Sunday, 27 December 2020

Pte Charles Robinson, 3rd Welsh Field Ambulance and 37th Field Ambulance, Royal Army Medical Corps, served Gallipoli, wounded and captured Cambrai 30 November 1917

Pte Charles Robinson, served Gallipoli with 3rd Welsh Field Ambulance and at Cambrai with 37th Field Ambulance, Royal Army Medical Corps, where he was wounded and made PoW
Charles Robinson was born on 21 December 1893 in Swansea.

He attested in 1911 under the Royal Army Medical Corps regimental number 1341. He served with the 3rd (later 1/3rd) Welsh Field Ambulance and was a carpenter and joiner in civil life. In 1914 he would have presumably been on the Welsh Division's TF annual summer camp when recalled home and then mobilised for full time war service on 5 August 1914. Subsequently, by 11 August he would have moved with his unit to its allotted station (units of the division were based at Shrewsbury, Wellington, Oswestry and Fort Scoveston) and subsequently moved to Northampton and then to Cambridge and Bedford, prior to proceeding to Gallipoli on or around 14 July 1915, via the natural harbour of Lemnos, in the Aegean.

Pte Robinson entered theatre of war 2b (Gallipoli and Aegean Islands) on 10 August 1915, landing at Suvla Bay, a beach head established to relieve the Australian forces at Anzac Cove to the south. Units of the 53rd Division were already in action when the Welsh Field Ambulance (attached to 158th Brigade) landed and the 3rd Welsh were further called upon to support the 54th (East Anglian) Division when it took up the attack between 11 and 18 August. By the end of the month the opposing forces were reduced to a stalemate and the 3rd Welsh tended in difficult conditions on the Suvla beachhead to the growing casualty list. Charles left the theatre on 7 November 1915, roughly 5 weeks before Suvla itself was evacuated. He was accordingly entitled to the 1914-1915 Star. His total service was 5 years and 10 days, finally being discharged as 'time expired' some time in 1916.

Charles re-enlisted into the RAMC on 8/9 February 1917, qualifying for a £15 re-enlistment bounty under Army Order 209 of 1916, his attestation being approved on the 15th. At this time he was living at 102 Terrace Road, Swansea. After what appears to have been a short transfer to the Royal Engineers, subsequently cancelled, he went overseas again on 5 August 1917; he was possibly on of the 4 O.R. reinforcements recorded as received by his unit on 17 August. He served in France with the 37th Field Ambulance, 12th (Eastern) Division, which was at this time still in the Arras sector, at the Ecole Normale, remaining there until 23/24 October when it transferred to Hesdin and then Aubrometz and Moislains to take part in the Cambrai operations. Its final position was taken up on the Fins-Nurlu Road, at the 3rd Corps Walking Wounded station. On Z Day (20 November), the station processed about 1,800 casualties. During these operations 54003 Corporal (Lance-Sergeant) Stephen McKenna of the unit was recommended for the second bar to the Distinguished Conduct Medal for gallantry in organising stretcher parties under rifle, shell and machine gun fire on 20 November and the night of 20-21 November at La Vacquerie. 45659 Corporal Sydney Allen Smith was also recommended for the bar to the DCM on the same occasion and a number of recommendations for Military Medals were sent through.

After just under 4 months overseas, Pte Robinson was posted as missing on 30 November 1917, reported in War Office Daily List No. 5465 of 14 January 1918. At this time the Field Ambulance was still set up on the Fins-Nurlu Road. He was possibly wounded by shell-fire during the German Cambrai counter-attack, in which the enemy drove the 12th Division back to La Vacquerie. Equally, like 47599 Pte Joseph Brown, also of 37th FA, he may have been wounded and captured whilst tending to the injured out in the open. The War Diary for the period simply notes "This morning the Germans attacked in force and at present 24 [later confirmed at 19] O.R. RAMC are believed captured. Five O.R. RAMC of this unit are believed to have been evacuated wounded.". He was later reported as a Prisoner of War in a London Gazette 'List received from various sources' published as part of War Office Daily List No. 5496 on 19 February 1918, being registered at Limburg around this time. Pte Robinson had his left leg amputated whilst imprisoned, at the PoW hospital at Celle, where he was reported in early July. German records give as his next of kin his mother, living at 102 Terrace Road, Mount Pleasant, Swansea.

He was subsequently repatriated to England in May 1918 owing to the loss of his left lower limb, apparently disembarking in Boston.

His return ('Soldier was prisoner of war in Germany, now arrived in England') was reported in War Office Daily List No. 5586 of 7 June 1918. After being sent to the King George Hospital, Stamford Street, London S E, he then proceeded to the Grove Military Hospital, Tooting and subsequently to 3 Western General Hospital, Neath. Finally, he spent some time in the care of the Metropolitan War Hospital, Whitchurch, near Cardiff prior to discharge.

Upon discharge on 14 April 1919 (under paragraph 292 xvi of King's  Regulations) his name was notified for the Silver War Badge, eventually issued on 30 May 1919 under the number B199423. His corresponding King's Certificate, for which he applied in September 1919, was issued on 16 January 1920. 

Sunday, 6 December 2020

Pte W Rowlands, North Staffs and 16th Notts & Derby Regiment (Chatsworth Rifles), entitled to Silver War Badge, discharged insane.

Pte W Rowlands, North Staffs and 16th Notts & Derby Regiment (Chatsworth Rifles), entitled to Silver Wound Badge, discharged insane.



Born in January 1884, William Rowlands of 24 Claremont Road, Newcastle-upon-Tyne was a 'Derby man';  having attested his willingness to serve he was posted to the Army Reserve on 10 December 1915. He was aged 31 years and 11 month and a wholesale fruiterer by trade with a wife, Annie, née Robertson, whom he had married on 21 June 1915. He was mobilised on 1 November 1916. He would have been subject to medical examination, the records of which do not survive, however it appears that the Syphilis which he was suffering and which was to cut short his military career was sadly not diagnosed at the time. Upon posting to the North Staffordshire Regiment he was given the regimental number [3/]31569 and joined the 3rd Battalion at Wallsend.

After training, he was posted overseas to the 8th Battalion, North Staffordshire Regiment on 21/22 January 1917. At 12 Infantry Base Depot he was part of a draft transferred to the 16th Sherwood Foresters (the Chatsworth Rifles) on 10 February 1917. His new number was 71540.

He joined the battalion on 16 February 1917, at which time, having just come out of support billets in Ypres, it was at 'E' Camp, Brandhoek. His first experience in the front line would have followed ten days later, in the form of a relatively quiet tour in the Left Zillebeke Sub-Section (Hooge). The month of March and the first half of April was similarly quiet for the battalion, although it continued to take part in tours of the front line. Then in mid-April the battalion was withdrawn for intensive training and working parties for what turned out to be the Third Battle of Ypres, July to November 1917. Within the training, particular emphasis was put on the platoon as a tactical unit and on assault rehearsals, and Pte Rowlands would have also fired on the rifle range whilst wearing his gas mask. Working parties included railway work and significant amounts of entrenching. This duty was interspersed with further tours in the line, beginning with an eventful week in the Hill Top sector starting 23 May and then Wieltje in June. The enemy were active with minenwerfers, artillery, snipers and gas, and a trench raid on Hill Top, to which the battalion returned for the final week of June, under increasingly heavy volumes of enemy fire. The final weeks before the attack were spent in training and battle practice at Serques, the battalion finally entering the forward area on the 28th of July.

This would have put Pte Rowlands in line to take part in the opening attack on 31 July, in which the battalion assaulted the German line between  Hampshire Farm (a strongpoint, as was Kultur Farm) and Canadian Farm, successfully taking the German first and second lines. After a period of the day spent on road repair and carrying parties, the battalion was put in the line again to reinforce the lead attacking battalions who had gone forward through them to attack the rear defence lines. The battalion was to remain under heavy rain and shell-fire in positions exposed to the defending Germans for six days until relieved at 11.20pm on 5 August by the 1/5th Gloucesters.

Subsequent to the opening day of the great offensive, 31 July 1917, The Chatsworth Rifles were engaged in The Battle of the Menin Road Ridge (specifically the action at Bulgar Wood, where Corporal Ernest Alfred Egerton of the battalion, another former North Staffordshire man, won the Victoria Cross), and remained taking tours of duty in the line under conditions of wet, cold and regular shelling for the period of - although not actively taking part in - the Battle of Polygon Wood, and The Second Battle of Passchendaele. The worst of these were the positions Tower Hamlets, which the battalion occupied from mid-October, and Polderhoek, in mid-November, both of which were battle-scarred and inadequate to protect against the elements or enemy action.

On 23 November 1917, Pte Rowlands received the first adverse entry on his military history sheet when he received 6 days Field Punishment No.2 for being absent from a working party. The battalion would have been in Ridge Wood Camp at the time. This was the first in a short series of misdemeanours, possibly associated with the onset of the mental symptoms of his illness. On 8 January he was awarded a further 7 days Field Punishment No.2, this time for being absent from 30 December to 1 January and "losing by neglect his Rifle, Equipment and Kit". On the former date the battalion had just entered the line on the Steenbeek, west of St Julien in support for the Alberta sector, in relief of the 2nd Manchesters.  A further three days FP.No.2 followed on 11 January 1918 for "improperly dressed on staff parade" (probably in Dambre Camp) before he was sent off on leave to the UK later in the month, never to return.

Pte Rowlands was sent home on 27 January 1918, with a view to being struck off strength of the BEF and put before a medical board for discharge. He was admitted to 1st Northern General Hospital Newcastle, where he reported 'headache, pains in body & legs, shooting artery pains'. His Wassermann test (a test for Syphilis) was strongly positive and, presumably due to his mental confusion, his statement that '[the problem] began in France 12 months ago but he did not go sick with it, was never under a doctor' was discounted. He spent some time at the Lord Derby Hospital, Warrington, where his report states that he was a 'vacant looking man who can give no connected account of himself, answers questions with the first words that come into his head...his speech is very slurring, his statements quite unreliable'. From there he was medically boarded and discharged due to sickness, on 15 June 1918, aged 34 years 5 months.

Being diagnosed with General Paresis (or Paralysis) of the Insane, 'aggravated by the present war', and 100% disabling, he was awarded a weekly pension of 27/6 and granted the Silver War Badge, Number 411980. Subsequently he was sent to asylum care, his medical records indicating that he required the constant care of another person.

He sadly died insane on 25 March 1919, his War Gratuity of £7 and financial effects of £19 going to his widow, Annie, later of 16 St Thomas Crescent, Newcastle.

Wednesday, 28 October 2020

113989 SPR .H.SALISBURY  R.E. - British War and Victory Medal, served 51st (Highland) Divisional Signal Company, wounded March 1918

113989 SPR .H.SALISBURY  R.E. - British War and Victory Medal 
Herbert Salisbury, born 1897, was from Burnley. Formerly of Burnley Technical School, he was living at the time of his enlistment at 17 Holbeck Street in the town. Presumably driven by an interest in the new science of radio communications, he had gained a 2nd Class qualification in Chemistry and 1st Class qualifications in Electricity & Magnetism and Mathematics at the school and armed with these and warm letters of recommendation from his headmaster and a justice of the peace, he applied to join the Wireless and Telegraph Section of the Royal Engineers. After having been medically examined at Burnley on 1 September he attested with his mother's permission on 2 September 1915 at Great Scotland Yard, London, aged 17 years 9 months. He was employed as a cotton twiner/cloth bundler and gave as his next of kin William Edward Salisbury, his father. He joined up to be a Wireless Operator  - Learner and was mustered as a Pioneer.  After some time in one of the RE Depot Companies he was transferred to the RE Signals Depot at Biggleswade with effect from 10 February or 23 March 1916 (information varies in his record), presumably for technical training, and then again to the Wireless Training Centre at Worcester on 12 July 1916, accumulating several Regimental Conduct Sheet entries for absence on parade (punished first by Saturday fatigues at 'Holmsfree' [or 'Holmefield?] and then by confinement to barracks) and talking in the ranks (Saturday fatigues at 'Holmefield'). By November 1916 he was based at Norton where he accumulated entries for lateness on parade, overstaying his leave pass and absence on parade. All were fairly minor offences punished by varying lengths of confinement to barracks. He spent Christmas and New Year 1916/17 under treatment at the Military hospital, Worcester, with eczema. On 20 August 1917 he tested (seemingly at Diglis Interception Station) as a Wireless Operator - Proficient and was remustered as a Sapper, receiving the appropriate 1 Shilling per day Engineer Pay. Passing through the RE Signals Depot at Fenny Stratford, on 24 August he embarked from the UK, being posted to signal base depot France on 27 August, awaiting drafting to a unit. He was just short of 19 years 9 months old. He served with 51st Divisional Signal Company. This Company, in common with the other DSCs had been augmented with a Wireless Section upon the abolition of the Army Wireless Companies and Motor Wireless Sections attached to armies in June 1917, as part of a wider amalgamation of wireless operations into the activity of the Signals service. He joined the unit in the field on 18 November. At this point the Wireless Section was with divisional HQ at Little Wood, Ytres, all wireless and amplifiers reported as being in position by 7.06pm on the 19th.  

The standard 1918 establishment for a divisional signals company (15 officers and 385 other ranks) was an HQ (including wireless and visual signalling section), a Royal Artillery Section (HQ and 2 RA Brigade subsections), No1 Section (four cable detachments and an MG Signal Section), and Sections 2-4, one per infantry brigade in the division). As a trained wireless operator he probably served with the HQ section. Divisions operated BF trench sets for their wireless communications supplemented by Power Buzzers forward of Brigade HQs. Spr Salisbury joined 12 days before the opening of Battle of Cambrai, for which the Company received the appropriate unofficial RE battle honour. This was the first battle in which wireless was used as a primary method of communication and on a wide scale (previously the preferred methods were telephony - relying on buried cable - despatch riders, pigeons and runners). The Company handled 80 messages in three days' operation. After the operations, the division as part of Harper's IV Corps, Third Army, remained in the Cambrai area (Harper being the former GoC of the 51st Division.)

The Division's allotted place in the line was a poorly-placed and -sited section of the front line in the Lechelle area, opposite the Hindenburg Line. To help remedy this situation, General Harper laid down principles for the construction of a new defensive system, maintained and developed by infantry under the direction of Sappers in the associated Field Companies. This took up the winter and early spring of 1918. For their good work, all ranks and arms were congratulated by General Byng, GOC 3rd Army. 

The 51st Division was in the line at the eastern edge of the Artois plateau when the German attack fell on 21 March 1918. The attack was heralded by a severe four-hour bombardment which interrupted all communications within the first quarter of an hour. Once the Germans had gained a foothold in the British line, companies between the Bapaume — Cambrai road and the Louverval valley were forced back into Boursies. Here the divisional artillery came into play, and the 401st Field Company with units of 152nd Brigade held a wired communications trench, specially sited as a switch line, which played a crucial role in delaying the enemy's advance through Boursies. 

On this day Spr Salisbury was wounded in action, suffering a gun shot wound back and leg (right), indicating a penetrating wound of some type. This wound was possibly incurred whilst at divisional HQ at Fremicourt, the divisional front at this time running roughly between Hermies and Louveral. A later post-mortem on the battle noted that during the Battle of St Quentin, wireless sets were often placed too far forward and overrun, jammed by German field stations or destroyed by shell-fire. When added to buried telephone cables being cut by the fierce, carefully-targeted bombardment, fog hampering visual and pigeon communications  and runners being caught by gas and shell-fire, this was a recipe for communication failure. Nonetheless, for their part in the action the Company received the unofficial RE battle honour St Quentin. 

Meanwhile, Spr Salisbury was admitted to 1/3rd Highland Field Ambulance on 22 March, and then via 7th Canadian General Hospital at Etaples was evacuated to England on the 25th. He featured on War Office Daily List No.5556 of 3 May 1918, as wounded.

Once home, he was hospitalised at Stoke-on-Trent Military Hospital, Newcastle, Staffordshire from 26 March to 26 April. Subsequently he appears to have been posted to Bedford again and later Hitchin Signals Depot (from which he had one episode of Absent Without Leave from 23:59 on 2 January until ordered to return to his unit by Military Police at the Great Northern Railway Station at 9am on 3 January.) At Hitchin he was medically examined and, presumably fully recovered, was sent to Heaton Park Dispersal Station (No.1 Dispersal Unit). He was subsequently demobilized by transfer to the Army Class 'Z' Reserve on 20 February 1919.

Thursday, 8 October 2020

Pair to a 2/South Lancashire 'Old Contemptible' and Prisoner of War : 8379 Pte J T McDonald

WW1 MEDALS TO AN OLD CONTEMPTIBLE 8379 Pte J.T. McDONALD SOUTH LANCS REG.
John Thomas McDonald served with the 2nd Battalion, South Lancashire Regiment. His regimental number of 8379 would suggest that he joined the regiment between July 1906 and April 1907, probably some time in late 1906 (by comparison, per Nixon, 8237 joined on 7 July 1906 and 8655 joined on 27 April 1907). Possibly a Reservist on the outbreak of war, his battalion was stationed at Tidworth, Wiltshire as part of the 7th Brigade of the 3rd Division. He entered the France theatre of war via Havre and Rouen with his battalion on 14 August 1914, and would have fought with the 2nd South Lancashire at Mons – where the regimental museum stated  “The accurate and disciplined fire of the 2nd South Lancashires, in front of Frameries, took a heavy toll of the massed German infantry, but eventually the battalion was ordered to retire. Though outflanked and outnumbered, the old 82nd withdrew in contact ‘in perfect order as if on parade’.” -  as well as through the rearguard action at Solesmes, the Battle of Le Cateau - where the battalion held the position in the centre of the British line, near Caudry - the subsequent retreat, and the Battles of the Marne, the Aisne, and La Bassee as well as (possibly) Messines 1914.
As 8379 Private J T McDonald, South Lancashire Regiment, he was listed as "Wounded" on the Casualty List issued by the War Office from the 16th December 1914 (published 31 January 1915). However, the presence of his name on the South Lancashire Regiment's 'Princess Mary's Gift' PoW list transcribed by Paul Nixon indicates that he was taken prisoner on or before 25 December 1914; this was possibly on the same occasion as his wounding. He was most likely one of the large number of men reported missing after a heavy German attack on the British line at La Bassee on 21 October. Although the Germans failed to break the line, the war diary records 520 other ranks killed, wounded and missing over the two day period 20-21 October, leading to only 300 ORs mustering the following day (22 October). This timing would accord with German PoW Records of a J McDonald 2/South Lancs captured at La Bassee.
Confirming his PoW status, as 8379 Private J McDonald, he was listed as "Previously reported missing, now reported prisoner of war" on the Casualty List issued by the War Office from 29 June 1915.
Whilst a prisoner in Germany, under the aegis of the Regimental Care Committee for Prisoners of War of the South Lancashire Regiment, he was 'adopted' by an individual under an initiative by the Committee which encouraged individuals to sponsor prisoners; sponsors would then take on the responsibility of paying for gifts for ’their’ prisoners. His 'adopter', known in most of the transcribed records as 'B.', may be Lady Burghclere, (Lady Winifred Anne Henrietta Christiana Herbert, daughter of the 4th Earl of Carnarvon and wife of 1st Baron Burghclere, former President of the Board of Agriculture) who is expressly referenced in one record. The same record also references 3780 [uchtemoor F.B.G, Rownenburg, {unintelligible} c/o] C{a?}mp 5 Hameln on Weser, which are presumably the names of German PoW camps in which he had been held. In October 1917 other records indicate he was at Hameln Hanover and in December 1917 he was at camp 3780 Clausthal Harz.
Finally, on 4 January 1919 he was reported in War Office Daily List No.5763 as a released Prisoner of War from Germany, arrived in England. This gave his Next Of Kin Address as Stockwell, S.W (London).
An Old Contemptible, for his service J T McDonald was entitled to the 1914 Star with clasp and roses (issued January 1920), plus the British War Medal and Victory Medal.

Wednesday, 9 September 2020

VM/TFEM & 2nd award clasp to 639/805308/731732 Sgt F J Heath 22nd North Midland Brigade RFA

VM & TFEM with 2nd award clasp and Oddfellows medal to Sgt F J Heath, North Midland Brigade, RFA


Frederick John Heath was born in Tunstall, Staffordshire, in the registration district of Wolstanton,
 on 5 April 1886 to William, a farm labourer from Newcastle-under-Lyme, and Annie. He married Lilian Shone at St Mary's Church, Tunstall on 20 September 1908, Rev. G.B. Bardsley officiating. The couple had two children, William Lewis and Albert and 1911 saw them living in Tunstall with Lilian's parents, Ellis and Lucetta. Frederick was a potter's dishmaker and Lilian and potter's transferrer. 
Under the regimental number 639, Frederick enlisted in the Territorial Force on 2 March 1910 for a four year period, joining the North Midland Brigade Ammunition Column at the Artillery Drill Hall, Victoria Square, Shelton, Staffordshire on 2 July. Within a year (by 12 June 1911) he had been promoted to Bombardier and on July 1912 to Corporal, attending annual camps at Morecambe, Aberystwyth and Pembrey. He re-engaged for a further year on 1 July 1914 and was embodied for service on 5 August, upon war breaking out, in what later became the 1/2nd North Midland Brigade Ammunition Column. 
As 639 Sgt F J Heath of the 2nd North Midland Brigade Ammunition Column, he took the Imperial Service Obligation on 29 November 1914, whilst the brigade was at Bishop's Stortford. He proceeded overseas on 26 February 1915, as part of the Divisional Artillery of the North Midland Division (later the 46th (North Midland) Division, the first Territorial formation to go overseas as a complete formation. The division first served in the Ypres sector, at Hooge (for the German 'Liquid fire' attack) and Hill 60, and then at Loos and the Hohenzollern Redoubt. During this time then-Sgt Heath chose to revert to the ranks on 4 June 1915, whilst his brigade was at Dranoutre. Subsequently the brigade was in the Armentieres and Arras sectors before travelling South to the Somme. On 22 May 1916 Gnr Heath was transferred from the Ammunition Column to the brigade's 'B' Battery (formerly No.2 Battery, headquartered at Stoke) on the occasion of the merger of the former Brigade Ammunition Columns into the Divisional Ammunition Column. On 1 July 1916 the brigade was engaged in preparation and wire cutting (up to 1000 rounds per hundred per day) in support of the costly diversionary attack at Gommecourt. Gnr Heath was promoted to Bombardier some time (November?) in 1916, to Corporal once again on 30 January 1917, still whilst with B Battery, 231st Brigade, and then Sergeant again on 4 July. The Brigade during this period remained in the Somme sector and was engaged in the operations on the Ancre and various local operations leading up to the German retreat to the Hindenburg Line. In the meantime, Heath re-engaged for a further four year period, in the field, on 11 April 1916, and qualified for his £15 re-enlistment bounty whilst still serving with B/231 in April the following year.

Subsequently, on the renumbering of the Territorial Force artillery, he received the new regimental number 805308. The Brigade went north again and was engaged in action at Bethune during the Battle of the Lys, part of the German offensive 'Operation Georgette'. Whilst with B/231 Sgt Heath was attached to XI Corps Rest Camp for one week from 12 to 19 July 1918 and had two week's furlough to the UK 24 October to 7 November the same year. 1918 saw  the brigade engage in the Battle of the St Quentin Canal and the various stages of the Hundred Days Offensive including the Battles of the Beauvoir Line, Cambrai 1918, the Selle, and the Sambre.

Leaving the strength of B/231 Brigade and returning to the UK on 18/19 February, he passed through No.3 Dispersal Unit, Clipstone around 21 February 1919, on his way toward demobilisation. At the time he gave his address for pay as 1 Davenport Street, Tunstall, Staffordshire. Whilst awaiting discharge in March 1919 his name has been put forward for the Territorial  Force Efficiency Medal. He was formally 'discharged on demobilisation' on 31 March 1920 having achieved 9 years 273 days' service.
For his service he was entitled to the 1914-15 Star, and British War Medal and Victory Medal named 639 SJT F J HEATH RA. He also received the Territorial Force Efficiency Medal, named 805308 SJT F HEATH RFA, awarded in May 1919 (he had written to enquire after the award of the medal on 30 April).

The Territorial Force Efficiency Medal was awarded to non-commissioned officers and men for a minimum of 12 years service in the Territorial Force, providing they attended 12 annual training camps. Previous service in other part-time forces including the Volunteer Force could count, while war service counted double. 

He re-enlisted on 20/21 September 1920 for a further three years,  receiving his new number 731732, and being appointed to the 2nd North Midland Brigade, RFA. At this time his employment was noted again as 'dish maker'. He then enlisted again for a further year in September 1923 at Shelton whilst serving as Battery Sergeant Major with 242nd (North Staffordshire) Battery, 61st (North Midland) Brigade, Royal Field Artillery. In between times, he joined the Independent Order of Oddfellows - Manchester Unity, as witness his medallion, dated 2 March 1925. He continued to sign on with the Territorial Army for further engagements regularly, until at least 1934, when a special case was made to DAA & QMG of 46th North Midland Division to secure his retention for a further year, completing fifteen years' service. His second award clasp for the TFEM/Efficiency Medal has been verified as awarded in May 1933, by which  time he was a Warrant Officer, Class 2. He was finally discharged on 20 September 1935 and is found on the 1939 census still at his wartime address 10 Davenport Street with Lilian, employed as a potter's dishmaker.

Subsequently, his son Albert served in the Second World War, with the Army Catering Corps attached Royal Artiller, as 1685079. He died in Italy on 13 June 1944 and is buried at the Bari War Cemetery.

Frederick died, two years after his wife, in Staffordshire in 1964.

Tuesday, 18 August 2020

1914/15 Star and Victory Medal 13715 Pte H Perkins, Essex Regiment, HLI, MGC, possibly wounded in action 1 July 1916, Montauban


13715 WW1 1914/15 STAR MEDAL AND VICTORY MEDAL PERKINS ESSEX REG
Harry Perkins from Upton Park served with the 10th Essex, 18th (Eastern) Division, under the regimental number 13715. Like 13718 Pte William George Lewis Napper (a carman from Islington, only 3 service numbers away, 10th then 11th battalion) he probably enlisted on or around 7 or 8 September 1914 at Finsbury or City Road barracks.
He went overseas on 25 July 1915. At some point he was appointed to the rank of Lance Corporal. The 10th battalion attacked south west of Montauban on the Somme on 1 July 1916, suffering 30 men killed in action and 156 wounded. Pte Perkins appeared on War Office Daily List 28/07/1916 (suggesting a wounded in action date between 1 and 4 July 1916), in the same list as (3/)2037 Lance Corporal Bernard Parry, 2nd Essex and 18969 Pte Clement Peacock, 9th Essex (wounded in action on 1 July and 3 July 1916, respectively). After a presumed period of recovery, he then transferred to a Territorial Battalion of the Highland Light Infantry - probably, like 282505 Pte Albert Maisey, the 2/7th (Blythswood City of Glasgow) Battalion, Highland Light Infantry (as 282507). Going overseas once again some time presumably after March 1917 and the Territorial  Force infantry renumbering, he featured again as wounded on War Office daily list No.5567 for 16/05/1918, suggesting he was wounded some time in the course of the German Spring offensive. His HLI battalion is not recorded but was probably the 18th, like 33217 Pte R Andrew and 36375 Pte D Brown (wounded 26 and 28 March 1918 respectively and both on the same casualty list as Pte Perkins). Pte Perkins was subsequently transferred again, this time to the Machine Gun Corps (149404) - transferring some time before 30 May 1918, probably like 149393 Pte Percy Orgles, 58th Battalion MGC, around 28 May 1918.

He was finally discharged to the Army 'Z' Reserve on 11 May 1919.

Partially erased 1914-15 Star attributed to Pte E W Lawrence, 3rd London Rgt, wounded in action at Gallipoli

Partially erased 1914-15 Star attributed to Pte E W Lawrence, 3rd London Rgt, wounded in  action at Gallipoli

Impressed:

237[9]

Pte [E].W. L[A]W□□□CE


3-[L][O][N]□ R.

Possibly 2379 Pte E.W. LAWRENCE 3-LON R.
Edwin William Lawrence was born about 1895 in Paddington, Middlesex. He enlisted on 3 September 1914 aged 19 years 6 months. He was a clerk in civil life. He gave as his next of kin his father, also Edwin W, of 28 Alperton Street  Paddington. Edwin the younger served with the 2/3rd Battalion the London Regiment. First sent to Malta in December 1914 to relieve the 1/3rd Battalion in garrison there (where the opportunity was taken to train the recruits), he served in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan as part of the Khartoum garrison between about 15 April 1915 and 13 September 1915

He  then went to Gallipoli via Port Sudan, Port Said and Mudros, leaving around 15 September, landing at Suvla Bay to join the campaign on 26 September. The battalion was attached to the Regulars of 86th Brigade in 29th Division and assigned to 'C' section of the 'Dublin Castle' sector of the line. The battalion spent the next two months holding the trenches, losing half its strength in the process, Pte Lawrence amongst them. He received a severe gun shot wound to both feet on 15 October at Gallipoli and, after admission to 15th General Hospital, was invalided home to England via the Hospital Ship 'Asturias' on the 29th. Pte Lawrence was discharged due to wounds, under paragraph 392(xvi) of King's Regulations*, on 16 August 1916 and was entitled to the Silver War Badge, number 89735. A pension record ledger entry subsequently gave him addresses in Birmingham and at Holly House Newtown near Hyde, Manchester.

*No longer physically fit for war service

Friday, 31 July 2020

WW1 Victory Medal to 43405 PTE.M.MARTIN.DURH.L.I., killed in action 31 July 1917, the Battle of Pilckem Ridge, Third Battle of Ypres

WW1 Victory Medal to 43405 PTE.M.MARTIN.DURH.L.I., killed in action 31 July 1917, the Battle of Pilckem Ridge, Third Battle of Ypres 
Matthew Martin was born in Kyo, County Durham circa 1892. By 1911 he was living with his grandmother, uncle and younger sister at 12 Towneley Street,  Stanley and was employed as a bottler in a mineral water factory. Matthew attested his willingness to serve at Stanley, County Durham on 9 December 1915. He was aged 24 at the time and was resident at 1 Towneley Street, Stanley where he worked as a coal miner (screener) for the South Derwent Coal Company, one of around 60 above-ground staff. His next of kin was officially given as his grandmother, Ann Robson (same address), later changed to his sister, Madeline Robson Martin. He was posted to the Army Reserve the following day (10 December) and spent approximately six months on the Reserve before being called up and appointed to the Durham Light Infantry by the recruiting officer of the 68th Recruiting District on 26/27 June 1916.

Pte Martin was posted first to the 3/9th DLI in June and then on 1 September 1916, following the absorption of the 3/9th and the three other third line battalions of the DLI into a new 5th (Reserve) Battalion, transferred to the new battalion, where he trained with 'A' Company. It was at this period that he presumably discarded his former regimental number 4689[?] and received the new number 8319. At some point he made an allotment out of his pay to his grandmother of three shillings and sixpence, to a total, including Separation Allowance, of thirteen shillings weekly.
Pte Martin was sent overseas on 25 October 1916 via Folkestone, disembarking at Boulogne the following day. After a fortnight at No.35 Infantry Base Depot, he was posted to the 13th Battalion, Durham Light Infantry (68th Brigade , 23rd Division) on 10 November 1916, joining them in the field on the 13th, most probably as part of a draft of 70 men recorded in the battalion history. This is presumably when he received his new regimental number in the Regular sequence, 43405. At the time the 68th Brigade was out of the line, the 13th DLI being in Winnipeg camp, south west of Vlamertinghe. After participating on classes of instruction and enjoying some time off for inter-compant football matches, Pte Martin's first experience in the line probably followed three days later, from 16 to 20 November 1916. He then wintered with the battalion in the Ypres Salient, undergoing the usual pattern of working parties in and out of the line and patrols, wiring and improvements whilst in it, broken by the usual Christmas festivities. By mid-February of 1917, when the brigade was again in rest, he had developed a skin infection to the shoulder and right leg that caused him to pass via 69th Field Ambulance and 23rd Divisional Rest Station to 13th General Hospital, Boulogne and thence by ship to England. He returned home on 28 February 1917, diagnosed with an inflammation of the connective tissue (skin infection) which took him to 4th Northern General Hospital at Lincoln for 50 days' treatment for ulcers on the right leg. After a period on the strength of the DLI depot at Fenham Barracks, he was posted to the 3rd (Reserve) Battalion on 1 May and went overseas again on 11 June 1917.

Upon arrival again at 35th Infantry Base  Depot he was posted to the 20th Battalion (Wearside), Durham Light Infantry, although he did not join them in the field until early the following month, 2 July. He served in the 10th platoon of C Company, under Captain Moreton Hand.  At this time the battalion was out of the lines at Mont des Cats, having recently taken part in  the Battle of Messines. The battalion history comments that of his draft, 234 Other Ranks, nearly all had been out with the BEF before. The battalion spent the next several weeks in intensive training and practice attacks for the forthcoming offensive, interspersed with inspections, sports and other competitions and parades, including an inspection of the new men by Brigadier-General CWE Gordon, GOC 123rd Brigade, in which Pte Martin would have taken part.

At this time, preparations for a further major attack at Ypres, designed to take the pressure off the French after the failed Nivelle Offensive and wear down and cut the supply lines of the German 4th Army opposite, were coming to a conclusion. In the assault, General Gough's British Fifth Army was tasked with securing Pilckem Ridge, the only high ground to the north east of Ypres, supported by the French First Army on the left and on the right by the British Second Army. In the attack the 41st Division, X Corps would advance either side of the Ypres-Comines Canal, with the 123rd Infantry Brigade on the north bank, 20th Durham Light Infantry on the left of the brigade attack.
The Brigade started moving up for the attack on 25 July and Pte Martin would have gone with 'C' Company into a line of advanced posts later that day, the companies rotating through the various posts whilst they waited for the postponed attack to take place. On the 29th the attack was back on for 3.50am on the 31st and the white tapes at which the battalion would assemble for the assault were laid. Here the rum ration went around - "three or four times if you wanted it", Pte George Thompson, another soldier of 'C' Company recalled - and the battalion prepared itself to go over the top. 

Attacking south of Klein Zillebeke, on the extreme left flank of Second Army's attack, towards the German-held line (the 'Red line') at Imperfect Trench, the battalion's objective was reached and passed, the battalion digging-in on the Blue Line and holding on to it in the face of counter-attacks until relieved after nightfall on 1 August. However, machine gun fire from concealed concrete pill boxes with interlocking arcs of fire, together with shell fire brought down by the enemy's S.O.S. rockets, caused the battalion over 430 casualties, Pte Martin amongst them. The battalion history reports that a group of C Company men under the Company Commander, Captain Hand, pushed on but was cut off and never seen again and it is possible that Pte Martin, if he did not fall in the initial assault, was one of this group.
In total, the attack, although taking the Pilckem Ridge, Bellewaarde Ridge and German observation posts on Gheluveld Plateau together with 5,000 prisoners, cost circa 32,000 casualties in the course of three days, in the face of unseasonal heavy rain, mud, a robust German defence and persistent counter-attacks.

Reported missing in the War Office daily casualty list No. 5365 of 15 September 1917, Pte Martin's death was presumed on or since 31 July 1917. His sister Madeline of Towneley Steet, Stanley, County Durham caused enquiries to be put in hand with the International Committee of the Red Cross, enquiries which finally received a negative reply on 15 June 1918. There was also an exchange with the War Office during the period. His financial effects of £1 7 4 and War Gratuity of £4 were released to Madeline in August 1918 and November 1919 respectively, whilst his grandmother Ann was granted a pension of 5/- a week from 26 March 1918.
For his service he was entitled to the British War Medal and Victory Medal, memorial plaque and scroll. 
Pte Martin, his body never having been identified, is commemorated at Bay 36H of the Menin Gate Memorial: 

"Here are recorded names of officers and men who fell in the Ypres Salient but to whom the fortune of war denied the known and honoured burial given to their comrades in death".

Saturday, 25 July 2020

30078 Pte T Beynon, 11th South Wales Borderers and 2nd Entrenching Battalion, killed in action at Merville, 11 April 1918

30078 Pte T Beynon,  South Wales Borderers 
Thomas Beynon was born to Thomas and Annie Beynon, both formerly of Breconshire, in Abercynon around 1893-94 (possibly the second quarter of 1893). Thomas the elder, apparently a bit of a rogue, had accumulated two convictions for drunkeness and three for non-payment of debt by late 1896. In the prison records he was described as a labourer, and in his probate record as a 'hitcher' (Hitcher 1894: a) Person putting waggons into the cage or b) Chief attendant at pit bottom). By 1901 the family, less Thomas the elder who had died in 1898, was living in Capcoch/Abercwmboi, Aberdare. In 1911 Thomas the younger was living at 19 Jenkin Street, Abercwmboi with his paternal grandfather, also Thomas,  mother Annie and three sisters, Mary Rebecca, Rose Ann and Jane. His mother worked from home as a confectioner whilst Thomas worked on his own account as a butcher. At some point, presumably after this, he married Mary Catherine, with whom he had a son, also Thomas, born on 10 August 1917.

Thomas Beynon is recorded as enlisting at Mountain Ash and may have spent some time in the Army Reserve before being called up. He served with the 11th Battalion, South Wales Borderers (2nd Gwent), being posted, via infantry base depot, to join them some time probably in mid-1917. He would have potentially served with the battalion at Third Ypres when, as part of the 115th Brigade of the 38th Division, it was in follow-up to the attacking brigades on 31 July 1917 during the Battle of Pilckem Ridge, leapfrogging over them once they had breached the Green Line and proceeding to attack and take the Steenbeck on Messines Ridge, pushing forward to Au Bon Gite, facing Langemarck. The battalion was finally withdrawn on 5 August,  having suffered 330 casualties,  killed, wounded and missing, returning to the line later in the month to take part in the Battle of Langemarck. 

From mid-September to December 1917 the battalion was in the line at Armentieres, working on the line, undertaking much patrolling and wiring and helping train troops of the 4th Regiment, Portuguese Expeditionary Corps.  The battalion then spent January resting and training prior to its disbandment.

After the battalion's disbandment on 10 February 1918, Pte Beynon served with the bulk of the battalion in a composite unit under the title of the 2nd Entrenching Battalion.

Entrenching battalions formed in effect holding units, which could keep men usefully employed on defensive works whilst they awaited posting to fighting units under control of the parent formation as gaps arose through wastage and battle casualties. Entrenching battalions were under Army or Corps (rather than divisional) control and were not intended for deployment closer to the front than the Rearward zone, although this appears to have been disregarded once the German Spring Offensive began. 

The 2nd Entrenching Battalion was set up at Doulieu under the aegis of the First Army Group of Entrenching Battalions (HQ at Bray) and was under the control of XV Corps. It contained troops from disbanded battalions of a range of units as well as the South Wales Borderers, including East Surreys, King's Liverpool, South Lancashires, Middlesex and Royal Fusiliers. The battalion did not accompany the 38th Division to the Somme, but remained at Merville, at this time a billeting and hospital centre, lying roughly between Hazebrouck, Bailleul, Estaires, and Bethune. They were employed working on rear lines of defence in the La Bassee-Armentieres area in anticipation of the German Spring Offensive. When the Battle of the Lys commenced, the battalion took part in the defence of Merville on 11/12 April 1918, during which time the Germans forced their way into and took the town. The action is described in Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig's Sixth Despatch as follows:
“The Fall of Merville.

(56) On the morning of the 11th April the enemy recommenced his attacks on the whole front, and again made progress. Between Givenchy and the Lawe River the successful resistance of the past two days was maintained against repeated assaults. Between Locon and Estaires the enemy, on the previous evening, had established a footing on the west bank of the river in the neighbourhood of Fosse. In this area and northwards to Lestrem he continued to push westwards, despite the vigorous resistance of our troops. At Estaires, the troops of the 5th Division, tired and reduced in numbers by the exceptionally heavy fighting of the previous three weeks and threatened on their right flank by the enemy’s advance south of the Lys, were heavily engaged. After holding their positions with great gallantry during the morning, they were slowly pressed back in the direction of Merville. The enemy employed large forces on this front in close formation, and the losses inflicted by our rifle and machine-gun fire were unusually heavy. Our own troops, however, were not in sufficient numbers to hold up his advance, and as they fell back and their front gradually extended, gaps formed in the line. Through these gaps bodies of German infantry worked their way forward, and at 6 p.m. had reached Neuf Berquin. Other parties of the enemy pushed on along the north bank of the Lys Canal and entered Merville. As it did not appear possible to clear the town without fresh forces, which were not yet available, it was decided to withdraw behind the small stream which runs just west of the town. This withdrawal was successfully carried out during the evening."

It is likely that it was in the defence of Merville that Pte Beynon was killed, being recorded as presumed dead on or since 11 April 1918. He was aged 25, and is commemorated on the Ploegsteert Memorial along with thirteen of his fellows. His effects, including a War Gratuity of £5, were split between his sister, Mary and his widow, who also received a pension of 20/5 a week, effective from 16 December 1918 for their son, Thomas. By this time the whole family was living at  19 Jenkins Street, Abercwmboi.

Saturday, 30 May 2020

British War and Victory Medals Private J. E. Robinson, 1/8th Durham Light Infantry (6216 Pte. J. E. Robinson. Durh. L.I.), killed in action 5 November 1916

Private J. E. Robinson, Durham Light Infantry British War and Victory Medals (6216 Pte. J. E. Robinson. Durh. L.I.) 

6216 Private James Edward Robinson, from Finsbury was born circa 1880, to Henry James Robinson (a packing case maker) and his wife Henrietta. James Edward was a goldsmith and jeweller in civilian life. He had three brothers and three sisters. He attested his willingness to serve at Woolwich on 7 December 1915, aged 35 years 4 months, and was posted to the Army Section B Reserve the following day. Whilst on Reserve he married Rose Eleanor Robinson (née Smith) in the  Parish church of St-John-at-Hackney, London on 20 February 1916. By March he was a 'badged' worker, doing essential war work at the Royal Ordnance Factory, Woolwich, and living at 18, Ironmonger's Street, EC. For this reason his first call-up notice appears to have been withdrawn at the request of the Royal Ordnance Factories. However, on 9 June he was called up again. Reporting to the Central London Recruiting Depot Whitehall, he was medically examined and enlisted into the King's Royal Rifle Corps under the number R/26442, subsequently being posted to the KRRC depot at Winchester, and to the 24th (Reserve) battalion. Pursuant to the establishment of the Training Reserve, this battalion was aborbed into the 21st Reserve Brigade with effect from 1 September 1916. Accordingly, on 31 August, Pte Robinson was posted to 'A' Company, 88th Training Reserve Battalion (formerly the 19th (Reserve) Bn, the West Yorkshire Regiment), also part of the 21st Reserve Brigade, under the new regimental number TR/5/7[2]795. Save for one instance of overstating his pass, his conduct sheet was clean.

Pte Robinson's records show that he was posted overseas on 6 October 1916, to 35 Infantry Base Depot, presumably intended as a reinforcement for the 20th Durham Light Infantry. In the event, however, he was reposted to the 1/8th Durham Light Infantry, 151st Brigade, 50th (Northumbrian) Division on 20 October, possibly whilst still in base depot and potentially therefore without having spent any time with the 20th. The same day he was allotted the regimental number number 6216 (posthumously 301833). 

This would have put him in line to have taken part in the 151st Brigade's attack on the Butte de Warlencourt (Warlencourt-Eaucourt Knoll), part of the Battle of the Ancre. The Butte, a white chalk mound close to the side of the Albert to Bapaume Road, offered very good views for the Germans and had been heavily mined, wired and fortified to form a formidable defensive position. As Roland Boys Bradford VC of the 9th DLI noted "The Butte itself would have been of little use to us for the purposes of observation. But the Butte de Warlencourt had become an obsession. Everybody wanted it. It loomed large in the minds of the soldiers in the forward area and they attributed many of their misfortunes to it. So it had to be taken." (Quoted in 'The Somme 1916 : The Strip of Murdered Nature')
The following account describes the attack in more detail:

"5 November

The 50th Division relieved the 9th Division from 24–25 October, in rain which had begun on 23 October and stopped around 3:00 p.m.the next day. The division took over the line east and south-east of Le Sars in the angle of the Martinpuich–Warlencourt, Eaucourt l'Abbaye and Martinpuich–Le Barque roads. The front line in Snag Trench was irregular and isolated posts on the left flank were joined, to make a continuous line. The German front line was still in Gird Trench and Gird Support Trench behind the butte. A British attack on 26 October, was postponed for two days and then postponed until 30 October, as preparations continued and trenches were repaired. Swampy conditions in no man's land were so bad, that no attack could take place until the ground dried. On 28 October, the ground had recovered slightly and the attack was scheduled for 1 November but then another downpour began in the night, followed by warmer weather, rain and gales from 30–31 October and the attack was again delayed, eventually being set for 9:10 a.m. on 5 November. The 149th Brigade and the 150th Brigade holding the line had become so exhausted that the 151st Brigade was moved up from reserve for the attack.

The 151st Brigade was to attack Gird Trench and Gird Support Trench, with the 1/8th, 1/6th and 1/9th battalions Durham Light Infantry (DLI); the 1/4th and 1/6th battalions Northumberland Fusiliers were attached from the 149th Brigade in support. The DLI battalions were to assemble in Snag and Snag Support trenches, Maxwell Trench and Tail Trench. As the 1/6th and 1/8th DLI took the Gird trenches, the 1/9th DLI was to capture the butte and the adjacent quarry and the Northumberland battalions were to support the attack from the flanks and the 1/5th Border Regiment was to stay in reserve in Prue and Starfish trenches; parts of the divisional machine-gun and trench mortar companies were to accompany the attack and a creeping barrage was to begin 200 yd (180 m) in front of the jumping-off line. Rain and high winds began again on night of 4/5 November and the attacking infantry floundered in mud, which was thigh-deep in places, as they advanced to the jumping-off points and several men drowned. The rain abated towards dawn, with the prospect of a fine cold day but the effect of the storm and a German counter-bombardment could be seen.

At zero hour the creeping bombardment began and infantry crawled out of their trenches, the first men pulling the following troops over the parapet. The British began to follow the creeping barrage, a moderate German counter-barrage fell short of Snag Trench and massed machine-gun fire began from the flanks, causing many casualties as the British troops struggled through the mud at walking-pace. The remaining men of the 1/8th DLI got close to Butte Trench, where they were also hit by British artillery and Stokes mortar fire and then retired to Snag Trench, leaving wounded and stragglers in shell-holes. On the right flank, a supporting Australian attack failed when the Australian artillery barrage fell behind the front line and a machine-gun barrage was so inaccurate that bullets hit the DLI trenches. In the centre the 1/6th DLI was held up on the right and on the left managed to overrun Gird Trench and form a strong point. The attack of the 1/9th DLI on the left flank, took the quarry, overran the butte and established a machine-gun position, advanced to Gird Trench and dug in on the Albert–Bapaume road. By noon, the 1/6th DLI were held up in Maxwell Trench and the 1/9th DLI had consolidated at the quarry, Gird Trench, Gird Support Trench and Butte Alley.

At 3:00 p.m., German counter-attacks began on the Gird Trenches and fighting in the butte continued for a strong point on the north side. By 3:00 p.m. the British had been forced back from Gird Trench and by 7:15 p.m. the Germans had advanced to Butte Alley and reinforcements were requested to recapture Gird Trench. At 12:20 a.m. (6 November) the 1/9th and 1/6th DLI were driven back to Maxwell Trench by converging attacks from the flanks and a frontal attack, which also overran the butte, where the German garrison emerged and joined in the counter-attack. German troops managed to get behind the quarry and by 1:00 p.m. on 6 November the British were back to their start line in Snag, Maxwell and Tail trenches. Another attack was ordered but cancelled later. The attacking battalions lost 967 men and other casualties made a total of c. 1,000 losses. RFC aircraft flew in support of the Fourth Army attacks, despite high winds and a contact-patrol crew flew for ​3 3⁄4 hours to observe the attack on the butte, reporting its capture and then loss to German counter-attacks.

On 5 November, the 1st Guard Reserve Division had been relieving the 24th Division and Infantry Regiment 179 recorded that the British "swarmed" over the butte and reached the Warlencourt trenches. During the battle, German artillery also managed to fire on both sides and parts of I Battalion, Infantry Regiment 179, I Battalion, Infantry Regiment 139 and I Battalion, Guard Reserve Regiment 1 conducted the converging attack at 10:50 p.m. On the British right flank, Guard Grenadier Regiment 5 and Guard Reserve Regiment 93 of the 4th Guard Division engaged the British. Early on 6 November, 73 soldiers stranded in no man's land surrendered to Infantry Regiment 179." (Source: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attacks_on_the_Butte_de_Warlencourt)
Although the Butte and part of Gird Trench (Gallwitz Riegel) by the Butte (1/6th DLI's objective), was partially secured, a failure to consolidate the position meant that 1/6th and 1/8th DLI had to withdraw, leaving 1/9th 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. Having been first listed as 'Missing' on the War Office Casualty List of 25/12/1916, with effect from December 1917 Pte Robinson's death was presumed on or after 5 November 1916, having occurred at some point during the 151st Brigade's unsuccessful attack on the Butte de Warlencourt. He was possibly one of the stragglers or wounded left in no-man's land after the abortive attack on Butte Trench. His effects went to his widow, Rose, as did a weekly pension of 13/9 from 16 July 1917. Subsequently Rose appears to have emigrated to Australia, from where she wrote in July 1921 asking for information about her deceased husband, whose letters and identify disc had been sent to her in clean condition just prior to her leaving England. She took this as an indication  that his body had been found; unfortunately the response to her query, although preserved, sheds no light.
For his service Pte Robinson was entitled to the British War Medal and Victory Medal. Having no known grave,  he is commemorated on the Thiepval Memorial.


Illustration: D/DLI 7/920/10(5) Drawing by Captain Robert Mauchlen of soldiers attacking the Butte de Warlencourt

Friday, 29 May 2020

Seeking Silver War Badge number 26004, Ernest Rumsey, Suffolk Regiment

I am searching for Silver War Badge number 26004, to Ernest Rumsey, Suffolk Regiment, listed on Facebook about 3 1/2 years ago. Please let me know if you have it and are willing to sell.

Tuesday, 28 April 2020

(T) 765, R.E. (T) 1472 and 402929 Sapper James A Clark, 2nd Highland Field Company, Royal Engineers

(T) 765, R.E. (T) 1472 and 402929 Sapper James A Clark, 2nd Highland Field Company, Royal Engineers
James A Clark was probably a native of Aberdeen, judging by his Territorial unit affiliation and his 1918 next of kin address (as found on his daily casualty list entry). A pre-war Territorial, he probably joined some time between the end of April 1914 and beginning of August. Judging by his 1917 service number, he was most probably a member of the 2nd Highland Field Company. He was almost certainly a serving member of the Territorial Force on the outbreak of war and as such, only obliged to undertake home defence. To address the manpower needs of the British Expeditionary Force, men of the Territorial Force were invited to volunteer for active service overseas ('the Imperial Service Obligation'). From the evidence of his Territorial Force War Medal entitlement Sapper Clark clearly accepted the Imperial Service Obligation. However, unlike many of his comrades he was almost certainly not sent overseas in 1914 and 1915, but rather in 1916 or afterwards.

During this time, he was possibly on the strength of those elements of the three Highland Field Companies which stayed with the newly-formed Home Service second-line Division, the 64th (2nd Highland) Division, in the UK when other elements went to France in 1915.

The first line Highland Field Company (1/2nd) went to France via Le Havre on 3 May 1915 and by June 1917 had been renumbered as the 401st. Having previously served with 7th Division it joined the 51st (Highland) Division on 31 January 1916 and remained with them for the rest of the war. The service history of the second line (2/2nd) Company was very similar. 

Until joining the first or second line company on active service, Sapper Clark was possibly with 3/2nd Highland Field Company (later 405th Field Company) or 4/2nd Highland Field Company, both home service units. With them he may have been on the training staff, an orderly or an administrator. His service with them would have taken him to Blair Atholl, Perth and Scone, Perth, then Alyth, Dundee and Coupar (winter quarters) and finally Norwich, Taverham, North Walsham and Kelling before a major restructure and withdrawal of second-line units took place in 1917.

Possibly, like 571/1446/402903 Sapper Alfred Webster, he went overseas in October 1916, joining his Company in November. Certainly the fact that he went overseas with his four-digit service number would indicate that his posting overseas took place before February 1917, when the Territorial RE was renumbered. Similarly, his later 6-digit service number indicates that, when he received it, he was on the strength of one of the various 'lines' of the 2nd Highland Field Company. 
Assuming Spr Clark was not posted elsewhere on his arrival in France (as was the case of some of his comrades with close service numbers), he would have joined either 1/2nd Highland/401st (Alfred Webster's Unit) or 2/2nd Highland/404th Field Companies. These companies principally served with 51st  (Highland) Division on the Western Front. 

With them, his service would have included, if he joined them early enough in 1916, service with the Division in support of the division's successful assault on Beaumont Hamel on 13 November during the closing (Battle of the Ancre) stage of the Battle of the Somme. One exploit of the 404th (then 2/2nd) Field Company during this period was the overnight digging (alongside one company of the 8th Royal Scots, the divisional Pioneer battalion) of New Munich Trench, enabling it to be garrisoned before dawn. For their service on the Somme, both Field Companies were awarded the unofficial RE battle honour "Ancre '16".

Service in 1917 would have included the Battles of Arras (battle honours "1st Scarpe '17" and "2nd  Scarpe '17"). The Field Companies were the first elements of the division to travel down to the Arras sector in January 1917 and it was in the preparatory period for the Battle of Arras that 402903 Alfred Webster was wounded by gassing (from a gas shell) whilst with the 401st Company. The RE also distinguished themselves, at this time, by running a pontoon ferry service from Fampoux via Athies to Blangy for conveying ammunition up the river Scarpe to battery positions in the Scarpe valley, and bringing back the wounded, to take some pressure off the RAMC. 

Subsequently the companies also served at Third Ypres (20-25 September 1917, for which they received the battle honour "Menin Road"), and Cambrai.
After this year of heavy fighting,  the Division was sent to the South and took over a poorly-placed and sited section of the front line in the Lechelle area, opposite the Hindenburg Line. To help remedy this situation, General Harper, the General Officer Commanding,  laid down principles for the construction of a new defensive system, and each of the Field Companies was given a particular sector of the line, with the responsibility for maintaining and developing the defences devolved to the infantry under the Sappers' direction. As such, the Field Companies were heavily engaged throughout the winter and early spring of 1918. For their good work, all ranks and arms were congratulated by General Byng, GOC 3rd Army. In addition, the Royal Engineers were also employed in salving buildings in the rear sector for use by a wide range of Divisional amenities including hot bathhouses for officers and men, Divisional canteens, both retail and wholesale, at which battalion canteens could purchase their stock; wet canteens, a fresh fish, vegetable and egg store, a picture palace, a Divisional theatre, a Divisional soda-water factory, a rest camp for officers and men, and hot soup kitchens.

In 1918 the companies were caught up in the German Spring Offensive, receiving the battle honour "St Quentin '18" amongst others. During this critical period, both companies took an active part in repelling the German attacks. The 51st Division was in the line at the eastern edge of the Artois plateau when the German attack fell on 21 March 1918, with 152nd Brigade holding the central section. The attack was heralded by a severe four-hour bombardment which interrupted all communications within the first quarter of an hour. Once the Germans had gained a foothold in the British line, companies between the Bapaume — Cambrai road and the Louverval valley were forced back into Boursies. Here the divisional artillery came into play, and men of the 401st Field Company were involved with units of 152nd Brigade in holding a wired communications trench, specially sited as a switch line, which played a crucial role in delaying the enemy's advance through Boursies. Dvr. G. S. Copland, of 404th Field Coy. Royal Engineers, who died of wounds 22nd March 1918, aged 24, was most probably wounded in this action. Also an Aberdeen man, he was the eldest of three brothers who fell in the Great War, one - 402132 Cpl C. Copland - who died 8th Sept, 1917, aged 22 with the 404th's sister company, the 401st Field Coy, Royal Engineers at Ypres.  Elements of both Field Companies continued to be engaged throughout the following days, as the fighting retreat continued, fighting alongside both 152nd and 153rd brigades and also subsequently during the Battle of the Lys, to which sector the division had, ironically, been sent for a rest.
Sapper Clark appears on the War Office daily casualty list for 7 July 1918, suggesting a wounding date of early June 1918.

Depending upon the severity of his wound, Sapper Clark may have been back on duty in time to serve during the Hundred days' offensive, when the 404th Company took a prominent part in the Battle of the Selle, bridge building alongside the 400th company, which had been with the 51st Division throughout the war. Here, at Noyelles, the 404th Company brought up its Weldon trestles and pontoons by waggon under accurate rifle and machine gun fire but nonetheless managed to put in place a bridge by 3.45am, only eight hours after Infantry patrols had reached the bank. 
The Divisional Engineers did much good work in throwing both light and heavy bridges over the rivers encountered during the advance, for example over the river Ecaillon at Thiant in October 1918. Here, finding that two fifteen-foot decks could just span the crossing, engineers of the 404th Field Coy under Lt E F Smith constructed the bridge from standard parts in eighteen and a half minutes under heavy shell fire. The division finished the war in rest in the Cambrai-Iwuy area on 11 November 1918.

It is not clear when Sapper Clark was demobilised but assuming he was with the 51st Division, it is likely that it was between December  1918 and March 1919. This would have been part of the division's reduction to a cadre prior to reformation in Scotland as part of the new Territorial Army. 

Sapper Clark's Territorial Force War Medal was  issued to him on 19 April 1922 and he clearly had received his British War and Victory medals by 1924 as in this year they were returned, apparently for adjustment (usually of name or number), and reissued on 16 June 1924.

Sunday, 26 April 2020

Pte George Henry Jordan, 1st & 2nd Battalions, East Surrey Regiment, Western Front and Salonika

Pte George Henry Jordan, 1st & 2nd Battalions, East Surrey Regiment

George Henry Jordan was attested as a militia man for six years in the 4th Battalion, The East Surrey Regiment on 6th May 1902. His age was given as 18 years 11 months at the time, suggesting that he was born circa May 1883 (although it appears that he overstated his age by over a year on his application, having actually been born in June/July 1884). Born in St Pancras to George and Mary-Ann Jordan (née Wood), he resided at 12 Chapter Road, Kensington and was employed there as a Porter.  His regimental number was 2824. 
He transferred out of the 4th battalion on 1 September 1902, presumably into one of the Regular battalions. This date is corroborated by his Discharge Certificate (made out to L-7478 George Henry Jordan (Army Form B.2079)), thus helping to link-up the two regimental numbers. Although his date of discharge to the Reserve is not known, his subsequently employment history would suggest it must have been before January of 1906, thus giving him a maximum of around three and a half years with the Colours.
He subsequently took up employment at Haileybury College as a dormitory servant and lived at Hertford Heath in Hertfordshire
 Here he met his wife-to-be, Susannah, in 1906. She worked in the kitchens whilst he worked in the dormitories - although initially he was employed as a Dining Hall waiter, being taken on aged 21 in January 1906. By the summer of that year he had been promoted to Lawrence Dormitory, which also carried with it an increase in pay. Their first two children,  George Henry (1909-1974) and William Thomas Dudley (1911-1978) were born during this period, with George Henry and Susannah marrying at St Luke's, Bermondsey, on 24 January 1909. They had a further son, Thomas, in 1913.
By 1914 George Henry the elder was a Reservist, being recalled to the Colours and posted to the 1st Battalion of the East Surrey  Regiment, then in Dublin, some time before early September that year, and most probably in early August. The 1st East Surrey War Diary for August 1914 comments on the number of '3 year men' who were first to join the battalion from the Reserve, and who therefore needed extra training. In particular it mentions a draft of 402 Reservists who arrived from the depot on 6 August and were at once put to instruction regarding fitting equipment and Fire Discipline. The diary observes "About half these men had left the Colours as long as 6 and 8 years, many having only done 3 years with the colours." It is possible that George Henry - who had probably been in the Army Reserve for nearly 8 years when mobilised - was one of these men, which could also explain why he was sent out as a later draft to the battalion rather than proceeding overseas on 15/16 August. (For context, the war diary for 7 August notes that a further draft of 242 Reservists arrived from Depot that day: "Most of these men having left the Colours more recently were better trained and as far as possible replaced the 3 years men posted to Crs.[Companies?] the previous day."). George Henry was noted amongst the college servants absent on military service in 'The Haileyburian", No. 440 Vol XX of October 15, 1914.
George Henry entered the France theatre of war on 4 September 1914, part of a reinforcement draft to the 1st East Surreys, 14th Brigade - then with the 5th Division. Judging by an entry in the battalion war dairy with reference to Landing Returns, this was possibly the 3rd Reinforcement, via St Nazaire. On this date the battalion had just come off the long, hot retreat towards Paris, having served as a rearguard at Crepy on 1 September, bivouacking on successive days at Nanteuil, Montge (within sight of Paris) and Bouleurs on the 4th, from whence it was sent at 11pm to march on Villeneuve and then on the 5th and 6th to provide outposts for the 5th Division about Tournan and Le Plessis, after which the division was ordered to resume the offensive. The following day, the 7th, Captain J K Whish and 98 other ranks joined the battalion, and it is possible (albeit unlikely, as their disembarkation date was given as 24 August) that George Henry was one of these. 
Depending upon exactly when his draft joined the battalion on the field, he served possibly at the Battle of the Marne and Pursuit to the Aisne in September 1914 and Battle of La Bassée in October. If he was one of the draft joining on 7 September he would have been in action the very next day, during the Battle of the Marne, when the 14th Brigade was ordered to attack through a wood and across a small river valley the village of Chateau-St-Ouen. The battalion, 'cheered [as the war diary recounts] by the Comdg Officer's promise that today they would have the chance to get at their opponent with the bayonet', fired with good effect from the top of the ridge overlooking the valley on a squadron of cavalry and retreating infantry and was in the process of 'thickening the firing line' when British artillery started to fire along the line of the ridge, forcing the battalion to withdraw, 'robbed of its anticipated fruits of the days operations'. Captain Whish was amongst the day's casualties. Further bitter fighting took place along the line of the river Marne on the 9th, heavy casualties (20 other ranks killed and 95 other ranks and six officers wounded) being caused by German artillery and rifle fire. On the 10th the battalion moved towards St Quentin to bivouack and a further draft of two officers (Lts Macfarlane and Booth of the 3rd Battalion) and 191 men joined. By the 13th the battalion had reached the Aisne opposite St Marguerite, via San Remy and Chacrise. Here they joined the Battle of the Aisne, crossing and advancing across the valley on St Marguerite under shrapnel fire and taking it before passing through the wooded spur above, in preparation for an attack on the wooded spur above Missy the following day. Here the battalion encountered a wired defensive position (consisting of a high wire paling and a barbed wire entanglement around the edge of the wood) and although the makeshift implements found in the village enabled the leading companies to make openings through the entanglements, the attack was held up by enemy fire on the grass track passing up through the wood and subsequently the battalion was pulled back. 'C' Company took part in this attack.
The following days were spent holding the line at Missy, improving and increasing the defence (such as loopholing walls and houses) and, as the War Diary says 'improving sanitary conditions of our surroundings' under rain, sniping and shelling. By the 21st the severity of the shelling was such that houses including the HQ were completely destroyed and a machine gun blown thirty yards out from its emplacement and buried in debris. The battalion finally moved out of Missy after dark on the 23rd September, a further 201 other ranks and two officers joining the battalion the following day; it seems quite likely that George Henry was one of this draft, which would have reached St Nazaire between 2 and 4 September. The 25th and 26th were spent in billets at Jury refitting and receiving congratulations from the divisional and corps commanders for the battalion's good work.
The beginning of October saw the battalion heading up towards La Bassée, a trying journey much of which was undertaken on foot; the war diary mentions in particular the night march covering the 18 miles from Longpont to Fresnoy for its impact on the last batch of Reservist reinforcements - George Henry possibly amongst them. The battalion finally arrived on the west bank of the La Bassée Canal at 4pm on 11 October, where 'A' and 'B' companies entrenched covering the canal, with 'C' and 'D' in close support in billets. The war diary singles out the numbers of French troops encountered and observed "we were all much struck with the swarms of refugees we met coming from the North of France and over the Belgian frontier". 
On 12 October the battalion took part in the Battle of La Bassée, advancing to one mile west of Richebourg l'Avoue where they encountered advancing Germans, knocking out three of their machine guns and preventing their recovery. The battalion pushed as far forward as possible and entrenched. Fighting continued early the following morning and  the Germans were rapidly pushed back with the loss of men and materiel, at the cost of 4 officers and 42 other ranks casualties. 'C' and 'D' Companies held the front line, being relieved by 'A' and 'B' the following evening, a relief which was interrupted by strong enemy fire and made more difficult by the slippery nature of the ground after rain. The relief was finally completed after daybreak on the 15th and further advances with some fighting took place on 16 and 17 October, taking the battalion to Lorgies and subsequently into Brigade Reserve. This respite was brief as they went into the line again, south of Lorgies, on 21 October in relief of the 2nd Manchesters, at which point the situation on their left was described as critical. On the 22nd the battalion, although under heavy shell fire, materially assisted in breaking up an attack on the King's Own Scottish Borderers on their right for the loss of one machine gun, and, displaying a fine grasp of priorities, saw two men leave the trench under fire to milk a stray cow. Casualties for the day were 1 officer and 4 men killed, and 7 wounded. The 23rd saw the 14th Brigade conform to a II Corps withdrawal to a rear position, 'C' Company being one of three in the firing line resisting an enemy attack in the afternoon of the 23rd and then again on the 24th. The following days were marked by extended shelling by heavy guns, culminating in an attack at 5.30pm on the 28th, during which the enemy got within 100 yards of the battalion's position, and a further attack after nightfall on 29 October. The same day, preparations were made to relieve the battalion with the 2/39th Gharwalis and the war diary noted "The battalion had now completed 19 days in the firing line and in the closest proximity to the enemy by day and night, especially during the last ten days in the trenches. News of a temporary rest was therefore most welcome to all ranks". The battalion also received congratulation from its outgoing and incoming divisional commanders, Lt General Ferguson commenting "No regiment has done better, and in none have I ever had more confidence." The battalion was finally relieved at 5.30am on the 30th, and after some misadventures and further casualties from shelling just as it arrived at its billets, by 6pm finally settled at La Couture.
The beginning of November saw the battalion moving towards the Ypres salient, encountering some men of the 2nd East Surreys, currently on detachment with the Meerut Division, on the way. On 4 November 1914 the 1st Battalion went into billets at Laventie, supporting the fire trenches of the Lahore Division, and took further reinforcements, mainly Special Reservists, prior to going into the line proper two miles south east of Laventie on the evening of 6 November. Save for an attempted attack on the night of the 7th, firing in support of operations on the 10th and the issue of a double rum ration on the cold, wintry night of the 11-12th, the next few days were relatively quiet, the battalion being relieved and marching to Estaires and then Meteren on the night and morning of the 14th-15th.
On 16 November after a brief rest arranged by the Brigadier in consideration of the tired state of the men, the battalion went into the line east of Lindenhoek, in the southern part of the Ypres salient, facing Messines. The battalion was taking over from the 153rd Regiment of the 39th French Division. The war diary observes "The discussion [with the commander of the 153rd Regiment]  of the details of the relief took rather a long time as we found it difficult at times to keep our Allies to the point they being so ready to give reasons for everything rather than a direct reply. The relief itself was delayed as the French guides were not altogether sure of their way to the Company trenches, but the Adjutant of the Battalion we relieved was most helpful, himself guiding some of the platoons up."
Describing the lie of the land, it stated that "The German trenches were from 50 to 150 yards from the French and generally on a higher level ; the approach too to the trenches was over a very open bit of ground and next to no communicating trenches which made the relief more difficult." One man was wounded during the relief. 17 November was a wet day with much enemy shelling of the support trenches, claiming 16 men wounded and two dead. The day of the 18th turned cold, with a sharp frost and some snow before the day brightened. There was further shelling around the reserve and support trenches and it is probably during this that George Henry, at this time with 'C' Company, was wounded, one of 605 casualties suffered by the battalion over thirteen weeks' fighting. This was clear evidence that he had been under fire by German guns in the qualifying period and thus made him an 'Old Contemptible' and so entitled to wear the coveted Aug-Nov 1914 clasp on his 1914 Star.
He appears in the records of the 14th Field Ambulance, being admitted on 18 November 1914, suffering from a bullet wound to the left shoulder (described in a much later news article as "shot through the chest' - in later years the children of the family would put their fingers into his shoulder wound as a party trick.) (The casualty list in the war diary gives his date of wounding as the 19th, however this appears to be an error given the date in the Field Ambulance records). From 14th Field Ambulance he was transferred - possibly the following day - to a motor ambulance,  presumably for onward evacuation to a base hospital. He appears accordingly in the official War Office Daily casualty List for 14 December 1914, as well as in the casualty lists carried in the Surrey Comet for 9 and 12 December, in connection with the articles "E.S.R. Casualties. Kingston and Teddington Men Killed in Action" and "East Surrey Losses. A Casualty from Frost Bite".
His wife later recalled that her first notification of his wounding was when she read in a paper of his death, before receiving a letter from him indicating that he was at a hospital in Kent (possibly indicating that he was at a prior hospital to that in Poole mentioned below). This is amplified by the December 21, 1914 edition of 'The Haileyburian', (p598), which notes ‘Jordan, the Lawrence Dormitory servant is back from the Front.  E.P. Belben [Old Haileyburian] told me he had had a Haileybury talk with him in the hospital at Poole.'
A letter exists from the college dated Christmas 1914 which would seem to indicate that he was on active service, or most probably still in the abovementioned hospital. This would have accompanied some gifts from the college and its members. In the February 11, 1915 edition of 'The Haileyburian' (p.618), it notes that for Christmas ‘25 boxes were sent to the serving College servants, containing a plum pudding, a “College cake”, tobacco, cigarettes and chocolates from the Masters, and a khaki-bound New Testament from their fellow servants.’ 
The fact that he is not mentioned in the East Surrey Regiment 1st Battalion part II orders 1915-18 suggests that he did not return to the battalion upon his recovery from being wounded. Instead, at some point he was posted to the 2nd Battalion. This most probably took place some time in 1915, on his recovery from the abovementioned wound, and after a period on the books of the 3rd (Reserve) or 4th (Extra Reserve) Battalions. His fourth son, James Herbert Ernest was born in October 1915, suggesting that George Henry was at home on furlough in January of that year. 
The 2nd Battalion served in France and Flanders and in the Salonika theatre. The battalion first entered a theatre of war (the France and Flanders theatre) as part of the 85th Brigade of 28th Division, on 19 January 1915. By the end of the first week in February it went into the line at Ypres, losing over 200 men killed, wounded and missing in its first major offensive action on 14 February, and then fighting in the Battles of Grafenstafel Ridge, St Julien, Frezenberg Ridge and Bellewaarde Lake, suffering heavy casualties. It is possible that George Henry was present for these  actions, possibly being part of a draft of 330 men which arrived when the battalion was in billets at Locre on 1 March, although equally he may have been part of the reinforcing party which enabled the battalion to fight once again at Loos, Hohenzollern Redoubt in September 1915 (a VC action for the battalion). 
By late October 1915 the battalion was travelling south for embarkation to Egypt and then Mudros en route to Salonika, where it arrived on 1 December. Here, in the Salonika theatre, it engaged in the digging of trench works (redoubts, support and communications trenches) and wiring (the infamous 'birdcage' of Salonika), as well as defending the line and fighting off disease such as Malarial Fever. A draft of 100 men joined in mid-January 1916 whilst the battalion was at Baldza, and it is possible that George Henry was part of that. The battalion dug and wired more or less constantly from January to April 1916 - suffering its first casualties when a bombstore at Lembet was destroyed on 27 March - occasionally interrupted by 'divisional treks', until it took up Garrison duties at Besch Chinar Gardens at the end of May.
Subsequently it moved to a new divisional area in June, replacing the French in outposts at Lozista on 16 June. The war diary observed that "the ground to the North and North East very swampy and marshy; Mosquitos swarming"; subsequently, the battalion moved to Kurfali on the 25th, where some suspected cases of Malaria were under observation: all ranks were treated with quinine the following day. Perhaps unsurprisingly, Malaria reached epidemic proportions in late June/early July 1916, with 18 officers and 454 other ranks on the sick list compared to 12 officers and 278 other ranks fit for duty. The following extract from 'The History of the East Surrey Regiment', p 141 and 203, courtesy of Ken James, Great War Forum, illustrates: "Several fresh cases of malarial fever occurred each day, the disease assuming epidemic form by the 29th June, in spite of wholesale quinine treatment which had been started on the 26th."  p203 continues: "The epidemic of fever which had declared itself in the Battalion at Kurfali, on the Struma front, at the end of June, 1916, rapidly assumed alarming proportions. Work continued as usual on the 1st July, but on the 2nd and following days all ranks were detained in bivouac in an attempt to localize and check the disease. On the 4th 9 officers and 42 men were admitted to hospital, 2 officers and 94 men on the 5th, on which day a shade temperature of 112° is recorded in the War Diary. On the 6th and 7th another officer and 88 men went to hospital, and one man died. Several medical officers visited the Battalion's bivouac and pronounced its sanitary arrangements perfect. The epidemic was attributed to the tour of duty at Lozista. On July 8th the Battalion marched westwards across the Krusha Balkan to Hamzali, en route to Paprat. The march over steep hills and rough roads was executed with great difficulty, the transport being disorganized through sickness; 47 men were admitted to hospital.
The Battalion continued its march at 5 a.m. on the 9th, and reached Paprat at 8.20 a.m. One officer and 34 men were admitted to hospital this day; and on the 10th, when the Battalion was "at rest," 1 officer and 64 men were admitted. Two men died this day. On July 11th, 22 men were admitted to hospital, bringing total sick to date to 18 officers and 454 other ranks. The strength of the Battalion fit for duty was 12 officers and 278 other ranks. Every
possible sanitary precaution had been taken, and it was now hoped that the turning-point had been reached; but for the time being the Battalion was ren­dered unserviceable, a condition shared by many other units of the Army." It was not until the 31st that the battalion could resume partial duty.
It was possibly at this point that George Henry caught the Malaria which was endemic in the theatre, affecting his health for a long time after the war.  
By this time the battalion was holding outposts at Paprat overlooking the Struma Valley, extending to a five mile front from 1 October onwards. In this month the battalion commenced the practice of putting out patrols over the Struma River towards Bursuk, until it moved to Haznatar in early November when it commenced patrolling towards Alipsa, which place it subsequently took. The routine consisted of work on the trenches and breastworks, dealing with the wet ground (Alipsa being on the banks of the Struma and, due the river overflowing, partially submerged), patrolling and occasional shelling from the Bulgarian artillery. Routines for cooperating with the Artillery were also worked out.
The beginning of 1917 saw a similar routine, until mid-January when the battalion, flooded out of Alipsa and Haznatar by the Struma overflowing its banks, was forced to withdraw all save 50 men to Ormanli for several days whilst the water subsided. The battalion was involved in a feint attack at the town of Barakli Dzuma (to which they had been sent in February) on 2 March 1917, the Bulgarians apparently countering with a feint of their own on the 17th. The battalion was finally withdrawn, after 5 months in the trenches, to Orljak on 3 April, returning on the 15th. May saw the battalion provide a 'demonstration' (bringing rifle and machine gun fire to bear on selected enemy positions) to support the successful attack on Essex and Ferdie trenches, and in June it took part in the general withdrawal to the Struma hills, leaving the valley bottom to the cavalry. July saw it in Paprat again for training and in August it moved to Inozeli/Sal Grec de Popovo in the Snevce area to establish a new line and then to Yardemli, followed by Turbes in September. The battalion continued to raid and patrol (for example to Nevoljen and, in the hope of catching Bulgarian patrols, Cuculuk) whilst in the line as well as setting up for bridgehead defence (the 85th Brigade's line in late September being the River Struma, with the 2nd East Surreys defending Cuckoo Bridge, one of two in the 85th Brigade line). A similar pattern applied into December, one notable incident being when 'B' Company had to go out to fetch the body of an RFC pilot and his Vickers guns and other machinery when shot down north of Jenekoj. At this time the battalion was working on an outpost line (the A.W.Line) which took in Nevoljen and Jenekoj, later extended to an A.X.Line, near Orljak. In January and February 1918 the battalion extended its patrolling further and March saw it in the Dova Tepe sector, pushing on towards Dova Tepe Fort, salving the Greek guns from the fort and then demolishing it before withdrawing at the beginning of June. July saw the battalion on Sal Grec Avance, apparently experimenting with land mine warfare in locations such as Rabovo Ridge, New Hill path, Frog Spur, Pin Hill track and York Redoubt. Much registration of various weaponry on targets in the enemy territory opposite took place during the month and through into August, alongside frequent patrolling and training for the attack using ball ammunition and rifle- and hand-grenades. September then saw the battalion advancing its positions to The Patch and Popovo Peak, sending out reconnoitring patrols, and providing covering and working parties before the attack on Doiran on 18 September, in which the battalion moved forward behind the Cretan division and held the line at Henry Point and then the following day forward to Akindzali. The battalion subsequently took part in the pursuit of the retreating Bulgarian Army, gaining touch with the enemy at 6pm on the 25th by Dzumaa Obasi, coming under machine gun fire and pressing the advance covered by artillery.
After the Armistice on 30 October, which found them back at Dzuma Obasi, north of Lake Doiran, the battalion proceeded to Turkey on 12 November and was engaged in disarming the Turkish forts at Rumeli Kavak on the European side of the Bosphorus, as well as sending a detachment to Constantinople to shut down the German and Austrian banks and leave British controllers in place. 
For its service in the Salonika theatre the battalion was awarded the battle honours "Struma", "Doiran 1918" and "Macedonia 1915-1918".
At some point during his service, George Henry was appointed Lance Corporal. He also earned qualifications as mounted infantry and as a saddler,  as well as the red service chevron indicating active service with the original BEF. 
George Henry's Aug-Nov 1914 clasp to the 1914 Star was issued on 19 February 1920. He was finally discharged from the Army on 31 March 1920 - probably after a year of civilian life on the strength of the Army 'Z' Reserve - having served 7 years 283 days with the Colours and 9 years 295 days with the Army Reserve. His character was given as 'Very Good' and he was described as honest,  sober and industrious. His fifth child, Susie Lillian (1920-1970) was born in March 1920, with Amy Francis following in November 1922.
Returning to the college, in the 1939 census he is noted as an Old Contemptible. He subsequently completed nearly 50 years of service with the college. George Henry Jordan died at the Herts & Essex General Hospital, Bishops Stortford on 2 April 1968, aged 83.