late Brigade'.

The 2/5th Battalion served on the Butkova Front, one of the quietest parts of the battle line, holding a strong defensive position on the lower slopes of the Krusha Balkans range above the valley of the Struma. The strength of the enemy positions far across the valley combined with little enemy activity contributed to a relatively static front and no doubt held down battle casualties. In any case, the Battalion did well enough to secure Colonel Williams-Till, its officer commanding, two mentions in dispatches and a Military O.B.E., the first MiD being Gazetted on 24 July 1917.

The following is an interesting account of service with the 2nd/5th DLI from Lt Borgognon, when he joined them in the line for a brief period of service with 'D' Company, between 18 and 31 March 1918 (having been posted there by mistake for the 2nd/9th, Army Troops in Salonika):

"My first night "up the line", I spend in an old Greek house with a nice wood fire burning in the grate. Had dinner in the mess with my new Company commander (Hon H de Vere Stacpoole) [author] quite a nice chap. Next morning I took over my post in the front line together with the Platoon who were holding it .

The Bulgars were quite a safe distance away, but not too far off to send a few shells over occasionally. Here(?) the unit I joined was essentially a garrison unit and was composed of category men, men with defective vision, defective hearing, bronchial subjects, malarial wrecks etc.. These were the types of men holding the front line. It was not surprising therefore that I could go right up close to the sentries in the middle of the night without being challenged.

Fortunately, nothing serious happened.. It's true Very-lights went up from our trip wires, also grenades went off, but these were probably occasioned by stray dogs.

Talking of dogs I had a beauty come to my dugout. A large white dog more like a polar bear than a dog but he was a splendid companion and used to sleep outside my dugout every night. I often heard him growling and barking in the night whenever any of the men passed near my dugout.

By the way, my dugout was a splendid structure under a large plum tree and even in March with snow upon the ground, the tree was in full blossom. The country round this part is very prolific, grape vines are entwined round about practically every tree, pears peaches also grow in profusion.

Men forming my platoon had been out in this country for over two years, many had never been into the town of Salonica or seen a woman since they landed in the country. Their days were made up of drills, work, sentry go, outpost duty, fatigues, with football as a recreation once a week. Truly a monstrous life for a man. Lt King at the next post formed a choir, and I assisted him, singing bass. We had regular choir practice and though we had no musical instruments we got together quite a decent choir. King and I also started a concert party and were practising turns ourselves. Duets etc., also a conjuring stunt, but unfortunately before the great day for our first performance I received orders to go back to base. So our concert party fell through.
...
I have remarked previously the enemy were quite a distance away. In proof of this I might say I often wandered out, unaccompanied, in front of our wire entanglements in broad daylight in fact I often went out to burn reeds and tall growing grasses as a malaria preventative measure. It appeared that so long as we did not annoy Johnny Bulgar with shells he was content to keep quiet. Patrols went out each night towards enemy lines and on one occasion the British patrol "bumped" against a Bulgar Patrol, the British were taken prisoners, owing to the superiority of the Bulgar numbers. The next might our new Patrol found a notice written by the captured British Patrol Leader asking his C.O to send his kit down to the enemy wire and the Bulgars would send two men down to carry it to him. His C.O was to give an undertaking that the two Bulgars would not to be interfered with and the enemy would give a similar undertaking regarding the British messengers(?). The undertaking were exchanged and the kit sent down. Next night a receipt was found on the post thanking the C.O for sending kit which was safely received." Source: http://www.borgognon.net/VEBdiary.html

On 20 April 1918, Private Raven proceeded on a course at Army Signalling School, going from there to No.2 Base Depot on 26 April, rejoining his Unit in the Field on 30 April. His Army Form W.3226 describes his employment in the army as light duties signaller. This would have involved work in the Signals Section including the paying out of wire and the use of field telephones in the field, potentially in positions of some danger, and wireless telegraphy using Morse Code. On 25 July 1918 he was appointed Paid Acting Lance-Corporal. Some time after mid-August 1918 he was granted Professional Pay Class 1.
Apart from an attachment to 28th Division's 84th Infantry Brigade between 14 October 1917 and 10 March 1918, 2/5 Durham Light Infantry saw out its service in the Salonika theatre with the abovementioned 228th Brigade,  seeing active service in the field in the latter (September 1918) stages of the Salonika campaign. In particular, the battalion was in support of the Greek Crete Division during the murderous Second  Battle of Doiran, 18-19 September 1918 when the combined Anglo-Greek forces attempted but failed to take the well-built Bulgarian defences on Pip Ridge and the Grand Couronne. By the end of the war the battalion was near Lake Doiran, falling under the command of the Crete Division from 30 September 1918 until  4 October, when the brigade was broken up.

Reflecting its employment at home, as a Garrison Battalion, and then on a relatively quiescent sector of the front, 2/5 DLI is recorded as having suffered 23 fatal casualties during the Great War, the main causes of death being malaria and dysentery. Whilst in Salonika the battalion seems to have made a contribution to keeping the troops entertained with a Regimental bandmaster sufficiently skilled to make a living with his own band (drawn partly from bandmates from his DLI days) after the war. After the Armistice the battalion was engaged in Occupation duties in Bulgaria before proceeding to join the Army of the Black Sea in South Russia in February 1919. The Battalion, along with the 2/9th, received the Battle Honour "Macedonia" for its efforts.

On 19 November 1918, Lance-Corporal Raven appears to have been sent to Base for leave(?). The rest of his record (Army Form B.103) is largely illegible. His Character was given on his Conduct Sheet as "Good" and he was described as sober, [reliable] and intelligent. He embarked for home on or about 7 January 1919. 

He was medically examined prior to demobilisation on 11 January 1919 at No.1 Dispersal Unit, Wimbledon. On 8 February 1919 at York he was demobilised and transferred to the Army Z Reserve. He received the British War Medal and Victory Medal, being his full entitlement, on 12 December 1921 and was obviously proud enough of his war service to pay for the following entry in the National Roll of the Great War 1914-1918:

H.J. RAVEN 

He joined in July 1916, and in the same year was sent to Salonika, where he took part in important operations until 1918, when he was then sent into Bulgaria and Serbia. In January 1919 he was sent home and demobilised, holding the General Service and Victory Medals. 141, Croyland Road, Lower Edmonton, N. 9.

238071 Sgt Percy James Stentiford MSM, Sussex Fortress Company, RE and 21st Battalion, West Yorkshire Regiment

238071 Sgt Percy James Stentiford MSM, Sussex Fortress Company, RE and 21st Battalion, West Yorkshire Regiment


Percy James Stentiford was born on or around 2 October 1883 in the parish of St Thomas, Withycombe Raleigh, Devon to George and Rosina Stentiford (née Pfeiffer), the youngest of seven children born to the couple. 

His father, George, was a gardener for Edward Cole of Leixlip and Stoke Lyne (his mother having been a lady's maid for the family) and by 1891 the family was living in Withycombe Raleigh, near Exmouth, in the lodge of Stoke Lyne House.

By 1901 Percy James was employed as a plumber and still living in the lodge at Stoke Lyne, now with his brother George - a gardener like his father - where he remained until at least 1911. Some time before the end of 1914 he moved, being resident at 22 Brooklyn Road, Seaford at the time of his enlistment in November that year. As well as his employment as a plumber he had previously served six years in the volunteer 1st Devonshire Yeomanry, being discharged on termination of his engagement.

He joined the Territorial Royal Engineers (Sussex (Fortress)  Reserve, RE) for four years' service in the United Kingdom. This Company was under the Sussex Territorial Force Association and at the time would have consisted of the HQ and No 1 Works Company at Seaford, serving as part of South Eastern Coastal Defences. With an apparent age of 30 years 1 month, he stood 5 foot 5 inches tall and had a chest measurement of 36 1/2" when fully expanded. His physical development was described as 'Good'. He was medically examined and certified fit by a RAMC Medical Officer at Newhaven on 22 November and the following day was appointed as a Sapper and embodied in the Sussex Fortress Reserve under the regimental number 237. He gave his next of kin as his mother,  and her address as Stoke Lyne Lodge, Withycombe, near Exmouth. He was tested by a Seaford builder (there being no facilities in a military workshop to apply the test) and graded a Very Good plumber.

Sapper Stentiford signed the Imperial Service Obligation at Seaford on 24 November 1914. He demonstrated his skills as a plumber in early and late January 1915, being rated as an Artificer 3rd and then 4th Class, finally earning himself Engineer's Pay of 1/8 a day on 1 July 1916. It seems likely that the company was involved, in common with other Companies, in construction of coastal batteries, camps, and hutments. In the meantime, in March and April 1915 he was hospitalised (Newhaven and 2nd Eastern General) with Tonsilitis. He was discharged with a recommendation that he return for a Tonsillectomy (which presumably did not take place given his later medical history) and that he be sent on furlough instead of to a convalescent home. 

By the end of 1914 the Territorial Companies had largely taken over charge of coast defence work from the Regular RE Companies as the latter were sent overseas, and in June 1915 the War Office authorised the raising of 'second lines' of the existing Territorial Companies.  With the 2/1st Company,  P J Stentiford was appointed Paid Lance-Corporal on 22 May 1915 (seemingly before the company had been formally raised) and then promoted to Second Corporal on 25 September, Corporal on 2 November and finally to Sergeant on 26 February 1916.  

Around February 1917 he would have been given a new number in the 545001-546000 series, to coincide with the renumbering of the Territorial Royal Engineers.

He married Amy Amelia Stentiford   (née Balkham), also of Seaford, born 1889 as the tenth child of Samuel Balkham and Harriett Maria Payne, on 22 August 1917 at Seaford.

By November 1917 he was serving with the 578th (Sussex) Works Company, Royal Engineers (formerly 3rd/1st (Sussex) Field Company) at Newhaven. From there he was posted to the 516th (1/London) Reserve Field Company, RE at Esher. In the meantime, the War Office had been considering the establishment of the pioneer battalions it had been raising, one per division, to address their more skilled military labour requirements.
 His transfer appears to have been part of a wider effort to address the skills shortages in many Pioneer Battalions, when compared to their establishment, by drafting-in Royal Engineers from the Reserve Companies at home to replace unskilled men who would be sent instead to infantry battalions within the same Regiment.

Accordingly, Sgt Stentiford was transferred to the West Yorkshire Regiment Pioneer Battalion, British Expeditionary Force under Army Order 204/1916, authority VOL/121/Drafts 7509/AG 2a/25/8/17, at RE rates of pay. He was posted overseas on 2 November 1917, disembarking the following day.

(In terms of Army protocol, as a Territorial he was presumably transferred to a Territorial unit within the West Yorkshire Regiment Corps and then posted to the 21st, a New Army Battalion.)


He was posted to the 21st West Yorkshire Regiment (Wool Textile Pioneers) on 4 November 1917, joining them in the field on the 11th. The 21st (Service) Battalion (Wool Textile Pioneers), West Yorkshire Regiment, was formed in Halifax on 24 September 1915 by the Lord Mayor and City of Leeds, moving to France in June 1916 and on 2 June 1916 coming under the orders of the Regular 4th Division as its Pioneer Battalion.  As a member of the 21st he would have been entitled to wear the distinctive crossed pickaxe and rifle collar badge of the Pioneer Battalions, reflecting their twin role as military labour and fighting infantry. At this time the battalion had just left Boesinghe in the Ypres Salient to move south to Arras. He was one of a draft of 289 ex-RE Other Ranks who joined on that day, presumably by way of an exchange with 269 Other Ranks who were sent to reinforce Infantry battalions of the West Yorkshire Regiment.  Later that day the battalion marched to Tilloy Wood, being employed on the upkeep of communications trenches, a tramway and Nissen Hut building (one platoon) which it continued to do until about the 19th, when it moved to building artillery bridges. The battalion continued to suffer a small trickle of casualties throughout the month. It is unfortunately not recorded what company Sgt Stentiford joined.

The battalion remained based in Tilloy Wood through December 1917 and well into 1918. In December the battalion principally concerned itself with maintaining communication trenches, whilst 'C' Company constructed a trench tramway and wired the communication trenches as a Reserve line. Towards the end of the month the work included cutting fire steps; this continued into January 1918, when the creation of machine gun nests and strong points in Happy Valley and other sites was also added to the work. Towards the end of the month the Battalion's focus extended to the creation of a new support line behind the Reserve line and the reclamation and revetting of trenches caved in by that month's heavy rain.

February saw the battalion go into billets at Arras for about a week before a move to St Laurent-Blangy towards the middle of the month. Here they were principally employed digging and wiring Reserve trenches in the 3rd system either side of the River Scarpe, and digging deep dugouts, incurring casualties including one officer and two other ranks gassed. At the end of the month, as part of a general reorganisation of the pioneer units, the battalion was also reorganised from a four-company (A, B, C and D) structure to a three-company (X, Y and Z) structure. By 25 November 1918 Sgt Stentiford was recorded as being with 'Z' Company and this may be suggestive of where he was placed at the time of this February 1918 reorganisation.

The first three weeks in March 1918 were principally spent working on Reserve trenches for XVII Corps. When the German Spring Offensive struck, the battalion was redirected to its Infantry role, occupying reserve trenches at Rifle Camp and alternating this with work on the Army Line at Duizans. During this period, as noted by the battalion history, "The great day of the battalion was on March 28th, 1918, when, as a divisional reserve, it advanced a line of one thousand yards, and held it two days until relieved by an infantry battalion."

The following extract from volume 2 of 'The West Yorkshire Regiment in The War 1914 -1918', by Everard Wyrall takes up the story for the month of April:

'From the 1st to 6th April the 21st Battalion (Pioneers) was at work constructing trenches for the 10th, 11th, and 12th Brigades of the 4th Division, east of Arras. Their camp was still at St Laurent Blangy [where the battalion was supposed to be rebuilding after the losses of March ]. The Battalion's strength at this period was 25 Officers and 551 other ranks, but it was continually losing officers and men. On the 5th Lieut. Richardson and three men of "Z" Company were wounded. On the 6th one man of "X" Company was killed and two men wounded. A mustard-gas shell also burst in the entrance of the officers' mess of the "Z" Company and five officers (Capt. Dighton, Lieut. Hocklebridge, and Second-Lieuts. Foster and Fox, and the Battalion Chaplain - Rev. C. Wright) and one other rank were badly gassed. On the 7th, as the 4th Division was relieved by Canadians, the Pioneers moved by train to Simoncourt and on the 8th to Fosseux. The 12th saw the battalion en route by bus to the scene of the Lys Battles, the Pioneers arriving at a point between Lillers and Busnes and Bivouacking in the fields for the night.

The Battle of Hazebrouck was in progress when the 21st Battalion (Lieut.-Colonel Sir E. H. St. L. Clarke) moved to camp and billets at the Chateau de Werppe on 14th April. That night all companies were hard at work digging a trench at Les Harrisoirs, following the line of the road. This was the line of the enemy's barrage, and "X" Company had Lieut. Bulmer and thirteen men wounded. The same work was continued on the following day.

On the 18th, when the Battle of Bethune was fought, the Pioneers were at work digging new trenches between Hinges and the Canal, and a trench near Les Harrisoirs. On this day Lieut. Metcalfe Smith, of "Z" Company, was wounded and died of wounds; four other ranks were also wounded. On the way to work a shell burst in the midst of "Y" Company, killing three men and wounding nine others. The enemy's attack on the 4th Division was completely broken up and about 160 prisoners were taken.

Under shell-fire almost the whole time, the Pioneers were in the line in the Bethune area until the end of the month - theirs was an unenviable life. During that period the battalion suffered the folowing casualties: 19th, six men wounded; 20th, Lieut. B. Grange and two men killed and eight wounded; 21st - 23rd, five men wounded; 24th, five men wounded, eight gassed; 25th, one NCO and two men wounded: 26th five men killed, twenty-nine wounded and fourteen [text missing]; 28th, six men wounded; 29th, three men wounded; On the 30th Battalion Headquarters and "Y" Company moved to farms in La Vallee to erect Nissen Huts in the orchards.

Such is the record (brief it is true) of the 21st Battalion during the German Offensive on the Lys. There are few to sing the praises of the Pioneers, but they were gallant fellows all, and carried out their duties with splendid tenacity and devotion."

After this, May was spent in La Vallée, mostly working in and around Pacaut Wood.

On 4 June 1918 Sgt Stentiford forfeited a day's pay, for an unknown cause. At this time 'Z' Company was working on the old front line of 2 September. Establishment at around this time was 30 officers and 517 men - low for a pioneer battalion. This was made worse when, during the latter part of the month, 10 officers and 180 Other Ranks were affected by '4 Day Fever', prevalent in the 4th Division at this time according to the War Diary. This temporarily reduced the fighting strength to only 443 Other Ranks. 

In July the battalion was still at La Vallée, 'Z' Company working on the support line of the front line system. Later in the month work turned to converting trenches of the existing systems into breastworks for the wet weather. This work continued into August interspersed with a period of repairing and clearing roads at Paradis following the enemy's retirement from there, and then at the end of the month going into the line east of Monchy before doing more dangerous work repairing and clearing the forward roads - the lesson having been learnt from the Somme of the absolute necessity of maintaining passable roads and tracks to the front to maintain the forward momentum of the assault. The battalion then did similar work at Fosse Farm after the division's participation in the attack on the Drocourt-Quéant line in early September. October was spent on roads and associated work successively in the Monchy, Naves and Haspres areas, following up the advance. At the beginning of November, on the 1st, the division attacked across the River Rhonelle and 'Z', along with the other companies, was heavily engaged in keeping the roads passable, under heavy shelling, up to and across the other side of the Rhonelle. Later in the month the battalion moved to Saulznoir, Artres and Le Triez. 'Z' Company was at Onnezies when news broke that the Armistice was signed. 


It is probably for his work during this period of constant work and open movement up to the Armistice that Sgt Stentiford was recognised as below, receiving a Gallantry Card from Major-General Lucas, GOC, 4th Division. (Major-General Lucas took over the division after Major-General Lipsett died on 14 October 1918 of wounds incurred that day whilst reconnoitering at Saulznoir for the Battle of the Selle. This thus dates the card to the second half of October or later, but probably before December 1918 when Sgt Stentiford was sent to Base Depot and then attached to the Expeditionary Force Canteens.) 

It read 'The Major-General Commanding 4th Division has received a report of the good work and devotion to duty of 238071 Sergt. P.J. Stentiford, 21st West Yorks. and he wishes to congratulate him on his fine behaviour.'

After the Armistice, the battalion moved to Préseau, and it was here that Sgt Stentiford (recorded as being with 'X' Company) was admitted, via No.4 Casualty Clearing Station (23 November), 11 Field Ambulance and No.21 Ambulance Train to No. 18 (Chicago U.S.A.) General Hospital at Camiers with Severe Tonsilitis on 25 November 1918.

Sgt Stentiford was discharged to Base Depot 'A' (or 'E', depending upon sources) on 3 December 1918 and then, after two weeks' leave to the UK, joined the RASC Expeditionary Force Canteen at Boulogne on 16 January 1919, where he was still attached as of 14 March 1919. This was presumably to put his special skills as a plumber to good use, Boulogne having numerous establishments run by the Expeditionary Force Canteen, including an officer's mess and rest house.

His service was further recognised by a Meritorious Service Medal Gazetted in the London Gazette 3 June 1919, the 'Peace Gazette', "for valuable services with the Armies in France and Flanders". Williamson notes that "The Gazette offered CinCs units the opportunity to recognise men for their Meritorious Service in the War.", suggesting that Sgt Stentiford had made a significantly favourable impression in his 13 months of service with his battalion.

For this service, his full entitlement was the British War Medal, Victory Medal and Meritorious Service Medal.

After a medical examination on the 2nd, on 5 May 1919 he was sent to England for demobilisation and was disembodied on 3 June 1919. His full address was given at this time as 6 Chichester Road, Seaford, Sussex.

He was working as a plumber and Fitter in 1939, living at 20 Chichester Road, Seaford with his wife Amy.

Percy James Stentiford died on 13 November 1942 aged 59. Probate was granted on 9 June 1943 to his widow Amy Amelia Stentiford, his effects being worth £595 1s 10d.

42311 Pte H Robinson North'D Fus and Durham Light Infantry 12420, 5729, 203870 - wounded Battle of Rosieres

42311 Pte H Robinson North'D Fus.
12420, 5729, 203870


Background, training and home service:

Pte Henry Robinson, a woollen spinner from Ossett, near Leeds was a "Derby/Group Scheme" Regular enlistment recruit. Born in 1892, he stood 5ft 2 3/4", weighed 126lbs and was married with two children. He attested his willingness to serve before a justice of the peace at Pontefract (?) on 11 December 1915, aged 23 years 6 months and, having chosen to defer his service, was posted to the Army Section B Reserve the following day (receiving a day's pay for the day of his Attestation). His Attestation was approved, and he himself called up and appointed to the King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry,  on 15 June 1916, under the service number 12420. On 17 June he was posted to the 11th (Reserve) Battalion, King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry , which from 1 September 1916 became the 8th Training Reserve battalion (he was recorded as being "attached"). 

Service in France:

On 6 October 1916, on disembarkation in France Pte Robinson was posted to the 13th (Service) Battalion Northumberland Fusiliers, part of 62nd Infantry Brigade, 21st Division (new Service number 42311).  At that time the battalion was readying for a move into I Corps area (completed on 7/8 October) to billets at La Bourse, prior to replacing the 2nd Northamptonshire in the front line in the Quarries sector, garrisoning and maintaining the "keeps" in this area (10 men per keep) and finding spoil parties for the 180th Tunnelling Company.  They were relieved by 12th Battalion the following day. I suspect that he may still have been at Infantry Base Depot when transferred to the DLI  (as below.)

Transfer to the 1/6th Battalion, Durham Light Infantry:

On one of his two "Statement of Services" forms there is a hard-to-decipher entry on the record which suggests a further transfer on 20 October 1916 to 1/6th Durham Light Infantry,  50th (Northumbrian) Division, only two weeks into his time in France. His service numbers with the DLI were, respectively, 5729 and 203870. This transfer is absent from the other Statement of Services sheet elsewhere in the record, which implies service with the Northumberland Fusiliers until posted to 5th Reserve Battalion DLI on 24 March 1917. However, in order for him to have two DLI Territorial service numbers, he would have to have been serving with the DLI before 1 March 1917 (when the renumbering took effect); in addition, the fact that both numbers appear on the medal roll strongly suggests that he served in France with his original 4-digit DLI service number prior to 1 March 1917 (and not that the 5th (Reserve) Battalion - a home formation - was his first posting, as might otherwise be inferred). On 20th October 1916 the 1/6 DLI was at Henecourt Wood, also in the Departement of the Somme, on fatigues, erecting huts and road making.  His posting date would put him in line to have served during the latter stages of the Battle of the Somme, including a week spent on working parties whilst encamped just outside Mametz Wood, immediately after which he would have taken part in 151st  Brigade's 5 November attack on the Butte de Warlencourt (Warlencourt-Eaucourt Knoll), part of the Battle of the Ancre.  In this attack, Gird Trench, running north east to south west behind the Butte, was 1/6th DLI's objective. As the battalion history notes, "On the night of Saturday, the 4th November, X, Y and Z Companies took over the front line in preparation for an attack on the Butte de Warlencourt on the Sunday morning. Zero had been fixed for 9.15 a.m. and the relief was not complete, owing to the extremely bad state of the trenches, till 9 a.m. The battalion was disposed for the attack with X Company on the right,  Y in the centre, Z on the left and W in support,  with the 9th Battalion on the left flank and the 8th on the right... The enemy position eas exceptionally strong, the trenches from which the attack started were so muddy that several men were drowned in them,  and the time for preparation was so short that the attack broke down almost as soon as it started." 


Although the Butte and part of Gird Trench was partially secured, a failure to consolidate the position meant that 1/6 and 1/8 DLI had to withdraw, leaving 1/9 DLI on the other side of the Butte to face a series of German counterattacks which forced a withdrawal after dark. The Brigade suffered almost a thousand casualties in the attack.

Harry Cruddace, also of the 1/6th, gives a short account of the attack quoted in 'The Somme, 1916: The Strip of Murdered Nature':
"Zero hour was almost upon us. Serious men gazed into one another's faces and some muttered thoughts of God and their loved ones. Chums clasped hands and said "Cheerio lad". Immediately the first wave made off they were met by terrific fire and crumpled up like snow in summer. We held on and the 9th Durhams reached a quarry on the edge of the Butte. I took up position  with the gun and opened fire on the opposing troops."

Although not stated, it was presumably sickness which caused him to be posted home on 11 December 1916. The battalion was resting in billets at Warloy during this period, following its bloodying at the Warlencourt-Eaucourt Knoll the previous month.

Convalescence at home:

On 12 February he was admitted to Woodcote Park Military Convalescent Hospital, Epsom, Southern Command, being discharged from there on 15 March 1917. Following on this, a further posting to the 5th (Reserve) Battalion, Durham Light Infantry took place on 24 March 1917 (possibly to No.8 Company). On 27 May 1917 he was again posted overseas.

On active service in France again, May 1917-on:

Pte Robinson disembarked at Boulogne on 27 May 1917 and was posted to 35 Infantry Base Depot on the same day. He was posted from 35 Infantry Base Depot on 9 June 1917 (making his will the following day) to 6th (presumably again 1/6th) Durham Light Infantry and on 25 June 1917 is recorded as having joined the unit in the Field. During the time of his absence the battalion had taken part in the Battle of Arras and was at the time of his rejoining it in divisional reserve near Boisleux-au-Mont.

After a fairly quiet three months in the Arras area, alternating between the front line (Henin), support (Neuville-Vitasse) and reserve (Mercatel), he would have moved up to the Ypres Salient with the battalion in late October. Here, just inside the remains of Houthulst Forest, he would have taken part in the Second Battle of
Passchendaele, 26 October to 10 November 1917, in which the battalion held and, by pushing their posts out under cover of night, advanced the line (described as "a series of waterlogged shell holes, which were troubled considerably by low-flying aeroplanes") by 200 yards in the sector. In consideration of the danger of being relieved in a position reached by a six mile walk on duck board tracks over devastated land under artillery fire, the battalion did one six day tour in the sector rather than the proposed four and two. After some time out of the line at Watten, December saw the battalion take over the line in Passchendaele Village itself, alternating between that an divisional reserve at Brandhoek (where Christmas Day 1917 was spent).


Wounded, March 1918:

From 6 February 1918 Pte Robinson had leave to England, probably whilst the battalion was encamped at St Omer. In early March the the battalion made its way once again to the Somme sector, there to form part of 5th Army reserve, and it was from this that it first went into the partially-completed Green Line at Beuzy on the night of 21 March. This was followed by successive withdrawals west of the Somme via Cardigny and Le Mesnil (in both of which places the battalion fought actions) as the German attack was pressed home. Pte Robinson was recorded as wounded in the Field, on 27 March 1918. This would place him in the midst of Operation Michael, the German Spring Offensive, quite possibly during W, X and Z Companies' counterattack to regain the battalion's lost position during the Battle of Rosieres. The 6th Durham Light Infantry were in the Rosieres Line about a mile south-east of the village, along with units of the 24th brigade when the action of a Labour company in falling back caused the right flank to be exposed and required an attack to stabilise the situation. Short shooting by the artillery caused the battalion casualties later in the day, whilst a further attack of twelve waves of German troops was beaten off with rifle and machine gun fire.


The next entries in Pte Robinson's record are largely illegible but appear to relate to his evacuation  via ?? Ambulance and ?? Casualty Clearing Station, thence to England per Hospital Ship St [Denis (?)] ex ??? (which presumably did not take place until 17 April). He was one of 189 Other Ranks of the battalion wounded during the fighting from 21-31 March 1918. He appeared on the War Office Daily List No. 5559 published on 7 May 1918.

Hospital and home service, April 1918-on:

He is recorded as having been hospitalised from 17 April 1918 to 2 August 1918, with Gun Shot Wounds to right forearm and left leg. During this time he appears to have been treated as posted to 73 Infantry TF Depot (Stockton on Tees), presumably for pay and rations purposes. On 8 (or 9?) August 1918, he was posted from the Depot to 5th Reserve Battalion, Durham Light Infantry and then on 24 August 1918 transferred to [Infantry] C[ommand] D[epot], Ripon, a convalescent establishment for soldiers not yet fit to return to their units. (the records are hard to decipher at this point but appear make a reference to "class ii, attributable"(?) - probably referring to the severity of the aforementioned GSW, and confirming for pensions purposes that it was attributable to military service).

Then, on 25 October he was posted again to the 5th (Reserve) Battalion,  DLI, (presumably, from other records, to B Company) at Sutton-on-Hull, remaining there until at least 10 November 1918. He was discharged to the Army Z Reserve 13 February 1919. Presumably he made a full recovery from his wounds as no pension claim is recorded against him and his Soldiers Protection Certificate appears to medically categorise him as "A".

A table gives the following service:

Served at home 15 June 1916 to 5 October 1916, then France 6 October 1916 to 11 December 1916. Home again 12 December 1916 to 26 May 1917, then to France again 27 May 1917 (making his will on 10 June 1917) to 16 April 1918, returning home again 17 April 1918, and there remaining.

Saturday 21 December 2019

Private John Weatherstone, 1/5th Battalion, Durham Light Infantry and Royal Defence Corps; wounded at Second Ypres, eight days after arriving in France

Private John Weatherstone,  1/5th Battalion, Durham Light Infantry and Royal Defence Corps; wounded at Second Ypres, eight days after arriving in France.


John Weatherstone was born in 1889. I  believe him to be the same as the "John Weatherston" who in 1911 was employed as a servant (presumably an apprentice blacksmith or similar) to a blacksmith in Horncliffe in the Parish of Wooler in Northumberland. At the outbreak of war he was resident at 14 Waverley Terrace, Darlington.  Amidst extensive efforts by the territorial battalions of the Durham Light Infantry to recruit for war service, he attested his willingness to serve for 4 years on 14 September 1914, at Darlington, as a Private. 5' 10" tall with a 38" chest, he was medically examined and declared fit to serve in the Durham Light Infantry and given the service number 2719. He signed the Imperial Service Obligation (Army Form E624) the same day, thus volunteering to serve overseas, and was posted to the Durham Light Infantry reserve, 5th Battalion. The 5th Battalion was a Territorial formation headquartered at the Drill Hall, Stockton, but three of the battalion's eight companies (D, E and H) were headquartered in Darlington, at the Drill Hall there. 


Pte Weatherstone was then posted for General Service on 28 November; in practical terms this probably indicates that he was posted to the first line Battalion of the 5th, 1/5 DLI (then based at Newcastle), on this date - rather than remaining with the Reserve battalion, then the 2/5th.

He entered the France and Flanders theatre with the 1st/5th Durham Light Infantry on 18 April 1915, landing at Boulogne as part of 150th Brigade, 50th (Northumbrian) Division. The 50th Division was the fourth Territorial Division declared fit for overseas service and on disembarkation concentrated around Steenvorde in Belgium.  Lieutenant-Colonel Gilbert Spence of Preston Park, Stockton was the officer commanding the battalion. 

This was about the time of the fierce fighting at Second Ypres, and the First-line Territorial Battalions of the DLI were split up and rushed into the line at Ypres to support the hard-pressed British front.   


["On 24th April at 1.00 am the battalion was assembled to move into action. They moved to take up positions on both banks of the Yser canal. From here the men moved to Potijze and in the early daylight they passed refugees and the gassed and wounded soldiers from the Front who warned them of their impending death. Ypres was to their right flank and visibly in flames. In occupying a line of reserve trenches at Potijze the first casualties were recorded..." ]

Pte Weatherstone was injured (Gun Shot Wounds to foot and back) on 26 April 1915, most probably whilst in the line at Fortuin during the Battle of St Julien, just outside Ypres, a brutal combat in which the six DLI Territorial Battalions lost 62 officers dead, wounded, invalided or missing, whilst the five battalions excluding the 1/6th suffered nearly 1,400 other ranks casualties. Pte Weatherstone was serving with C Company of 1/5 DLI at the time. 

After his wounding he was passed back through the casualty evacuation chain until he was admitted to No.2 General Hospital, Quai D'Éscale, Havre on 29 April. Shortly afterwards he was invalided home via the Hospital Ship Carisbrooke Castle on 3 May, arriving home on 4/5 May 1915.  


After what was presumably an extended period of treatment, on 27 November 1915 he was transferred to 34 (Northern) Command Depot, Ripon, which would later become a unit for the rehabilitative training of soldiers too fit for convalescent camp but not yet fit enough to be returned to unit. Following this, on 11 May 1916, he was transferred from the convalescent establishment and added to the permanent staff.  In early 1917 he was renumbered, as part of the wider renumbering of the Territorial Force, being given the new service number  271987. Whilst there he married Daisy Clarice Bint (born 1890 in Henley, Oxfordshire) on 6 June 1917. 

On 30 June 1917 he was transferred to the Labour Corps and, probably about that time, transferred to 473rd HS (Home Service) Employment Company, which had been formed at Ripon. It is possible that this was simply a continuation of his existing duties under another "badge", as the circa 275-man Home Service Employment Companies consisted of medically downgraded personnel in recognised trades and provided batmen, clerks, sanitary men, cooks, laundrymen, storemen, tradesmen such as butchers and tailors, and other essential staff members for hospitals, barracks and command depots like those at Ripon.


Later, possibly around 29 June 1918, he was transferred to the Royal Defence Corps, service number 78135, and posted to 166th Protection Company, also part of Northern Command.  The RDC was created in April 1916 to guard strategic areas such as ports, munitions factories and Prisoner of War camps. It was princpally composed of older men and those who were less fit (including those, such as Pte Weatherstone, impaired by or recovering from war injuries). Between January and the end of June 1918 the Company, under the command of Captain Edward Paxton, was on guard duties at  Brocton POW camp,  Cannock Chase, the Royal Defence Corps Depot being at 24 Sun Street, London EC2. There were two camps at Brocton, the facility later being extended to include two “transit” camps nearby for those being sent to neutral Netherlands and a 1,250 bed hospital. It seems likely that Pte Weatherstone was posted to the Company to coincide with its next posting after Brocton. (Possibly to Revesby outside Lincoln, a work camp, to which one of his fellow soldiers was posted in 19th October 1918). At some point during this service he was promoted to Lance Corporal. 

He was demobilised from No.1 Dispersal Centre on 20 March 1919 after having given four years and 188 days' service. He was discharged on demobilisation as being surplus to military requirements having suffered impairment since entering into the service (Para. 363 (xvia) of King's Regulations). His medical grade was given as B.II (Free from serious organic diseases, able to stand service on lines of communication in France, or in garrisons in the tropics: Able to walk 5 miles, see and hear sufficiently for ordinary purposes). He had a clean conduct sheet and his character on demobilisation was described as Very Good. His address on demobilisation was his mother's, Mrs R Patterson, Rose Cottage, East Learmouth/Branxton, Cornhill-on-Tweed. As well as a pension of 40/- a week (plus 10/- a week for his wife), he received a War Gratuity of £35 in 1921, in consideration of a Gun Shot Wound right ankle, attributable to service. In January 1922 he was writing from his new address of Burn Cottage to the War Office to enquire to whom he should apply for his medals. He received his medals on 11 March 1922 and died at home on 9 [August?] 1924 (or 1923?), the War Office being notified of his death by his Half-Brother, Arnold Patterson on 15th August. His cause of death is hard to ascertain as the record is almost illegible but it appears to have been heart-related. He is presumably the same man as the "John Weatherston" who is recorded on the Civil List of death registrations for September 1924 in the registration district of Wooler, containing the parish of Branxton, also in Northumberland.