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Exploring the Military Service of Joseph Chidwick

Joseph Thomas Chidwick, born in Dover in 1887, served as a Private in the 2nd Battalion of the South Lancashire Regiment during World War I. He died in France on 22 March 1918 during the German Spring Offensive and is commemorated on the Pozières Memorial, reflecting the fate of many lost servicemen.

Joseph Thomas Chidwick: A Detailed Biography

Private Joseph Thomas Chidwick, no. 32046, 2nd Battalion, Prince of Wales’s Volunteers (South Lancashire Regiment), was born at Dover, Kent, in early 1887 and was killed in action in France on 22 March 1918. [1][2][3] He is commemorated on the Pozières Memorial to the Missing of the Somme and also remembered in online databases dedicated to First World War casualties. [1][4][3]


Early Life and Family

Joseph Thomas Chidwick was born in Dover, Kent, before 27 April 1887, his birth registered in the Dover registration district (volume 2A, page 1003, line 226). [1] He was the son of Francis Thomas Chidwick and his wife Mary Ann, née Marsh, and was baptised at St John Mariner, Dover, on 27 April 1887, confirming his family’s ties to that parish and to the town’s maritime community. [1]

By the 1891 census Joseph was living at Hougham, Kent, recorded as a four‑year‑old son in his parents’ household. [1] This rural parish just outside Dover suggests a childhood spent between town and country, typical of working families whose livelihoods were connected to both agricultural and urban employment. [1]


Early Life and Family (Work and Home)

In the 1901 census Joseph appears back in Dover at 130 Clarendon Place, aged 14, still living as a son in the parental home and working as an under gardener, probably in domestic service or on a local estate. [1] By the 1911 census he is at 9 Montrose Cottages, Manor Road, Maxton, Dover, his occupation given as carter, indicating experience with horse‑drawn transport and local delivery work. [1]

By 1915 Joseph, then aged about 28, was recorded at 31 Kitchener Road, Dover, as head of household (“self”), still rooted firmly in the town where he had been born and raised. [1][4] A later service‑record abstract from the Dover War Memorial Project confirms this address and describes him as a carman, underlining his status as a skilled working‑class man employed in transport before joining the Army. [4]


Military Service

During the First World War Joseph served in the Prince of Wales’s Volunteers (South Lancashire Regiment), the county regiment which recruited mainly from South Lancashire but also absorbed men from other parts of Britain as the war progressed. [1][5] His specific unit is given as the 2nd Battalion, South Lancashire Regiment, and his rank as Private, with the regimental number 32046, placing him among the wartime drafts that reinforced the regular battalion on the Western Front. [1][3]

The 2nd Battalion South Lancashire Regiment was a regular battalion which went to France in August 1914 and served continuously on the Western Front. [6][7] Sources describing the regiment’s Great War service show that by early 1918 the battalion was engaged in front‑line duty in France and Belgium and was caught up in the German Spring Offensive launched on 21 March 1918, a massive assault along the Somme front. [6][8] Contemporary and later summaries of the battalion and associated units note heavy casualties during this period, with fighting and withdrawals through places such as Lagnicourt, Albert and other villages east of the old Somme battlefields. [9][10][7]


Circumstances of Death

Joseph’s individual report gives his date of death as 22 March 1918, in France, with no specific battlefield named. [1] On that date the German Spring Offensive (Operation “Michael”) was in its second day, with British units forced into rapid retreat, suffering large numbers of killed, wounded and missing as they attempted to hold rearguard positions and delay the enemy advance. [10][8] A modern roll of casualties for 22 March 1918 lists “Private 32046 JOSEPH THOMAS CHIDWICK, South Lancashire Regiment” among the fallen of that day, confirming his death in action. [2]

Other sources relating to the 2nd Battalion South Lancashire Regiment and to men killed or taken prisoner on 22 March 1918 suggest that the battalion was engaged in defensive and delaying actions in the battle zone around the Somme sector, though detailed battalion‑level war diaries for that exact day are not cited in the brief secondary summaries available. [9][7] The fact that Joseph has no known grave and is commemorated on the Pozières Memorial indicates that his body was either not recovered or could not be identified after the fighting, a common fate in the chaos of the March 1918 retreat. [1][3]


Burial and Commemoration

Joseph has no known grave and is therefore commemorated by name on the Pozières Memorial, which honours more than 14,000 British and South African servicemen who died on the Somme between 21 March and 7 August 1918 and have no known burial. [1][3] His entry in the Commonwealth War Graves Commission database records him as “Private JOSEPH THOMAS CHIDWICK, 32046, 2nd Bn., South Lancashire Regiment, who died on 22 March 1918, France, commemorated on the Pozières Memorial”, confirming the unit and date of death. [1]

An associated memorial entry on Find a Grave (Memorial ID 16081789) also preserves his details, ensuring continued online remembrance. [1] The Dover War Memorial Project includes him under reference “13582 – Chidwick Joseph Thomas – South Lancashire Regiment” with details of his pre‑war trade as a carman and home address at 31 Kitchener Road, Dover, linking the name on a distant battlefield memorial back to a specific street and community in his home town. [4]


Legacy

Within his extended family Joseph is linked to the wider Chidwick and Marsh family lines via his FamilySearch profile (ID GM54‑CN2). [1] Online remembrance projects such as the Imperial War Museums’ “Lives of the First World War” identify him as “Joseph Thomas Chidwick, born 1887, died 1918, British Army 32046 Private, South Lancashire Regiment”, ensuring that his service and sacrifice are documented in national as well as local memory. [11][12]

The combination of civil records, census entries and military memorials paints a picture of a Dover‑born working man whose life followed a typical late‑Victorian and Edwardian pattern until interrupted by global war. [1][4] His death on 22 March 1918, at the height of the German Spring Offensive, and his commemoration on the Pozières Memorial, place him among the many whose individual graves were lost in the fluid and violent fighting of 1918 but whose names endure on stone and in digital records. [1][2][3]


Key External Links

Sources
[1] Individual-Report-for-Joseph-Thomas-Chidwick.pdf
[2] Today’s Fallen Heroes Friday 22 March 1918 (4242) – Scribd https://www.scribd.com/document/372944297/Today-s-Fallen-Heroes-Friday-22-March-1918-4242
[3] South Lancashire Regiment – First World War Casualties https://astreetnearyou.org/regiment/251/South-Lancashire-Regiment
[4] Notes on Service Records – THE DOVER WAR MEMORIAL PROJECT http://doverwarmemorialproject.org.uk/Casualties/WWI/Service%20Notes/ChidwickJ.htm
[5] South Lancashire Regiment – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Lancashire_Regiment
[6] The Prince of Wales’s Volunteers (South Lancashire Regiment) https://www.longlongtrail.co.uk/army/regiments-and-corps/the-british-infantry-regiments-of-1914-1918/the-prince-of-waless-volunteers-south-lancashire-regiment/
[7] South Lancashire Regiment – Men on the Gates https://menonthegates.org.uk/maf_army/south-lancashire-regiment/
[8] South Lancashire Regiment https://vickersmg.blog/in-use/british-service/the-british-army/south-lancashire-regiment/
[9] The Plumb brothers from Antrobus, Cheshire – Great War Forum https://www.greatwarforum.org/topic/299675-the-plumb-brothers-from-antrobus-cheshire/?do=findComment&comment=3143832
[10] British Entrenching Battalions of 1918 – The Long, Long Trail https://www.longlongtrail.co.uk/army/regiments-and-corps/the-british-infantry-regiments-of-1914-1918/british-entrenching-battalions-of-1918/
[11] Search for “Chidwick” in lastname | Lives of the First World War https://livesofthefirstworldwar.iwm.org.uk/searchlives/field/lastname/Chidwick/filter
[12] Search for “South Lancashire Regiment” in unit | Lives of the First … https://livesofthefirstworldwar.iwm.org.uk/searchlives/field/unit/South%20Lancashire%20Regiment/filter/?page=162
[13] THE HEROIC ACTIONS OF PRIVATE JACK COUNTER In the month … https://www.facebook.com/JerseyHeritage/posts/the-heroic-actions-of-private-jack-counter-in-the-month-of-remembrance-our-lates/1264712125696019/
[14] South Lancashire Regiment | Death and Service https://deathandservice.co.uk/category/regiment/south-lancashire-regiment/
[15] [PDF] Personal History He was living at Stalybridge, Cheshire when he … https://mlfhs.uk/images/wm-biogs/966-49.pdf
[16] REGIMENTS IN THE GREAT WAR | Lancashire Infantry Museum https://www.lancashireinfantrymuseum.org.uk/regiments-great-war
[17] Private R Taylor South Lancashire Regiment. Died Friday 22 March … https://astreetnearyou.org/person/254946/Private–Taylor
[18] My father’s elder brother, James Algernon joined the army on the 20 … https://www.facebook.com/groups/lancashireinfantrymuseum/posts/10158068594584910/
[19] 1/5th Battalion, http://www.prescot-rollofhonour.info/Documents/SLR_1-5Bn_WarDiaryV3.pdf
[20] 20654 Private Thomas Price, S. Lancashire Regiment – UBIQUE https://www.reubique.com/20654.htm
[21] 201805.pdf https://www.westernfrontassociation.com/media/5558/201805.pdf

The Tragic Story of Raymond Douglas Castle, H.M.S. Exeter

Raymond Douglas Castle, born on August 5, 1920, in Folkestone, served as an Able Seaman on H.M.S. Exeter. Captured after its sinking in the Java Sea, he died from dysentery on March 22, 1945, while imprisoned in Makassar. He is commemorated at Ambon War Cemetery, ensuring his legacy endures.

Raymond Douglas Castle: A Detailed Biography

Able Seaman Raymond Douglas Castle, P/JX.236193, Royal Navy, of H.M.S. Exeter, was born on 5 August 1920 in Folkestone, Kent, and died of bacillary dysentery while a prisoner of war at Makassar, Celebes (Sulawesi), on 22 March 1945. [1] He is buried in Ambon War Cemetery, Maluku, Indonesia, where he is commemorated by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, and remembered as the devoted son of Albert Douglas West Castle and Daisy Victoria Castle of Elham, Kent. [1][2][3]


Early Life and Family

Raymond Douglas Castle was born on 5 August 1920 at Folkestone, Kent, his birth registered in the September quarter of 1920 in the Elham registration district (volume 02A, page 2401). [1] He was the eldest son of Albert Douglas West Castle, a builder and contractor, and his wife Daisy Victoria, née Simpson, placing him in a family with strong local roots and clear social standing in Folkestone and later Elham. [1]

By 1921 the family had connections to Portsmouth, Hampshire, where the infant Raymond appears as a visitor at 34 Monmouth Road, North End, Portsmouth, aged ten months, in the 1921 census; the property is noted as uninhabited, but Raymond is recorded as a visitor, with both parents alive and resident in the Portsmouth parliamentary division. [1] This early movement between Folkestone and Portsmouth reflects both his father’s working life and the family’s wider network, with an early link to naval ports that would later be echoed in Raymond’s own career. [1]

Raymond’s childhood was principally rooted in Folkestone. On 8 February 1930 he is associated with “Folkestone Hythe Sandgate”, and by 1939 the Register records him at 8 Cherry Garden Lane, Folkestone, Kent. [1] A 1930 local newspaper item lists “Raymond D. Castle” among contributors of farthings to the L.L.K. cot at the Royal Victoria Hospital, showing his participation in local charitable efforts from a young age. [1] The family’s standing in the town is highlighted by the fact that his grandparents were the Mayor and Mayoress of Folkestone (Alderman and Mrs A. Castle), making him the “Mayor’s grandson” in contemporary press coverage. [1]


Early Life and Family (Education and Work)

Raymond received a good grammar-school education at the Harvey Grammar School, Folkestone, a well‑regarded local institution that prepared boys for professional and technical careers. [1] After leaving school he took up employment with the Folkestone Electricity Company, working under Mr Arthur Mills, suggesting an aptitude for technical or engineering work that would have been valuable in the modernising infrastructure of the inter‑war period. [1]

A 1942 press notice describes him as the eldest son of Mr and Mrs Douglas Castle of Cherry Garden Lane, Folkestone, and reiterates his status as grandson of the Mayor and Mayoress, underlining his family’s civic prominence. [1] The same notice records that his father, Douglas Castle, had himself served in the Royal Navy during the First World War, offering a clear family tradition of naval service that likely influenced Raymond’s own decision to volunteer for the Royal Navy. [1]


Military Service

Raymond volunteered for the Royal Navy at the age of 19, around 1939, and undertook his initial naval training at H.M.S. Collingwood, a well‑known shore establishment used as a training base for seamen and communications ratings. [1] He was allotted the service number P/JX.236193 (often rendered as P/JX 236193) in the Portsmouth division, and was rated Able Seaman (A.B.), placing him among the trained seamen of the fleet. [1]

After training, Raymond served for a time in Icelandic waters before being posted to the heavy cruiser H.M.S. Exeter (pennant number 68), a York‑class cruiser already famous for her role in the Battle of the River Plate in December 1939, when she helped drive the German pocket battleship Admiral Graf Spee to scuttle at Montevideo. [1][4][5] During 1941 and early 1942 Exeter was employed largely on convoy escort duties and then transferred to the Far East with the American‑British‑Dutch‑Australian (ABDA) forces, as Japan advanced through South‑East Asia and the Netherlands East Indies. [6][3]

On 27 February 1942 Exeter took part in the first Battle of the Java Sea, where she was hit by Japanese shells that crippled her machinery and forced her temporary withdrawal to Surabaya, already with significant casualties among her crew. [6][3] Two days later, on 1 March 1942, still damaged and short of boiler power, Exeter attempted to escape to Ceylon but was intercepted by a superior Japanese force; after a three‑hour action she was further damaged by gunfire and torpedoes and finally abandoned and sunk in the Java Sea. [4][6][3] Of her company, 54 men were killed in the final action and about 651 survivors, including Able Seaman Raymond Castle, were rescued and taken prisoner by the Japanese, many eventually being sent to prisoner‑of‑war camps at Makassar (Macassar) on Celebes (Sulawesi) and other locations in the Netherlands East Indies and Japan. [1][2][7][3]


Military Service (POW Experience and Decorations)

Raymond’s individual report records that from 1 March 1942 he was a prisoner of war in Makassar/Java Sea, indicating capture following the loss of Exeter. [1] Japanese records summarised by later researchers show that the surviving crew of Exeter were first taken via Banjermassen in southern Borneo before being concentrated at Makassar POW Camp, where conditions of malnutrition, forced labour and disease led to further deaths among the prisoners. [2][7][8]

A broader account of Exeter’s survivors notes that approximately a quarter of those taken prisoner died in captivity, many from disease exacerbated by starvation and inadequate medical care. [2][6] Some men from Exeter were later moved to work on projects such as a nickel mine at Poemalla in eastern Celebes and to camps in Japan, but Raymond’s documentation places him consistently at Makassar until his death, suggesting he remained within that camp system. [1][7][8] His medals recorded are the 1939–45 Star and the War Medal 1939–1945, the standard campaign awards for service in the Second World War. [1]


Circumstances of Death

Raymond was officially reported as missing in early 1942, with a local newspaper notice of 21 March 1942 under the heading “Mayor’s Grandson Missing” recording that Able Seaman Raymond Douglas Castle of H.M.S. Exeter, eldest son of Mr and Mrs Douglas Castle of Cherry Garden Lane and grandson of the Mayor and Mayoress, had been posted missing following the Java Sea battles. [1] This reflected the immediate confusion after Exeter’s loss, when the Admiralty could confirm neither the fate of the ship’s company nor their eventual status as prisoners of war. [1][9]

By the end of the war fuller information emerged about the fate of Exeter’s POWs. A post‑war newspaper clipping from The People of 14 October 1945, transcribed in the individual report, states under the heading “DIED IN JAP HANDS” that news had been received by the Mayor and Mayoress of Folkestone that their son, an Able Seaman and survivor of H.M.S. Exeter, had died in Japanese hands the previous March, a reference clearly intended to Raymond though the clipping mis‑names him as “Reginald D. Castle”. [1] Official documentation clarifies that “CASTLE, Raymond Douglas, Official Number P/JX.236193, A.B., R.N., H.M.S. Exeter” died on 22 March 1945 at Makassar, Celebes, from bacillary dysentery while a prisoner of war in Japanese hands, a cause and place of death consistent with known conditions in the Makassar camp where disease and malnutrition were rife. [1][2][7]


Burial and Commemoration

Immediately after death, Raymond’s remains were buried locally under wartime conditions, with documentation citing Makassar War Cemetery, Celebes Island, Netherlands East Indies, as the burial place, where a Schedule “A”, Form H/2 entry records “R. D. Castle, Able Seaman, R.N. P/J.236193, H.M.S. ‘Exeter’, 22nd March 1945”, accompanied by a cross symbol and the family tribute “Always in our thoughts. Mother, Father, Howard and Valerie”. [1] Post‑war, the Imperial (now Commonwealth) War Graves Commission concentrated many scattered graves, and Raymond is now commemorated at Ambon War Cemetery, Maluku, Indonesia, grave reference 28. F. 12, as “CASTLE, A.B. RAYMOND DOUGLAS, P/JX.236193, R.N., H.M.S. Exeter, 22nd March 1945, Son of Albert Douglas Castle and Daisy Victoria Castle, of Elham, Kent.” [1][2]

The text of his headstone is preserved both in CWGC and family‑compiled sources, reading: “R. D. CASTLE, ABLE SEAMAN, R.N. P/J.236193, H.M.S. ‘EXETER’, 22ND MARCH 1945, ALWAYS IN OUR THOUGHTS. MOTHER, FATHER, HOWARD AND VALERIE.” [1] A linked Find a Grave memorial (ID 22742848) also records his details and the location of his grave at Ambon, providing modern researchers and relatives with accessible information and imagery. [1] His name appears within wider rolls of honour connected to H.M.S. Exeter and to the Far East POW community, which collectively commemorate those who died as prisoners of the Japanese between 1942 and 1945. [2][10][11]


Legacy

Raymond’s death had a profound impact on his family and community. Probate was granted in London on 6 July 1946 in respect of “CASTLE Raymond Douglas of The Knoll, Elham, near Canterbury, died 22 March 1945 at Makassar”, with administration to his father, Albert Douglas West Castle, builder and contractor, and his estate valued at £105 0s. 11d., illustrating both his youth and the modest financial circumstances typical of a young man whose adult life had been largely spent in wartime service. [1] The persistence of newspaper references from 1942 and 1945, and the emphasis on his relationship to the Mayor and Mayoress of Folkestone, show how closely his personal story was tied to local civic life and how his loss was felt as both a family bereavement and a communal sacrifice. [1]

Within the wider narrative of H.M.S. Exeter and the Java Sea campaign, Able Seaman Raymond Douglas Castle stands among those whose service extended beyond battle into years of captivity marked by hardship and disease. Modern historical accounts of Exeter’s loss stress that about a quarter of the ship’s survivors died as prisoners, and Raymond’s death from bacillary dysentery at Makassar on 22 March 1945, just months before the end of the war, exemplifies this grim statistic. [1][2][6][7] His grave at Ambon War Cemetery and his records on the Commonwealth War Graves Commission website ensure that his name and sacrifice remain publicly accessible, maintaining his place in the collective memory of the Royal Navy, of Folkestone and Elham, and of all those who suffered as prisoners of war in the Far East. [1][2][3]


Key External Links

Sources
[1] Individual-Report-for-Raymond-Douglas-Castle.pdf
[2] The Sinking of HMS Exeter – Fold3 HQ https://blog.fold3.com/the-sinking-of-the-hms-exeter/
[3] HMS Exeter, British heavy cruiser, WW2 https://www.naval-history.net/xGM-Chrono-06CA-Exeter.htm
[4] HMS Exeter (68) – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Exeter_(68)
[5] Heavy Cruiser Exeter (68) https://ww2db.com/ship_spec.php?ship_id=894
[6] HMS Exeter Battle of the Java Sea and later loss https://www.royalmarineshistory.com/post/hms-exeter-battle-of-the-java-sea-and-later-loss
[7] HMS Exeter (68) – Pacific Wrecks https://pacificwrecks.com/ship/hms/exeter.html
[8] Makassar POW Camp, Celebes http://www.mansell.com/pow_resources/camplists/other/makassar_main.html
[9] HMS Exeter battle and POW summary http://www.mansell.com/pow_resources/camplists/other/makassar_exeter.html
[10] HMS Exeter Roll of Honour – MaritimeQuest https://www.maritimequest.com/warship_directory/great_britain/pages/cruisers/hms_exeter_roll_of_honour.htm
[11] HMS Exeter (68) crew killed in action and missing … – Pacific Wrecks https://pacificwrecks.com/ship/hms/exeter/crew.html
[12] Ajax Crew & Casualties together with Exeter & Achilles River Plate … https://www.hmsajax.org/ajax-crew-casualties
[13] Michael Uniacke died in a Japanese POW Camp in February 1945 … https://www.facebook.com/groups/352758182704021/posts/1292775308702299/
[14] P Died Database – FEPOW Family https://www.fepow.family/Research/Serving_Country/Royal_Navy/HMS_Exeter/html/p_died_database_12.htm
[15] HMS Exeter – Researcher @ Large http://www.researcheratlarge.com/Ships/HMS/Exeter/1942CaptainsAction&LossReport.html
[16] CA 1936 Exeter http://alternateuniversewarships.com/Royal%20Commonwealth%20Navy/CA%201936%20Exeter/CA_1936_Exeter1.htm
[17] Prisoners of War of the Japanese 1942-1945 – POWs-of-japan.net https://www.pows-of-japan.net/articles/68.htm
[18] D 89 HMS Exeter – Royal Navy https://www.seaforces.org/marint/Royal-Navy/Destroyer/D-89-HMS-Exeter.htm
[19] War Memorial – WW2 Names – Colwall Village Society http://www.cvs.colwall.info/Articles/War_Memorial/Remembrance_pdfs/ww2_summary.html
[20] VJ Day: WW2 signed flag is ‘a piece of history’ – BBC News https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gzkn6djjjo
[21] Jan97 https://www.nautinsthk.com/jan97.html

George Skeer: Brabourne’s Decorated War Veteran

Serjeant George Skeer, a decorated NCO in the Royal Garrison Artillery, died on 21 March 1918 during the German Spring Offensive. Born in Kent, he was a rural postman and active church member before re-enlisting in 1914. His bravery earned him several awards, including the Military Medal and Belgian Croix de Guerre. His name is honored on the Pozières Memorial.

George Skeer: A Detailed Biography

Serjeant George Skeer, M.M., Croix de Guerre (Belgium), 280539, 222nd Siege Battery, Royal Garrison Artillery, was a decorated Kentish artillery NCO who died of wounds on 21 March 1918 during the opening day of the German Spring Offensive and is commemorated on the Pozières Memorial, Panel 10. [1][2][3]


Early Life and Family

George Skeer was born in the Bridge registration district of Kent in the final quarter of 1881 and baptised at Harbledown on 30 October 1881, the son of John Skeer and Mary (née Hills). [1] By the 1891 census he was living at Court Lodge Cottage, Lyminge Street, Lyminge, recorded as a scholar, indicating attendance at the local elementary school in this rural Downland parish. [1]

As a young man he left Harbledown and Lyminge in search of work. By April 1909 he was resident in Ashford, then a growing railway town, and on 2 August 1909 he married Lilian West at St Nicholas, Barfrestone, banns having been called there between 11 and 25 July. [1] The couple later settled at “Southside”, Brabourne Lees, near Ashford; in the 1911 census George appears at Egerton Cottage, Brabourne, aged about 29, employed as a rural postman, with Lilian listed as his wife. [1] They had at least two children, Donald George Skeer and Stephanie Joan Skeer, forming a small family that would be deeply affected by the war. [1]


Early Life and Family (Civic and Personal Background)

Before the war George became a well‑known figure locally as the Brabourne rural postman, responsible for delivering mail across country lanes and villages. [1][2] Local ringing records from the Kent County Association of Change Ringers also note his involvement in church life as a bell ringer and sidesman, reflecting a strong connection to parish and community. [1][4]

Within wider family research he is linked under FamilySearch ID KLHN‑4ZW, embedding his story within an extended Kentish family network. [1] This combination of rural employment, church service and family responsibility illustrates the settled civilian life he left behind when he returned to the colours in the First World War. [1][2]


Military Service

George’s military association began well before 1914. The individual report records that he enlisted in the Royal Garrison Artillery in 1900, serving until 1908 as a gunner and later a sergeant under service number 5539. [1] After this initial period of regular service he resumed civilian life as a postman, but retained his skills and experience with heavy guns, which would be invaluable when war came. [1][2]

At the outbreak of the First World War he re‑enlisted in the Royal Garrison Artillery. Posted to France in June 1915, he served continuously on the Western Front until his death in 1918, being renumbered 280539 in line with RGA administrative changes and eventually serving as a serjeant in 222nd Siege Battery. [1][5] Siege batteries operated heavy artillery pieces, such as 6‑inch or 8‑inch howitzers, tasked with counter‑battery fire, destruction of strongpoints and deep bombardment of enemy positions, placing their crews in important but hazardous roles just behind the front line. [1][6][7]


Military Service (Gallantry Decorations)

George’s conduct under fire earned him two high decorations. He was awarded the Military Medal (M.M.), instituted on 25 March 1916 as a level‑3 gallantry award for non‑commissioned officers and men, given for acts of gallantry and devotion to duty under fire that did not reach the threshold of the Distinguished Conduct Medal. [1] His award was announced in the London Gazette, granting him the right to use the post‑nominal letters “M.M.” and marking him out among his peers for bravery in action. [1][4]

In addition, George received the Belgian Croix de Guerre (1st Class), a foreign decoration granted by the King of the Belgians for distinguished bravery in operations connected with Belgian interests. [1] Gazette number 30631 of 15 April 1918 records that “His Majesty the King of the Belgians confirms the award of the ‘Croix de Guerre’” and that the British monarch granted unrestricted permission to wear the decoration, emphasising the international recognition of his gallantry. [1][8][4] He also qualified for the 1914–15 Star, British War Medal, Victory Medal and Memorial Plaque. [1][9]


Circumstances of Death

Serjeant Skeer died of wounds on 21 March 1918 at the age of 36. [1] This date marks the opening of Operation Michael, the first blow of the German Spring Offensive, directed primarily against the British Fifth Army around St Quentin and parts of the Third Army further north. At 04:40 that morning, German artillery launched an enormous five‑hour bombardment over an 80‑kilometre front, firing more than a million shells, including high explosive and gas, in a carefully planned strike against British trenches, batteries and communications. [1][3][10]

Regimental and local accounts note that 222nd Siege Battery was in the St Quentin sector and that, although Serjeant Skeer was officially off duty when the offensive began, he voluntarily joined efforts to reposition his battery’s guns in response to the German advance. [1][2][5] During this hazardous work, carried out under heavy shellfire and amid collapsing communications, he was wounded and later succumbed to his injuries, his death officially recorded as “died of wounds” on 21 March 1918. [1][2][11] The scale and confusion of the fighting meant that his body was not recovered for identified burial. [1]


Burial and Commemoration

Because no known grave exists for George, his name is inscribed on the Pozières Memorial in the Somme region of Picardie, France, where it appears on Panel 10. [1][12] The memorial, maintained by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, commemorates more than 14,000 soldiers of the British and South African forces of the Fifth and Fourth Armies who died between 21 March and 7 August 1918 and have no known grave, many of them casualties of Operation Michael and the subsequent fighting. [1][13]

His CWGC entry reads: “SKEER, GEORGE, Serjeant, 280539, Royal Garrison Artillery, 222nd Siege Battery, died 21 March 1918, aged 36. Son of John and Mary Skeer, of Lyminge, Kent; husband of Lilian Skeer, of ‘Southside’, Brabourne Lees, Ashford, Kent. Military Medal. Croix de Guerre (Belgium).” [1][13] A Find a Grave memorial (ID 16079046) and dedicated biographical page on the Faded Genes website provide further detail on his life and awards, ensuring that researchers and descendants can access his story easily. [1][2][9]


Legacy

George Skeer’s legacy is that of a highly regarded non‑commissioned officer whose life linked quiet village service and exceptional battlefield leadership. As a rural postman and church bell ringer in Brabourne Lees he embodied the dependable core of pre‑war village society; as a serjeant in the Royal Garrison Artillery he became one of the experienced NCOs on whom the effectiveness of Britain’s heavy artillery depended. [1][2][4] His Military Medal and Belgian Croix de Guerre demonstrate that his courage was recognised by both his own country and an Allied nation grateful for his actions.

For his widow Lilian and their children Donald George and Stephanie Joan, his loss on the first day of the Spring Offensive meant a lifetime shaped by absence, despite the pride they could take in his decorations and service. [1][2] Today, through CWGC records, local Kent memorials, bell‑ringers’ rolls of honour and online projects such as “We remember George Skeer” on Lives of the First World War, his name continues to be honoured as that of a Kentish postman turned decorated artillery serjeant who gave his life at a pivotal moment in 1918. [1][4][9]


Key External Links

Sources
[1] Individual-Report-for-George-Skeer.pdf
[2] George SKEER 1881 https://www.fadedgenes.co.uk/GeorgeSKEER.html
[3] Operation Michael https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Michael
[4] World War 1 Records – Kent County Association of Change Ringers https://kcacr.org.uk/association/ww1/
[5] 222nd Siege Battery – what did they do? – Great War Forum https://www.greatwarforum.org/topic/254915-222nd-siege-battery-what-did-they-do/
[6] HMS Exeter (68) – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Exeter_(68)
[7] David Gibbins — Gunner Charles Gerald Cook, Royal Garrison Artillery (183, 93 and 224 Siege Batteries), 1916-19 http://davidgibbins.com/journal/2019/3/12/gunner-charles-gerald-cook-royal-garrison-artillery-183rd-93rd-and-224th-siege-batteries-1916-19
[8] Croix de Guerre – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croix_de_Guerre
[9] We remember George Skeer – Lives of the First World War https://livesofthefirstworldwar.iwm.org.uk/lifestory/4058315
[10] German attack at St Quentin, March 1918 https://www.dublin-fusiliers.com/battaliions/1-batt/campaigns/1918-kaisers.html
[11] Operation Michael, The Thirty Worst and an Advanced Dressing … https://www.westernfrontassociation.com/world-war-i-articles/operation-michael-the-thirty-worst-and-an-advanced-dressing-station/
[12] Pozières British Cemetery & the Pozières Memorial https://thebignote.com/2016/08/03/pozieres-british-cemetery-the-pozieres-memorial/
[13] Pozières Memorial (CWGC) – Remembering the Fallen https://www.ww1cemeteries.com/pozieres-memorial.html
[14] Royal Garrison Artillery – First World War Casualties https://astreetnearyou.org/regiment/161/Royal-Garrison-Artillery
[15] 220th Siege Battery, Royal Garrison Artillery – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/220th_Siege_Battery,_Royal_Garrison_Artillery
[16] May 2012 compressed.pub http://2mnbattery.org/newsletter/2012/May_2012.pdf
[17] Plain Text UTF-8 https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/51776/pg51776.txt
[18] Battle Honour ST QUENTIN – German Spring Offensive 1918. https://www.royal-irish.com/events/battle-honour-st-quentin-german-spring-offensive-1918
[19] Full text of “”The cannoneer.” Recollections of service in the Army of the Potomac” https://archive.org/stream/cannoneerthe00buelrich/cannoneerthe00buelrich_djvu.txt
[20] List of recipients of the Croix de Guerre – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_recipients_of_the_Croix_de_Guerre
[21] Acta Militaria http://nelsonlambert.blogspot.com/2011/07/
[22] Battle of Saint-Mihiel – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Saint-Mihiel
[23] March | 2015 – Historical Digression https://historicaldigression.com/2015/03/
[24] History of the Royal Regiment of Artillary, by Francis Duncan https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/58209/pg58209-images.html

Arthur Frederick Mount: His Life and Legacy

Corporal Arthur Frederick Mount, 43609, Machine Gun Corps (Infantry), born Cheriton, Kent, 1898, formerly of the 2nd Kent Cyclist Battalion, was killed in action on 21 March 1918 during the German Spring Offensive and is commemorated on Special Memorial 48, St Souplet British Cemetery, France.

Arthur Frederick Mount: A Detailed Biography

Corporal Arthur Frederick Mount, no. 43609, Machine Gun Corps (Infantry), was a Cheriton‑born soldier who originally enlisted in the 2nd Kent Cyclist Battalion and was later transferred to the Machine Gun Corps, being killed in action on 21 March 1918 during the opening day of the German Spring Offensive. [1][2][3] He is commemorated on a special memorial in St Souplet British Cemetery, France (Memorial 48), as his original wartime grave was later lost. [1][2]


Early Life and Family

Arthur Frederick Mount was born in Cheriton, Kent, his birth registered in the September quarter of 1898 in the Elham registration district (volume 2A, page 1047, line 65). [1] He was the son of George Marsh Mount and his wife Mary Jane, née Raines, and was baptised at All Souls, Cheriton, on 24 July 1898, confirming the family’s parish connection. [1]

In the 1901 census the family was living at 9 Park Road, Cheriton, where Arthur appears as a small child. [1] By 1911 he was still in Cheriton, recorded at 154 High Street as a scholar, indicating that he was still at school in his early teens and growing up within the expanding garrison‑town environment of Folkestone and Cheriton close to Shorncliffe Camp. [1]


Early Life and Family (Home and Kinship)

By 1918 Arthur’s residence is recorded simply as Folkestone, Kent, reflecting the close link between Cheriton and Folkestone as effectively one urban area by the time of the First World War. [1] FamilySearch lists him under ID KLH9‑WD9, anchoring him in the wider Mount and Raines family networks of east Kent. [1]

No marriage or children are recorded for Arthur, and his youth at the time of death (not yet 20) makes it likely he remained unmarried, like many of his contemporaries who enlisted as teenagers. [1] His upbringing in a town with strong military connections may well have influenced his early decision to enlist in a local territorial‑type unit even before he reached full adulthood. [1]


Military Service

Arthur’s first recorded enlistment is on 27 March 1915 at Sandgate, Kent, when he joined the 2nd Kent Cyclist Battalion as private no. 1046. [1] The 2nd Kent Cyclist Battalion was a Territorial Force unit raised in east Kent, used initially for home defence and later for overseas service; like other cyclist units, it provided mobile infantry and communications support. [4]

At some point after 1915 Arthur transferred to the Machine Gun Corps (Infantry), where he was given the new service number 43609 and rose to the rank of Corporal. [1][2] The Machine Gun Corps was formed in late 1915 to centralise the Army’s Vickers machine‑gun units and, by 1918, its infantry component was organised into divisional machine‑gun battalions, each equipped with large numbers of Vickers guns to provide sustained fire support for infantry formations. [5][3]


Military Service (Context in 1918)

By March 1918 Arthur would have been serving in a Machine Gun Corps unit on the Western Front, employed in defensive strongpoints, covering lines of withdrawal, and attempting to break up German attacks with concentrated machine‑gun fire. [5][6] Contemporary machine‑gun doctrine placed great emphasis on indirect fire, barrage fire and the siting of guns to sweep no‑man’s‑land and communication trenches, making MGC positions prime targets for German artillery and infiltration troops. [5][7]

The Imperial War Museums’ “Lives of the First World War” entry for “Corporal 43609 Arthur Frederick Mount, Machine Gun Corps” summarises his service and confirms his unit and rank, though it does not specify his exact company or battalion. [2] Nevertheless, his date of death aligns precisely with the first day of the German Spring Offensive, Operation Michael, when many MGC units suffered very heavy casualties. [1][2][3]


Circumstances of Death

Arthur was killed in action on 21 March 1918, with the place of death given as Germany in the individual report, a shorthand reference often used for casualties who fell or later died in areas that would be recorded in German‑held territory. [1] On that morning, at 4.40 a.m., some 6,500 German guns and 3,500 heavy mortars opened an immense barrage against the British Third and Fifth Armies along a 70‑mile front on the Somme and to the north, targeting especially artillery and machine‑gun positions to neutralise defensive fire. [8][3][7]

After the five‑hour “hurricane” bombardment, stormtroop infantry units advanced through the fog, infiltrating weak points in the British lines and bypassing pockets of resistance, while subsequent waves “mopped up” the isolated strongpoints, many of which were manned by machine‑gunners. [6][9][3] The high casualty rates suffered by the Machine Gun Corps on 21 March 1918, combined with the confusion of rapid withdrawals and the loss of ground to the Germans, explain why Arthur is recorded simply as killed in action and later commemorated on a memorial rather than an identified battlefield grave. [1][2][3]


Burial and Commemoration

Arthur is commemorated in St Souplet British Cemetery, France, on Special Memorial 48. [1] St Souplet British Cemetery was created after the Armistice when graves were brought in from the surrounding battlefields and from smaller cemeteries that could not be permanently maintained; a number of special memorials were erected there to soldiers whose original graves were destroyed in later fighting or whose exact locations were lost. [2][6]

The Commonwealth War Graves Commission records him as “MOUNT, ARTHUR FREDERICK, Corporal, 43609, Machine Gun Corps (Infantry), who died on 21 March 1918, aged 19 (approx.), son of George Marsh Mount and Mary Jane Mount, of Cheriton, Kent; commemorated at St. Souplet British Cemetery, Memorial 48.” [1][2] A Find a Grave memorial (ID 24760395) also preserves his details, linking his name to the cemetery and to modern family and local remembrance efforts. [1]


Legacy

Within his extended family Arthur appears under FamilySearch ID KLH9‑WD9, ensuring that his life is integrated into wider family‑history research for the Mount and Raines lines. [1] His medal entitlement – the British War Medal, Victory Medal and Memorial Death Plaque – reflects both his overseas war service and his death in action, and his service as a Machine Gun Corps corporal during one of the most intense days of the war underlines the dangerous nature of his role. [1][2]

More broadly, Arthur’s death on 21 March 1918 places him among the thousands of British soldiers lost in the opening hours of Operation Michael, when the German Army attempted to break the stalemate of trench warfare and drive the Allies back towards the Channel ports. [6][9][3] Through the CWGC record, the St Souplet memorial, and digital resources such as Lives of the First World War, Corporal Arthur Frederick Mount’s story remains accessible to descendants, local historians and all those interested in the human cost of the German Spring Offensive of 1918. [1][2][8]


Key External Links

Sources
[1] Individual-Report-for-Arthur-Frederick-Mount.pdf
[2] Lives of the First World War https://livesofthefirstworldwar.iwm.org.uk/lifestory/3264623
[3] German spring offensive – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_spring_offensive
[4] Army Service Numbers 1881-1918 https://armyservicenumbers.blogspot.com/2018/04/
[5] Machine Gun Corps https://aif.adfa.edu.au/OrderOfBattle/Machine_Gun.html
[6] 1918: Year of victory https://www.nam.ac.uk/explore/1918-victory
[7] Voices of the First World War: The German Spring Offensive https://www.iwm.org.uk/history/voices-of-the-first-world-war-the-german-spring-offensive
[8] German Spring Offensive 1918 – National Records of Scotland (NRS) https://www.nrscotland.gov.uk/learning-and-events/first-world-war/german-spring-offensive-1918/
[9] Operation Michael | Canada’s FWW Battles – The Vimy Foundation https://vimyfoundation.ca/battles/operation-michael
[10] Military Service Recognition Book https://fenety.com/epubs/ONCL-20/26/
[11] 3rd Divisional Ammunition Column https://ia801808.us.archive.org/22/items/CEF_DAAC_3rdDiv/CEF_DAAC_3rdDiv_text.pdf
[12] F/O Arthur Frederick https://raffeaea.com/home/stories/f-o-arthur-frederick/
[13] MonthlyArmyList1919July_hocr_pageindex.json.gz https://dn720003.ca.archive.org/0/items/monthly-army-list-1919-july/MonthlyArmyList1919July_hocr_pageindex.json.gz
[14] Military Service Records, Awards, and Unit Histories: A Guide to Locating Sources https://www.congress.gov/crs-product/RS21282
[15] Thursday 21 March 1918 – First World War Casualties – A Street Near You https://astreetnearyou.org/date/1918/03/21
[16] Full Death Roll https://www.fepow.family/Research/Serving_Country/Killed_in_Action/Far_East/Suffolk_Regiment_5th_Bn/html/full_death_roll.htm
[17] Manufacturer & Catalogue No Scale https://www.hannants.co.uk/manufacturer/print-scale/products?per_page=25&sort=stock&search_direction=desc&create_pdf=1
[18] nominal https://aattv.net/nominal.htm
[19] Witness and Canadian homestead, mercredi 27 octobre … https://numerique.banq.qc.ca/patrimoine/details/52327/4188008
[20] OBITUARY https://www.glengarrycountyarchives.ca/Glengarry_pdf/The-Glengarry-News/1941-1950/1944/Nov/11-24-1944.pdf
[21] We Remember: WWI Records Search http://www.doingourbit.ca/records-search-show-all?field_surname_value=&field_given_name_value=&field_address_at_enlistment_value=&field_birth_city_value=&field_birth_county_value=&field_birth_country_value=&field_wounded_value=All&field_prisoner_of_war_value=All&field_survived_the_war_value=All&page=55

Percy James East: A Soldier’s Journey in WWI

Percy James East, born around September 1892 in Sandwich, Kent, served as a Private in the 6th Battalion, The Buffs during World War I. He was killed in action on March 18, 1916, and is commemorated on the Loos Memorial in France. His military service and dedication are honored through various remembrance efforts.

Percy James East: A Detailed Biography

Private Percy James East, G/6280, 6th (Service) Battalion, The Buffs (East Kent Regiment), was born at Sandwich, Kent, about September 1892 and was killed in action in France on 18 March 1916. [1][2] He has no known grave and is commemorated on the Loos Memorial, Pas‑de‑Calais, France, where his name appears on Panels 15–19 alongside many comrades of the 12th (Eastern) Division. [1][3]


Early Life and Family

Percy James East’s birth is registered in the September quarter of 1892 in the Sandwich registration district, Kent (volume 2A, page 950, line 204), placing his birth around late summer 1892. He was the son of Walter East and Selina Caroline East, née Mannering, and grew up in a close‑knit Kentish family rooted in the small port and market town of Sandwich. [1]

By the 1901 census the family were living in Harnet Street, Sandwich, with Percy recorded as a school‑age child in his parents’ household. [1] Sandwich’s mix of maritime, agricultural and small‑trades employment provided the backdrop to his early life, and the family’s continuing presence there is reflected in the later addresses recorded for his mother. [1]


Early Life and Family (Work and Home)

By 1911 Percy was living at 1 Jessamine Villas, Sandwich, where his occupation is given as bottle washer, indicating work in a bottling or mineral‑water business or similar local industry. [1] This sort of manual but semi‑skilled employment was typical for young working‑class men in small Kent towns in the years immediately before the First World War. [1]

In 1915 his address is given as 11 Jasmine (Jessamine) Villas, Woodnesborough Road, Sandwich, showing that he remained close to his childhood home and that the small terrace of Jessamine Villas continued to be the family base. [1] After his death, the Commonwealth War Graves Commission recorded his mother, Selina C. East, as living at “1, Jessamine Villas, Boatsman’s Hill, Sandwich, Kent”, further confirming this cluster of related addresses as the East family’s long‑term home. [1]


Military Service

Percy enlisted at Sandwich into The Buffs (East Kent Regiment), being posted to the 6th (Service) Battalion, with the service number G/6280 and the rank of Private. [1][2] His medal entitlement—1914–15 Star, British War Medal and Victory Medal—confirms overseas service in a theatre of war from 1915. [1]

The 6th (Service) Battalion, The Buffs, was formed at Canterbury in August 1914 as part of Kitchener’s First New Army (K1), joining 37th Brigade of the 12th (Eastern) Division and training at Colchester, Purfleet and then Shorncliffe before moving to Aldershot in February 1915. [1][4][5] In late May 1915 the Division crossed to France via Folkestone–Boulogne and Southampton–Le Havre, concentrating south of Saint‑Omer by early June and joining III Corps; the 6th Buffs thereafter served continuously on the Western Front. [1][5][6]


Military Service (Battles and Front‑Line Duty)

The 6th Buffs and 12th (Eastern) Division first saw major action at the Battle of Loos in September–October 1915, where they attacked in the sector near Hulluch and the Hohenzollern Redoubt, suffering heavy casualties in repeated assaults and German counter‑attacks. [1][3][6] Subsequent fighting in October 1915 around positions known as “The Quarries” at Hulluch further depleted the battalion but also established it as a seasoned front‑line unit. [1][3]

In early 1916 the area around the Hohenzollern Redoubt became the focus of intensive mine warfare. On 2 March 1916, four large British mines were blown under German positions, followed by attacks that captured a series of craters, including the key Triangle Crater, with 12th (Eastern) Division selected to hold and exploit the new positions. [1][3][5] The 37th Brigade, including the 6th Buffs, relieved 36th Brigade in the crater sector on 5 March 1916 and endured continuous German bombing attacks, shelling and trench raiding in appalling mud and cratered ground for the rest of the month. [3][7]


Circumstances of Death

Percy’s individual record notes that he served in France between 31 August 1915 and 18 March 1916, and that he was killed in action in France on 18 March 1916. [1] A contemporary War Office casualty list dated 13 April 1916 initially recorded “E J East, Private, 6280, Buffs, France and Flanders” as missing, reflecting the confusion following the intense fighting in the Hohenzollern Craters sector; this entry clearly relates to Percy under an initialled form of his name. [1]

The broader context of his death is the Hohenzollern Redoubt action of 2–18 March 1916, during which 12th (Eastern) Division fought to hold newly captured mine craters against persistent German counter‑attacks and mortar fire. [3][5] German Minenwerfer bombardments and infantry assaults repeatedly struck the crater line and the old British front trenches, causing very high casualties; accounts of the period describe men standing shin‑deep in churned earth and water, exposed to accurate plunging mortar fire and close‑quarters bombing. [3][6] Percy’s death on 18 March 1916 coincides with the final phase of this action, when the Division was still in the line and suffering losses from shelling and localised attacks around Triangle Crater and the adjacent saps. [1][3]


Burial and Commemoration

Percy James East has no known grave, a common outcome for soldiers killed in cratered and heavily shelled sectors such as Hohenzollern, where bodies were often buried, re‑buried or obliterated by later explosions. [1][3] Instead he is commemorated on the Loos Memorial at Dud Corner Cemetery, near Loos‑en‑Gohelle, Pas‑de‑Calais, which bears the names of more than 20,000 officers and men who fell in the area from 1915 to the end of the war and have no known resting place; his name appears on Panels 15–19 among those of The Buffs and associated units. [1][2]

The Commonwealth War Graves Commission record for “EAST, PERCY JAMES, Private, G/6280, 6th Bn., The Buffs (East Kent Regiment), died 18 March 1916, aged 22, son of Selina C. East, of 1, Jessamine Villas, Boatsman’s Hill, Sandwich, Kent” confirms his age, unit and family details. [1] A Find a Grave memorial (ID 15344005) likewise records his name and commemorative location, providing a modern point of reference for family historians and researchers. [1]


Legacy

Percy’s medals—the 1914–15 Star, British War Medal and Victory Medal—together with the award of a wound stripe and the issue of a Memorial Death Plaque, underline his recognised service and sacrifice on the Western Front. [1] His life also preserved in genealogical form via FamilySearch ID LY9B‑M9F. [1]

Local and national remembrance projects ensure that Percy’s name is not confined to official registers. The “A Street Near You” database lists “Private Percy James East, G/6280, The Buffs (East Kent Regiment), 18/03/1916 (aged 22)” among the regiment’s casualties, linking him to the wider story of The Buffs’ wartime losses. [2][8] More broadly, the history of the Hohenzollern Redoubt action and the 12th (Eastern) Division highlights the ferocity of the fighting in which he died, placing his individual story within a larger narrative of sacrifice in one of the most dangerous sectors of the Western Front in early 1916. [3][5][6]


Key External Links

Sources
[1] Individual-Report-for-Percy-James-East.pdf
[2] The Buffs (East Kent Regiment) – First World War Casualties https://astreetnearyou.org/regiment/256/The-Buffs-(East-Kent-Regiment)
[3] Hohenzollern Redoubt action, 2–18 March 1916 – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hohenzollern_Redoubt_action,_2%E2%80%9318_March_1916
[4] Buffs (East Kent) Regiment https://vickersmg.blog/in-use/british-service/the-british-army/buffs-east-kent-regiment/
[5] 12th (Eastern) Division – The Long, Long Trail https://www.longlongtrail.co.uk/army/order-of-battle-of-divisions/12th-eastern-division/
[6] The 12th (Eastern) Division Memorial Cross – Hellfire Corner http://www.hellfirecorner.co.uk/middlebrook3.htm
[7] Current Information – London War Memorial https://londonwarmemorial.co.uk/view_profile.php?id=23678
[8] Search for “East Kent Regiment The Buffs” in unit | Lives of the First … https://livesofthefirstworldwar.iwm.org.uk/searchlives/field/unit/East%20Kent%20Regiment%20The%20Buffs/filter/span%5B/?page=21
[9] The Buffs 6th batt East Kent – The – Great War Forum https://www.greatwarforum.org/topic/105179-the-buffs-6th-batt-east-kent/
[10] William Richard COTTER VC – The VC and GC Association https://vcgca.org/our-people/profile/396/William-Richard-COTTER
[11] Lance Corporal William Cotter VC | The Western Front Association https://www.westernfrontassociation.com/world-war-i-articles/2016/february/lance-corporal-william-cotter-vc/
[12] Britain WWI Victory Medal East Kent Regiment (The Buffs) KIA Loos … https://www.medals-orders.com/great-britain-united-kingdom-wwi-victory-interallied-military-medal-east-kent-regiment-the-buffs-kia-1916-loos-ww1-1914-1918-british-decoration-great-war.html
[13] The 1st/3rd (East Kent–The Buffs) https://www.maltaramc.com/regmltgar/3rd.html
[14] We remember George Shilling – Lives of the First World War https://livesofthefirstworldwar.iwm.org.uk/lifestory/4014113
[15] Acting Corporal William Richard Cotter – A Street Near You https://astreetnearyou.org/person/2947410/Acting-Corporal-William-Richard-Cotter
[16] Britain WW1 WW1 Victory Medal – Pte A. Dyke, East Kent Reg. https://www.dracomedals.com/britain-wwi-ww1-victory-medal-pte-east-kent-regiment-the-buffs-kia-loos-1916..html
[17] Search for “Buffs,(East Kent) Regiment” in unit https://livesofthefirstworldwar.iwm.org.uk/searchlives/field/unit/Buffs,(East%20Kent)%20Regiment/filter/span%5B/?page=30
[18] Private Year: 1914-18 East Kent Regiment (The Buffs) 6th Battalion I … https://www.facebook.com/groups/436081820298097/posts/1084910138748592/
[19] Hohenzollern Redoubt Facts for Kids https://kids.kiddle.co/Hohenzollern_Redoubt
[20] Percy James East – Timenote https://timenote.info/lv/Percy-James-East
[21] 6th Battalion The Buffs https://www.greatwarforum.org/topic/6404-6th-battalion-the-buffs/

The Life and Legacy of Stoker Bernard West: A WWII Story

Stoker 1st Class Bernard Geoffrey West, born on 2 March 1923, served in H.M. Motor Anti-Submarine Boat 29. He tragically drowned on 14 March 1944, aged 20, during a transfer between vessels. Buried with full naval honors in Ramsgate Cemetery, his legacy represents the risks faced by wartime reservists.

Bernard Geoffrey West: A Detailed Biography

Stoker 1st Class Bernard Geoffrey West, C/KX 161347, Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve, served in H.M. Motor Anti‑Submarine Boat 29 and died by accidental drowning off Ramsgate, Kent, on 14 March 1944, aged 20. [1][2][3] He is buried with full naval honours in Ramsgate Cemetery, Division M.A., grave 161, and commemorated by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. [1]


Early Life and Family

Bernard Geoffrey West was born on 2 March 1923 in the Bridge registration district, Kent; his birth was registered in the June quarter of 1923 (volume 2A, page 1715) and he was the son of Edward West and Maude Louisa (née Norris). [1] He grew up in rural Kent during the inter‑war years, a period of relative calm between the two world wars, in a family rooted in the Weald and Bridge areas. [1]

By 29 September 1939 the Register records Bernard, then aged 16, living at Little Hale Cottages, Camp Hill, Sevenoaks, Kent. [1] His occupation is given as “milk roundsman”, an early‑morning job delivering fresh milk by cart or small vehicle to local households, reflecting a typical working‑class route into employment for a young man in rural Kent. [1]


Early Life and Family (Community and Home Guard)

Before joining the Navy, Bernard took part in local defence preparations as a member of the Weald Platoon of the Home Guard, the volunteer force raised in 1940 to resist any German invasion and support civil defence. [1] This involvement shows an early sense of duty and readiness to serve, even while he continued his civilian work delivering milk around the Weald. [1]

He remained unmarried and there is no evidence he had children; his short life was framed by family, local work and then rapid transition into wartime naval service. [1] Within family research his details are preserved in genealogical databases under FamilySearch ID G3LH‑HQX. [1]


Military Service

Bernard enlisted in the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve (RNVR), the wartime reserve branch that recruited civilians for naval service. [1] He was allocated service number C/KX 161347 (also recorded administratively as Q/KX 163147 in one Admiralty summary) and trained as a Stoker 1st Class, responsible for the running and maintenance of engines and machinery in small craft. [1]

He was posted to H.M. Motor Anti‑Submarine Boat 29 (M.A.S.B. 29 / H.M. L.A.S.B. 29), one of the small, fast powerboats operated by Coastal Forces for anti‑submarine patrol, air‑sea rescue, escort and inshore defence. [1][2][4] Motor anti‑submarine boats were compact craft developed from high‑speed racing boat designs, capable of rapid manoeuvre in coastal waters and equipped with depth charges, light guns and listening gear; they played a vital but hazardous role around ports such as Ramsgate, tasked with mine‑searching, patrols and rescue duties in the Channel and Thames Estuary approaches. [1][2][3]


Military Service (Coastal Forces Context)

Coastal Forces boats, including MASBs, were typically crewed largely by RNVR ratings like West, many of whom had limited maritime background before enlisting but quickly adapted to the demands of small‑craft warfare. [1][4] Ramsgate served as a base for anti‑submarine and air‑sea rescue flotillas; surviving reports of the 1st Motor Anti‑Submarine Flotilla show how boats numbered in the 20s and 30s, operating from Ramsgate under the Flag Officer Dover, were continuously engaged in search, escort, mine‑sweeping, buoy‑servicing and patrol tasks across the period 1941–44. [3] This environment placed constant demands on crews, even on apparently routine movements between moorings and harbour positions.

Although Bernard’s individual service record is not quoted in full, his rating as Stoker 1st Class indicates he had completed initial training and gained technical proficiency with the MASB’s engines, likely petrol or diesel, and auxiliary systems. [1] His duties would have included engine checks, fuel management, and emergency repairs in cramped conditions below deck, making him essential to the boat’s ability to manoeuvre in combat or during rescue operations. [1][2]


Circumstances of Death

On the evening of 14 March 1944, H.M. M.A.S.B. 29 lay in the waters off Ramsgate when Bernard West and another crew member were ordered to transfer to another vessel. [1] At about 21.30, in darkness and under wartime blackout conditions, West attempted to jump from his boat onto the second craft; he misjudged the distance between the moving hulls and fell into the gap between them. [1]

Evidence presented at the Ramsgate coroner’s inquest, reported in the Thanet Advertiser on 24 March 1944, recorded statements from Able Seaman William James Reeves and A/B Charles Clark, who described seeing West go to the upper deck, hearing a splash shortly afterwards, and then realising a man was overboard. [1] The tragedy was compounded by the fact that West could not swim, a not uncommon situation among wartime sailors; as he fell, he became wedged beneath the boat he had been ordered to board, making immediate rescue extremely difficult. [1]

A search began at once, but in the dark waters around the hulls, direct access to the trapped seaman proved impossible. [1] Only at 1.15 a.m., nearly four hours later, was his body recovered using grappling irons; an RNVR lieutenant‑commander testified that there were no external injuries and that the appearance was consistent with death by drowning. [1] The coroner, Mr J. H. Robinson, returned a verdict of accidental death, summarising: “This young man lost his life in trying to jump onto the boat he was ordered to transfer to, but he misjudged the distance and fell in between the two.” [1]


Burial and Commemoration

Bernard Geoffrey West’s funeral took place on 24 March 1944—his 21st birthday—at a “south coast town”, recorded elsewhere as Ramsgate, where he was buried with full naval honours in Ramsgate Cemetery, Division Ramsgate, Section M.A., grave 161. [1] The Sevenoaks Chronicle described how his parents, brother and sisters, and around forty shipmates attended the service, with floral tributes from family, neighbours, Sevenoaks farmers, Captain A. F. W. Howard, his ship’s company, fellow ratings in the flotilla, flotilla officers and other officers and shipmates, illustrating the breadth of those who mourned him. [1]

His headstone, recorded in the burial notes, reads:

“B. G. WEST
STOKER I. R.N. C/KX.161347
M.A.S.B. 29
14TH MARCH 1944 AGE 20
ETERNAL REST GRANT UNTO HIM, O LORD;
AND LET PERPETUAL LIGHT SHINE UPON HIM
R.I.P.” [1]

The Commonwealth War Graves Commission entry lists him as “WEST, BERNARD GEOFFREY, Stoker 1st Class, C/KX 161347, H.M. M.A.S.B. 29, Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve, died 14 March 1944, aged 20, son of Edward and Maude Louisa West, of Weald, Kent; buried Ramsgate Cemetery.” [1] His CWGC record and a Find a Grave memorial (ID 57638392) ensure that his grave and details remain accessible to descendants and researchers. [1]


Legacy

Bernard Geoffrey West’s life represents a common but often overlooked type of wartime sacrifice: a young reservist killed not by enemy action but by the inherent risks of naval service. [1] Serving in a small coastal craft, he faced the dangers of narrow decks, moving hulls and cold, dark seas every day, and his death during a routine transfer underlines how lethal such conditions could be even in home waters. [1][3]

For his parents at Hurst Dene, Weald, and his siblings and extended family, his loss at twenty—officially recorded as 20 though his funeral coincided with his twenty‑first birthday—brought enduring grief, tempered by pride in the tributes paid by officers and shipmates who described him as “an efficient, hard‑working seaman, fond of moving pictures”. [1] Today, through CWGC, local newspapers, genealogical records and studies of Coastal Forces and motor anti‑submarine boats, Bernard’s name stands alongside those of many young RNVR men whose service in “the Little Ships” helped secure British coastal waters in the later stages of the Second World War. [1][2][4][3]


Key External Links (for WordPress)

Sources
[1] Individual-Report-for-Bernard-Geoffrey-West.pdf
[2] MASB – British Military Powerboat Trust https://bmpt.org.uk/other_boats_history/MASB/masb.htm
[3] Report on activities of 1st Motor Anti-Submarine Flotilla (1941- 1944) https://asrwhaleback.com/report-on-activities-of-1st-motoranti-submarine-flotilla-1941-1944-lt-eric-custance/
[4] Royal Navy Coastal Forces 1940-1945 – Unit Histories https://www.unithistories.com/units_british/RN_CoastalForces.html
[5] HMS M29 – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_M29
[6] RN Motor Torpedo Boats, Motor Gun Boats & Motor Launches … https://www.worldnavalships.com/forums/thread.php?threadid=2054&page=7
[7] WRENing it up, WWII Coastal Forces style – laststandonzombieisland https://laststandonzombieisland.com/2016/10/29/wrening-it-up-wwii-coastal-forces-style/
[8] Casualties: US Navy and Marine Corps Personnel Killed and Injured … https://www.history.navy.mil/research/library/online-reading-room/title-list-alphabetically/c/casualties-usnavy-marinecorps-personnel-killed-injured-selected-accidents-other-incidents-notdirectly-result-enemy-action.html
[9] [PDF] ROYAL NAVY LOSS LIST COMPLETE DATABASE http://www.thisismast.org/assets/downloads/rn-loss-list-2023-02-27.pdf
[10] SS Arkansan – Bernard Bio https://www.ssarkansan.com/home/bernard-bio
[11] 29th Motor Torpedo Boat Flotilla – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/29th_Motor_Torpedo_Boat_Flotilla
[12] THE ROYAL NAVY DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205185545
[13] [PDF] 3rd Drowning Tragedy Hits Area Family https://www.cadl.org/lhonline/ICN1967-07-05.pdf
[14] MTB 747 AB Albert Pearson – Coastal Forces Veterans http://cfv.org.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=354
[15] British navy anti submarine boat hi-res stock photography and … https://www.alamy.com/stock-photo/british-navy-anti-submarine-boat.html
[16] Titles owned by GEORGETOWN PUBLIC LIBRARY https://catalog.georgetowntexas.gov/catalog/titles/
[17] MOTOR TORPEDO BOATS: History, Technical details + Action … http://ww2f.com/threads/motor-torpedo-boats-history-technical-details-action-capsules.48087/
[18] List of monitors of the Royal Navy – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_monitors_of_the_Royal_Navy
[19] 20 May 1944 – Family Notices – Trove – National Library of Australia https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/44810010
[20] WW2 MGB 81 Motor Gun Boat Restoration – Berthon https://www.berthon.co.uk/shipyard/yacht-refits-refurb/ww2-mgb-81-motor-gun-boat-restoration/
[21] HMS M29 https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q5633237

Keith Finn’s Final Voyage: The Sinking of S.S. British Resource

Keith Charles Finn, an 18-year-old Merchant Navy apprentice from Chatham, Kent, served on the S.S. British Resource. He was lost at sea when his ship was torpedoed by a German submarine on March 14, 1942. Finn is commemorated on the Tower Hill Memorial, honoring those with no known grave.

Keith Charles Finn: A Detailed Biography

Keith Charles Finn, an 18‑year‑old Apprentice in the Merchant Navy from Chatham, Kent, served aboard the British tanker S.S. British Resource (London) and was lost at sea on 14 March 1942 when his ship was torpedoed by German submarine U‑124 north of Bermuda. [1][2][3] He has no known grave and is commemorated on the Tower Hill Memorial, Panel 20, among the many merchant seafarers who died in the Atlantic during the Second World War. [1][4][5]


Early Life and Family

Keith Charles Finn was born on 9 May 1922 at Chatham, Kent; his birth was registered in the June quarter of 1922 in the Medway registration district, volume 2A, page 1325. [1] He was the son of Charles John Finn and his wife Eva Alice, née Juniper, and grew up in the Chatham area, a long‑established naval and maritime town on the River Medway. [1]

The individual report records his residence simply as Chatham, Kent, with an address at 425 High Street, placing him in the commercial heart of the town. [1] Later memorial sources, including a Rochester Sir Joseph Williamson’s Mathematical School war memorial listing, describe him as the son of Mr and Mrs Charles John Finn of Chatham, confirming both his parentage and local connections in north Kent. [1][4]


Early Life and Family (Education and Youth)

While specific school records are not cited in the report, the presence of his name on the Rochester Mathematical School war memorial strongly suggests that Keith was educated there, a grammar‑type school serving the Medway towns. [4] The school’s roll lists “FINN, KEITH CHARLES, Apprentice, Merchant Navy, S.S. British Resource (London), Son of Mr and Mrs Charles John Finn of Chatham, Died 14/03/1942, Age 19, Tower Hill Memorial, Panel 20,” linking his education directly to his later maritime service. [4]

The report also notes an Atlantic crossing: on 27 May 1941 Keith arrived at New York, New York, United States, aged 18, an early indication of his seafaring career and suggesting that he was already serving as an apprentice on an ocean‑going vessel in the year before his death. [1] His departure port is given as Sheerness, Kent, another Thames‑Medway estuary port, reinforcing the picture of a young man whose working life from late adolescence revolved around merchant shipping and transatlantic trade. [1]


Military Service

Keith served in the Merchant Navy during the Second World War, with his rank recorded as “Apprentice” and his service attached to S.S. British Resource of London, a 7,209‑ton tanker operated by the British Tanker Company. [1][2] Merchant Navy apprentices were trainee deck officers, learning navigation, seamanship and shipboard responsibilities at sea, and their service counted as war service when employed on hazardous ocean routes in time of war. [6]

British Resource had an active wartime career before her loss, participating in several Atlantic and coastal convoys, including OB 124, BHX 42, SL 50, OB 287, HX 131 and EN 3, carrying petroleum products between North America, the Caribbean and the United Kingdom. [2] In early 1942 she loaded approximately 10,000 tons of benzene and white spirit (highly flammable petroleum derivatives) at Curaçao and sailed independently for the United Kingdom via the North Atlantic, part of the broader campaign often called the “Second Happy Time”, when German U‑boats attacked Allied shipping off the American seaboard and in the mid‑Atlantic with devastating effect. [1][2][6]


Circumstances of Death

On the evening of 14 March 1942 British Resource was steaming unescorted about 230–260 miles north of Bermuda, en route from Curaçao to the UK, when she was sighted and tracked by German submarine U‑124, commanded by Kapitänleutnant Johann Mohr, during the U‑boat’s eighth patrol. [1][2][3][6] At 21.18 hours the U‑boat fired two torpedoes which hit the tanker fore and aft, stopping her and causing severe damage; as the ship’s defensive gunners attempted to fire at the periscope, a third torpedo (a coup de grâce) struck near the engine room at 21.33 hours, setting the benzene cargo alight and turning the entire ship into a blazing inferno. [1][2][7][6]

The flames spread rapidly over the sea surface, and British Resource burned fiercely until she finally sank the following day, 15 March 1942. [1][2][8] Of those on board, 43 crew members and three DEMS gunners were lost, with only five survivors – the master, the third radio operator and three gunners – being rescued by the Royal Navy corvette H.M.S. Clarkia (K88) and landed at Hamilton, Bermuda. [1][2][7] Keith Charles Finn, serving as an Apprentice, was among those missing, presumed drowned, his death officially dated to 14 March 1942 in the North Atlantic and attributed to enemy action and sinking of his ship. [1][4][6]


Burial and Commemoration

As a casualty lost at sea with no recovered remains, Keith has no known grave. Instead, he is commemorated on the Tower Hill Memorial in London, which records the names of merchant seamen and fishermen who died in both world wars and have no known grave but the sea. [1][4][9] His entry appears on Panel 20 of the Second World War section as “FINN, KEITH CHARLES, Apprentice, S.S. British Resource (London), Merchant Navy, 14 March 1942, aged 19, Son of Charles John and Eva Alice Finn, of Chatham, Kent.” [1][4]

The Commonwealth War Graves Commission online database preserves this information and provides a central, authoritative record of his service and sacrifice. https://www.cwgc.org/find-records/find-war-dead/casualty-details/2786691/keith-charles-finn/ [1] A Find a Grave memorial (ID 12398173) also lists Keith’s details, including his association with Tower Hill Memorial and his family in Chatham, offering an accessible digital place of remembrance for relatives, researchers and the wider public. [1]


Legacy

Within his extended family tree, Keith is recorded with a FamilySearch profile under ID LY9B‑M9F, ensuring that his story is integrated into wider genealogical research on the Finn and Juniper lines. [1] The combination of civil registration data, migration records, and official war memorial listings allows a coherent reconstruction of a short life that moved rapidly from Medway schoolboy to transatlantic seafarer, ending in one of the many sudden and violent losses of the Battle of the Atlantic. [1][2][4]

In the broader historical context, the sinking of S.S. British Resource is frequently cited in accounts of U‑124’s highly successful Bermuda and mid‑Atlantic patrol in March 1942, during which the submarine sank or damaged multiple Allied ships. [2][3][10][6] Keith’s name on Tower Hill, the Rochester Mathematical School memorial, and in Merchant Navy casualty lists stands as a reminder of the crucial but often under‑recognised role played by young merchant seamen in sustaining Britain’s lifelines at sea, and of the heavy price they and their families paid in the struggle to keep those routes open. [1][4][7]


Key External Links

Sources
[1] Individual-Report-for-Keith-Charles-Finn.pdf
[2] MT British Resource sunk U-124/Mohr 13 March 1942, 46 men … https://ericwiberg.com/2014/03/mt-british-resource-sunk-u-124mohr-13-march-1942-46-men-ablaze-by-benzene-or-drowned
[3] German submarine U-124 (1940) – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_submarine_U-124_(1940)
[4] rochester sir joseph williamson’s mathematical school war memorial https://www.roll-of-honour.com/Kent/RochesterMathematicalSchool.html
[5] List of shipwrecks in March 1942 – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_shipwrecks_in_March_1942
[6] Second Happy Time | World War II Database https://ww2db.com/battle_spec.php?battle_id=277
[7] 14 – 20 March 1942 – The TimeGhost Army https://community.timeghost.tv/t/14-20-march-1942/6446
[8] Ships Lost in 1942 https://sunkenshipsobx.com/index.php/lost-ships-obx/late-1910s-to-early-1940s/1942
[9] Tower Hill Memorial, London, England – Surnames N-O – Interment.net https://www.interment.net/data/eng/greater-london/tower-hill-memorial-records-n-o.htm
[10] U-124 under Johann Mohr Bermuda patrol March 1942 – Eric Wiberg https://ericwiberg.com/2014/04/u-124-under-johann-mohr-bermuda-patrol-march-1942
[11] Seaman Percy Donald Duncan Melvin – Veterans Affairs Canada https://www.veterans.gc.ca/en/remembrance/memorials/canadian-virtual-war-memorial/657966
[12] Surnames P-R – The Radio Officers Association https://radioofficers.com/in-memoriam/ww2-radio-officers-killed-at-sea-1939-1945/ww2-radio-officers-killed-at-sea-1939-1945-p-r/
[13] Keith Finn | LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/keith-finn-2b7407239
[14] CRL https://catalog.crl.edu/Author/Home?author=British+Library
[15] Keith Charles FLINT personal appointments – Find and update company information https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/officers/9eiYuQhnehR6l3tpj0AUqjbOek0/appointments
[16] SS Muskogee sunk by U-123 near Bermuda – Facebook https://www.facebook.com/groups/oldhistoricalphotos/posts/682069964652706/
[17] Appointments https://kfinlay.github.io
[18] Eastern Sea Frontier – War Diary March 1942 https://www.uboatarchive.net/ESF/ESFWarDiaryMar42.htm
[19] Brit+Resource+Lorient+return+for+U-124 – Eric Wiberg https://ericwiberg.com/2014/03/mt-british-resource-sunk-u-124mohr-13-march-1942-46-men-ablaze-by-benzene-or-drowned/britresourcelorientreturnforu-124/
[20] charles finn http://charlesfinn.blogspot.com
[21] List of shipwrecks in May 1942 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_shipwrecks_in_May_1942

Biography of Leading Aircraftman Tich Kemsley

Frederick Charles “Tich” Kemsley, a Dover-born miner, served as Leading Aircraftman in the RAF’s Balloon Command during World War II. He died from a long illness on 21 February 1943 at age 24, and is buried in Dover. His service contributed to Britain’s aerial defense, highlighting the significance of Balloon Command.

Frederick Charles “Tich” Kemsley: A Detailed Biography

Leading Aircraftman Frederick Charles “Tich” Kemsley (service number 538183) was a Dover‑born miner who served in the Royal Air Force with Balloon Command during the Second World War. He died, after a long illness connected with his wartime service, at King Edward VII Emergency Hospital, Midhurst, Sussex, on 21 February 1943, aged 24, and is buried at Buckland, St Andrew, Dover. [1][2]


Early Life and Family

Frederick Charles Kemsley was born about December 1918 in Dover, Kent, his birth registered in the December quarter of 1918 in the Dover Registration District (Volume 02A, Page 1615). He was the son of Albert Valentine Kemsley and his wife Clara Ann, née Ballard, a Kentish family rooted in the Dover area. [1]

The 1921 census records the Kemsley family living at 19 Primrose Road, Dover, where Frederick appears as a two‑year‑old son in the household. This address, close to the town’s working‑class districts and its port, suggests a childhood shaped by Dover’s status as a Channel town still marked by the legacy of the First World War. [1]

By 1934, Frederick was employed as an underground engine driver at Snowdown Colliery, one of Kent’s main coal mines, while still resident at 19 Primrose Road. Working below ground in the colliery demanded both physical resilience and mechanical skill, qualities that would later translate well into technical work within the Royal Air Force. [1]


Military Service

At some point after 1934, Kemsley left the pits and joined the Royal Air Force, eventually holding the non‑commissioned rank of Leading Aircraftman (LAC), service number 538183. [1] LAC was the grade immediately above aircraftman, typically held by experienced ground crew and technical personnel whose skills were vital to day‑to‑day operations. [1][3]

His individual report places his RAF service at Manchester, Lancashire, within 10 Balloon Centre of No. 33 Group, Balloon Command, headquartered at Parkhead House, Abbey Lane, Sheffield, Yorkshire. [1][4][5][6] No. 33 Group was responsible for barrage balloon defence across parts of northern England, including key industrial and port cities such as Manchester and Sheffield. [4][5]

RAF Balloon Command, formed in 1938, controlled a network of balloon groups and centres that deployed barrage balloons over cities, docks and industrial targets to obstruct low‑level Luftwaffe attacks. By forcing enemy bombers to higher altitudes, the balloons reduced bombing accuracy and made the aircraft more vulnerable to anti‑aircraft guns and fighters. [4][7][8][9] Within this structure, 10 Balloon Centre—listed in wartime orders of battle at Bowlee, near Middleton, Manchester—controlled balloon squadrons protecting Manchester and surrounding areas. [5][6][10]

As a Leading Aircraftman in Balloon Command, Kemsley likely served on or in support of a barrage balloon site, handling the winching gear, cables and gas, maintaining equipment, and helping to raise and lower the balloons in response to weather and raids. Contemporary accounts describe balloon operating as physically demanding and often hazardous work, carried out in exposed conditions and at all hours to maintain Britain’s aerial shield. [1][7][8][11][9]


Circumstances of Death

Civil registration shows that Frederick Charles Kemsley died on 21 February 1943 at King Edward VII Emergency Hospital, Midhurst, Sussex, his death registered in the Midhurst district (Volume 2B, Page 745, line number 102). [1] A notice in the Dover Express of 26 February 1943 reported that L.A.C. Kemsley had died at this hospital “after nine months’ suffering, patiently borne,” indicating a long illness or injury period prior to death rather than a sudden operational fatality. [1]

The hospital at Midhurst functioned during the war as an emergency and military hospital, treating service personnel suffering from wounds, illness or conditions aggravated by service. Kemsley’s transfer there from his northern posting suggests that his condition was serious enough to warrant specialist or long‑term care away from his home unit. [1]

Four years later, on 21 February 1947, the Dover Express carried an “In Memoriam” notice from his parents and brother George, which read:

“KEMSLEY.—Loving thoughts and treasured memories of a dear son,
Frederick Charles Kemsley (Tich), who was called to higher service on Feb.
21st, 1943, aged 24 years.—From Mum, Dad and brother George.” [1]

The wording “called to higher service” reflects both the family’s Christian faith and the high regard in which they held his RAF service, emphasising that his death at 24 was seen as a sacrifice bound up with the wider war effort, even if not the result of a single dramatic incident. [1]


Burial and Commemoration

After his death, Frederick’s body was brought home to Dover for burial. He was laid to rest in Buckland, St Andrew churchyard, Dover, in Section B.G., Grave 9. [1] The Dover War Memorial Project notes that he was 24 and that representatives from RAF Headquarters at Dover attended his funeral, underlining the official recognition given to his service. [2]

His grave is recorded and maintained as a war grave, and his details appear on the Commonwealth War Graves Commission’s online database under the entry for Leading Aircraftman Frederick Charles Kemsley. The CWGC record confirms his full name, rank, service number 538183, unit as Royal Air Force, date of death as 21 February 1943, and place of burial at Buckland, St Andrew. [1][2]

A further memorial entry on Find a Grave (Memorial ID 33223819) also commemorates him in Buckland churchyard, providing a focal point for family members and researchers tracing the Kemsley family and Dover’s wartime casualties. [1] Together, these records ensure that his name remains part of the public roll of honour for Dover men who served and died in the Second World War.


Legacy

Frederick Charles “Tich” Kemsley’s life illustrates the journey of many working‑class young men from Britain’s industrial and mining communities into highly responsible technical roles within the wartime RAF. From underground engine driver at Snowdown Colliery to Leading Aircraftman in Balloon Command, his skills and labour shifted from fuelling the civilian economy to defending British cities and industry from aerial attack. [1][4][7][8]

Balloon Command’s work has sometimes been overshadowed by the more dramatic narratives of fighter and bomber operations, yet historians now stress its importance as a key layer in Britain’s air defences. Its barrage balloon screens, including those operated under No. 33 Group and 10 Balloon Centre at Manchester, significantly complicated German low‑level bombing and helped save lives and infrastructure in repeated raids. Kemsley’s role within this command formed part of that broader defensive shield. [4][5][7][8][9]

Within his own family, Frederick is remembered in memorial notices and genealogical research as “Tich,” a term of affection that hints at his personality and presence in the household at 19 Primrose Road. [1] In the wider community, he is one of the Dover casualties documented by the Dover War Memorial Project, which has helped restore individual identities to the names behind local war memorials. [2] For descendants and relatives, his story preserves the memory of a young Dover man whose quiet but vital service in Balloon Command contributed to the defence of his country and who bore his final illness with patience and courage.

Sources
[1] Individual-Report-for-Frederick-Charles-Kemsley.pdf
[2] World War Two – Service … – THE DOVER WAR MEMORIAL PROJECT https://doverwarmemorialproject.org.uk/Casualties/WWIInotinbook/SurnamesKandL.htm
[3] Leading aircraftman – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leading_aircraftman
[4] RAF Balloon Command – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAF_Balloon_Command
[5] 1940 Status – Balloon Barrage Reunion Club http://www.bbrclub.org/1940%20Status.htm
[6] Balloon Command – Jan 1943 – rafweb.org http://rafweb.org/Members%20Pages/Orders%20of%20Battle/1943/1943_01_Balloon.htm
[7] RAF Balloon Command – the Second World War https://www.thesecondworldwar.org/western-front-1939-1940/battle-of-britain-1/the-raf-1/balloon-command
[8] RAF Balloon Command https://www.thesecondworldwar.org/western-front-1939-1940/battle-of-britain/raf-balloon-command
[9] Barrage Balloons: The RAF Squadrons That Defended WWII Britain https://www.forcesnews.com/news/aviation-history/barrage-balloons-what-were-raf-squadrons-which-defended-wwii-britain
[10] Barrage Balloon Organisations of the Royal Auxiliary Air Force https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barrage_Balloon_Organisations_of_the_Royal_Auxiliary_Air_Force
[11] WW2 People’s War – Balloon Command/Bomber Command – BBC https://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peopleswar/stories/46/a1072946.shtml
[12] United Kingdom – Balloon Command – Nevington War Museum https://www.nevingtonwarmuseum.com/united-kingdom—balloon-command.html
[13] Balloon Units – rafweb.org https://www.rafweb.org/Members%20Pages/Unt%20Histories/Miscellaneous/Balloon.htm
[14] Balloon Command was the Royal Air Force command … – Facebook https://www.facebook.com/HistoryukEIRE/posts/balloon-command-was-the-royal-air-force-command-which-was-responsible-for-contro/1075303702591278/
[15] CMHS :: DLAW :: Category :: Fleet Air Arm – University of Exeter https://cmhs-data.exeter.ac.uk/cmhs-data/dlaw/category/69/
[16] Caribbean aircrew in the RAF during WW2 https://www.caribbeanaircrew-ww2.com/?page_id=108
[17] Elliott, James (Leading Aircraftman) – CASPIR https://caspir.warplane.com/personnel/unit-search/p/600030803
[18] Barrage Balloons at the Tower of London in the Second World War https://www.hrp.org.uk/blog/barrage-balloons-at-the-tower-of-london-in-the-second-world-war/
[19] Balloon Command – Jun 1942 – rafweb.org https://www.rafweb.org/Members%20Pages/Orders%20of%20Battle/1942/1942_06_Balloon.htm
[20] Rare WW2 British Commanding Officers No9 Balloon Command … https://www.militariazone.com/general-other/rare-ww2-british-commanding-officers-no9-balloon-command-signed-menu/itm77677
[21] Royal Air Force Balloon Command, 1939-1945 Royal … – Facebook https://www.facebook.com/groups/6124479674262184/posts/royal-air-force-balloon-command-1939-1945royal-air-force-balloon-command-1939-19/8934983439878446/

Charles Edward Mills: Hero of the Devil’s Brigade

Sergeant Charles Edward Mills, a Canadian paratrooper born in England, served with the 1st Canadian Special Service Battalion during World War II. He was killed in action on 18 February 1944 at Anzio, Italy, aged 23, and is commemorated at Groesbeek Canadian War Cemetery in the Netherlands. His legacy endures in historical remembrance.

Charles Edward Mills: A Detailed Biography

Sergeant Charles Edward Mills (service number C/65543) was an English‑born Canadian paratrooper of the 1st Canadian Special Service Battalion, R.C.I.C., the Canadian element of the famed “Devil’s Brigade.” He was killed in action during the bitter fighting around the Anzio beachhead in Italy on 18 February 1944, aged 23, and is now buried in Groesbeek Canadian War Cemetery in the Netherlands. [1][2][3]


Early Life and Family

Charles Edward Mills was born on 22 May 1920 at Ashford, near Kingsnorth, Kent, England, the son of Charles Edward Mills and his wife Eva Caroline, née Richardson. His birth is registered in the June quarter of 1920 in the West Ashford Registration District, confirming the family’s residence in this part of Kent at the time. [1]

By June 1921 the Mills family were living at 12a Millbank Place, Ashford, where young Charles appears in the census as the one‑year‑old son in the household. This places his earliest childhood firmly in an urban Kentish setting, within reach of both Ashford and the surrounding rural parishes. [1]

Like many families in the aftermath of the First World War, the Mills family chose to emigrate to Canada in search of better opportunities. A Canada Ocean Arrivals Form 30A records that four‑year‑old Charles sailed to Canada on the S.S. Antonia, arriving in Quebec in 1923 to join his father, with his religion given as Baptist and his race as English. His passage was paid by his father, and his Canadian destination was 81 Euclid Avenue, Toronto, Ontario. [1]

During the 1920s the family settled into Canadian life. By 1931, the Canadian census shows Charles living at 187 Ennesdal Road, West York, Ontario, aged 11, single, a scholar, and still recorded as Baptist. This indicates a stable family home and suggests that he received his schooling in the Toronto area, growing up in a Baptist household that maintained close family ties despite the move from England. [1]

In later years the Mills family moved east along Lake Ontario to the growing industrial town of Oshawa. Contemporary newspaper coverage describes Charles as the son of Mr and Mrs C. E. Mills of Five Points Road, Oshawa, and notes that before going overseas he served as an instructor at Ottawa, evidence that his parents’ home in Oshawa became the family’s main base during the war years. [1]


Military Service

On 5 August 1940, shortly after his twentieth birthday, Charles enlisted in the Canadian Active Service Force. His attestation paper records that he joined the Midland Regiment at Bowmanville, Ontario, giving his address as R.R. #2, Oshawa, and his occupation as labourer, with experience in a “paper mill, lumber, basket, etc.” industry. He declared himself single, of Baptist religion, and named his mother, Eva Mills of Cochrane Street, Whitby, Ontario, as his next of kin. [1]

At enlistment he stated that he had not previously served in the Active Militia or in any other naval, military or air force, and had not taken part in the Great War, which is consistent with his age. In the standard declaration on his attestation he undertook to serve in the Canadian Active Service Force for the duration of the emergency and demobilisation thereafter, or for a minimum of one year if required, signing simply “Charlie Mills” beneath the printed form. [1]

Although he enlisted into the Midland Regiment, Charles later volunteered for special service and was transferred into the Canadian element of the First Special Service Force (FSSF). His subsequent records and headstone identify him as a Sergeant in the 1st Canadian Special Service Battalion, R.C.I.C., which was the Canadian battalion within the joint Canadian‑American commando formation popularly known as the “Devil’s Brigade.” [1][4][2][5]

The First Special Service Force was formed in 1942 as an elite raiding and assault unit, trained intensively in mountain warfare, skiing, amphibious operations, demolition and night fighting. It was organised as three small regiments with a service battalion, equipped and administered as part of the United States Army, but with Canadians forming roughly one‑third of its strength and commanding five of the six battalions. [4][2][5]

Within this organisation, the 1st Canadian Special Service Battalion represented the Canadian contingent and contributed men to the Force’s aggressive patrolling and raiding operations. FSSF training emphasised stealth, hand‑to‑hand combat, and deep penetration raids, earning the unit a fearsome reputation at the front. German opponents at Anzio are known to have dubbed the Force the “Black Devils” because of their blackened faces and silent night tactics. [4][6][5]

During his Canadian service, Sergeant Mills served both in instructional and field roles. A Toronto newspaper report described him as a “Technical‑Sergt. Charles Mills, a member of a paratroop squadron,” noting that before going overseas he had been an instructor at Ottawa. Family recollections preserved in a later Oshawa newspaper article record that during training he was stationed at Ottawa, Victoria, Jasper, Edmonton, Prince Rupert and Montreal, and that he took part in manoeuvres in the Aleutian Islands before shipping out to the Mediterranean theatre. [1]

By the early months of 1944, Sergeant Mills and his comrades in the First Special Service Force were deployed to Italy. After a strenuous mountain campaign, the Force was landed at the Anzio beachhead (Operation Shingle) on 1–2 February 1944, where it took over roughly a quarter of the defensive perimeter, about seven miles of front, on the Allied right flank. For the next fourteen weeks the Force conducted continuous patrols and night raids into enemy territory at Anzio, often at heavy cost. [1][7][2][6][5]


Circumstances of Death

The official record of death for Sergeant Mills states that he was killed in action in the field in Italy on 18 February 1944, his place of death simply noted as “The Field (Italy).” [1] This date falls during the most intense phase of the Battle of Anzio, when German counter‑attacks pushed hard against the Allied “Final Beachhead Line” and Allied units, including specialist formations such as the FSSF, were heavily engaged in patrols and defensive actions. [9]

Family papers and contemporaneous correspondence shed further light on the circumstances. A letter from his commanding officer in Italy, described in a 1954 Oshawa newspaper article, explained that Charles was out on patrol when his party encountered an enemy patrol “between the lines.” In the resulting affray he became separated from his companions and was not seen again. The officer highly commended him as a soldier, but there was no immediate confirmation of his fate. [1]

On 2 March 1944, a Canadian Pacific Telegraph form delivered to his mother, Mrs Eva Mills of General Delivery, Oshawa, announced that “C.65543 SERGEANT CHARLES EDWARD MILLS [was] officially reported missing in action eighteenth February 1944,” promising that further information would follow when received. [1] Months later, a letter from the Director of Records at National Defence Headquarters confirmed that no further information had been obtained and asked the family to report any news they might receive, however slight. [1]

In June 1944 his father, Charles E. Mills, wrote back on behalf of his wife, then away from home “for a much needed change,” explaining that they had no definite news. He summarised the commanding officer’s account of the patrol action and stated that the family would gladly pass on any further information received. The Canadian authorities eventually ruled that, for official purposes, Sergeant Mills, previously reported missing, was now presumed killed in action on 18 February 1944, while serving with the 1st Canadian Special Service Battalion in Italy. [1]

The broader context of his death is the costly fighting at Anzio, where Allied forces struggled for months to hold and expand the beachhead under relentless German counter‑attacks. Specialist units such as the First Special Service Force were employed for aggressive patrolling, reconnaissance and raiding, operating forward of the main line. The Force held a long stretch of front for ninety‑nine continuous days without relief, suffering substantial casualties but playing a key role in blunting German pressure on the beachhead. [1][7][2][6][5]


Burial and Commemoration

For many years after the war, Sergeant Mills’s physical resting place remained unknown to his family. A 1954 Oshawa newspaper report records that his body, “killed in action in Italy 10 years ago,” was only recently discovered near Anzio and removed to the Groesbeek Canadian War Cemetery at Nijmegen, Holland. The report notes that the news of this reburial had just been communicated to his parents, then living on Five Points Road, Oshawa. [1]

The same article explains that his father took comfort from the knowledge that the war dead were treated with reverence and care, and felt that the Nijmegen area, where some 8,000 other Canadians were buried, would be a fitting resting place for his son. The family received a registered letter stating that the cemetery was a large burial ground for Canadian Army casualties and that its maintenance in perpetuity had been arranged. [1][3]

Today, Sergeant Charles Edward Mills lies in Groesbeek Canadian War Cemetery, Netherlands, in Plot XVI, Row F, Grave 15. [1][3] His Commonwealth War Graves Commission entry gives his unit as the Canadian Special Service Battalion, R.C.I.C., and confirms his date of death as 18 February 1944. [1][3] The headstone inscription, as transcribed in the family papers, reads:

“C.65543 SERGEANT
C.E. MILLS
1ST CANADIAN
SPECIAL SERVICE BATTALION
18TH FEBRUARY 1944
AGE 25
TILL THE DAY BREAK
AND THE SHADOWS FLEE AWAY
LOVINGLY REMEMBERED AT HOME” [1]

He is further commemorated on the Canadian Virtual War Memorial maintained by Veterans Affairs Canada, which provides a public profile and remembrance for him as a Canadian casualty of the Italian campaign. [3] Earlier documents also show an administrative stamp referencing the Cassino Memorial, reflecting the initial practice of commemorating those missing in Italy before graves were located and concentrated after the war. [1]


Legacy

Sergeant Mills’s service and sacrifice sit within the remarkable story of the First Special Service Force, whose daring operations in Italy and Southern France have become a touchstone in Canadian and American special forces history. The Force’s contribution at Anzio, where it patrolled aggressively, inflicted heavy losses on the enemy, and maintained Allied morale along a precarious front, was central to the eventual success of the beachhead and the subsequent advance on Rome. [1][4][7][2][5]

Within his own family, Charles was remembered not only through official medals and documents but through more personal mementoes. The Oshawa article notes that the family kept an Italian marble statuette he had presumably bought as a souvenir to bring home, as well as his four posthumous campaign awards: the Italy Star, the 1939–1945 Star, the War Medal 1939–1945, and the Canadian Volunteer Service Medal with bar. [1] These items, together with letters, telegrams and clippings, formed a tangible link to a son lost far from home.

The newspaper notice reporting him missing placed him alongside two suburban airmen of the Royal Canadian Air Force, underlining how widely the war touched Toronto‑area families. It described him as a member of a paratroop squadron and recorded that before going overseas he had served as an instructor at Ottawa, indicating that he was valued for his skill and leadership as well as his courage in the field. [1]

Today, Sergeant Charles Edward Mills is honoured in several ways: through his grave at Groesbeek Canadian War Cemetery, through the Commonwealth War Graves Commission and Veterans Affairs Canada online memorials, and through genealogical and local history research that has reconstructed his life story. [1][3] His life, though short, traces a journey from Kentish childhood to Canadian immigrant, from Oshawa labourer to elite paratrooper of the 1st Canadian Special Service Battalion, and ultimately to a soldier who gave his life in one of the Second World War’s hardest campaigns.

Sources
[1] Individual-Report-for-Charles-Edward-Mills.pdf
[2] WW2 – Anzio https://www.canada.ca/en/department-national-defence/services/military-history/history-heritage/battle-honours-honorary-distinctions/anzio.html
[3] Charles Edward Mills – The Canadian Virtual War Memorial – Veterans Affairs Canada https://www.veterans.gc.ca/en/remembrance/memorials/canadian-virtual-war-memorial/detail/2232194
[4] First Special Service Force – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Special_Service_Force
[5] First Special Service Force – The Army Historical Foundation https://armyhistory.org/first-special-service-force/
[6] First Special Service Force History https://fssf.aplos.org/Page/1810
[7] History of the First Special Service Force – FSSF Association http://www.firstspecialserviceforce.net/history.html
[8] First Special Service Force – Canadian soldiers https://www.canadiansoldiers.com/organization/specialforces/1ssf.htm
[9] Battle of Anzio – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Anzio
[10] The Devil’s Brigade – Canada’s History Society https://www.canadashistory.ca/explore/military-war/the-devil-s-brigade
[11] Picture of the day Canadian 1st Special Service Force troops being … https://www.facebook.com/groups/754427714964136/posts/1670811843325714/
[12] “Wars should be fought in better country than this” – ARSOF History https://arsof-history.org/articles/v5n2_better_country_page_1.html
[13] Independent Companies and Special Service Battalions https://www.commandoveterans.org/book/export/html/967
[14] WWII Italian Canadian Campaign – Devils Brigade Tour | Page 1000 https://canadianbattlefieldtours.ca/devils-brigade/1000/
[15] Information object browse – AIM25 – AtoM 2.8.2 https://atom.aim25.com/index.php/informationobject/browse?subjects=122629&sf_culture=en&sortDir=desc&repos=21397&view=table&sort=relevance&topLod=0
[16] Some 1st Special Service Force patches – U.S. Militaria Forum https://www.usmilitariaforum.com/forums/index.php?%2Ftopic%2F121202-some-1st-special-service-force-patches%2F
[17] Sergeant Charles Edward Mills – Memorials – Veterans Affairs Canada https://www.veterans.gc.ca/en/remembrance/memorials/canadian-virtual-war-memorial/668934
[18] Person:Charles Mills (5) – Genealogy – WeRelate.org https://www.werelate.org/wiki/Person:Charles_Mills_(5)
[19] On this day in US Army SF/SOF history……05 Dec 1944 – Facebook https://www.facebook.com/SFACHAP60/posts/on-this-day-in-us-army-sfsof-history05-dec-1944-menton-day-last-formation-of-the/1269351785223285/
[20] 80th Anniversary First Special Service Force Deactivation | https://montanamilitarymuseum.org/80th-anniversary-first-special-service-force-deactivation/
[21] [PDF] “Matters Canadian” and the Problem with Being Special https://scholars.wlu.ca/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1344&context=cmh

William Norris: A Tale of War and Commemoration

William Norris, born in 1886 in Petham, Kent, served as a Private in the 2nd Battalion of The Buffs (East Kent Regiment). Enlisting before the First World War, he was killed in action on February 14, 1915, during trench duties in the Ypres salient. He is commemorated on the Menin Gate Memorial.

William Norris: A Detailed Biography

Early Life and Family

William Norris was born in or about October 1886 in the rural parish of Petham, Kent, England, his birth registered in the East Ashford registration district (volume 2a, page 778, line 279). [1] He was the son of John Norris and Charlotte Ann (née Foord), a Kentish couple whose family life was centred on small villages south of Ashford. [1] William’s early years were shaped by this agricultural and village environment, in which many young men later found employment either on the land or in local trades before turning to military service.

By the time of the 1891 census, William was living at “The Lees,” Naccolt, in Kent, reflecting a move within the same general rural area. [1] This address sits close to the later community of Boughton Lees, near Ashford, indicating that the Norris family’s sphere of life remained firmly within the Kent countryside. In 1901, William, aged 14, is recorded as a “stepson” in Boughton Aluph, at Boughton Lees, suggesting a change in family structure, possibly through the death of a parent and remarriage of the surviving spouse. [1] The detail implies a potentially complex household, but one still rooted in the villages around Ashford.

William did not subsequently marry, and no children are recorded for him. [1] His adult life therefore appears to have been defined primarily by his army service rather than by domestic or family responsibilities. Later CWGC records describe him as “son of the late John and Charlotte Ann Norris, of Boughton Lees, Ashford, Kent,” confirming that both parents were deceased by the time of his death and that his closest association in civil life remained the Boughton Lees area. [1][2]

Early Life and Family (Appearance and Character)

Surviving military documentation preserves some physical details about William Norris. He was recorded as being 5 feet 6¾ inches tall, with brown hair and grey eyes. [1] These particulars, typical of attestation or service papers, present a brief but humanising glimpse of the man behind the regimental number L/8705. [1] Such records were compiled when he enlisted, most likely when joining The Buffs (East Kent Regiment) in the years before the First World War.

Coming from Boughton Lees and its surroundings, William would have grown up within sight of Ashford and within easy reach of the county town of Canterbury, where The Buffs had strong recruiting connections. [1][3] The regiment, one of the oldest in the British Army, drew heavily from Kentish men, and a sense of local pride in serving with “The Buffs” was well established by the late nineteenth century. [3][4] William’s enlistment into this regiment therefore reflects both geographical proximity and local martial tradition.

Military Service

William Norris enlisted at Canterbury, Kent, joining The Buffs (East Kent Regiment) and receiving the regular army number L/8705, the “L/” prefix associated with pre-war “old contemptible” regulars of the regiment. [1][2] He served in the 2nd Battalion, The Buffs, holding the rank of Private. [1][5] His recorded period of service runs from 19 November 1907 through to his death on 14 February 1915, indicating over seven years as a professional soldier, most of it in overseas garrisons of the British Empire. [1]

On 4 August 1914, at the outbreak of the First World War, the 2nd Battalion The Buffs was stationed at Wellington, Madras, in India. [1][4] In November 1914, as part of the rapid reinforcement of the British Expeditionary Force on the Western Front, the battalion embarked from Bombay, landing at Plymouth on 16 November and moving to Winchester. [1] There it joined the 85th Brigade of the newly formed 28th Division, a regular division composed largely of battalions brought home from imperial garrisons. [1][6]

On 15–18 January 1915, the 28th Division, including 2nd Buffs, embarked at Southampton for France. [1] Disembarking at Le Havre between 16 and 19 January, the division concentrated in the area between Bailleul and Hazebrouck by 22 January 1915, operating in the Ypres sector. [1][7] The 2nd Buffs were then engaged in trench-holding duties and minor operations in the Ypres salient, a notoriously dangerous sector where artillery, sniping and harsh winter conditions inflicted steady casualties even in periods of relative quiet. [7][8]

Circumstances of Death

Private William Norris, L/8705, 2nd Battalion, The Buffs (East Kent Regiment), was killed in action on 14 February 1915 in France or Belgium, aged about 28. [1][2] His battalion was serving with the 28th Division in the Ypres salient at the time, occupying trenches and positions that were subject to enemy shelling, trench raids and sniper fire. [1][7] While detailed battalion war diary extracts are not quoted in the summary, the date and location strongly suggest that William died during routine front-line duties or localised fighting near Ypres rather than in a major named battle.

Contemporary research on 2nd Buffs in early 1915 notes that the battalion was frequently in exposed positions around the Ypres–Comines Canal and east of Ypres, sustaining casualties from German shellfire and small-arms fire in the months preceding the Second Battle of Ypres. [7][9] Listings of casualties for 14 February 1915 include Private William Norris, L/8705, The Buffs, supporting the conclusion that his death formed part of this attritional pattern of losses. [2][10] Many such casualties were never recovered or their graves later lost due to the intensity of shelling and the subsequent reshaping of the battlefield.

The absence of a known grave for William, and his commemoration instead on a memorial to the missing, reflect the grim realities of the Ypres front. [1][8] The winter of 1914–15 saw foul conditions in the trenches, with mud, flooded dugouts, frostbite and constant harassment by enemy artillery and snipers all contributing to casualties. [8] William’s death on 14 February 1915 fits this pattern of relentless pressure on the early-war regular battalions, many of whose pre-war professionals would not survive to see the later battles of 1915 and 1916.

Burial and Commemoration

William Norris has no known grave and is commemorated on the Ypres (Menin Gate) Memorial in West-Vlaanderen, Belgium. [1] He is listed on Panels 12 and 14 of the memorial, alongside many comrades from The Buffs and other regiments who fell in the Ypres salient before 16 August 1917 and whose bodies were never identified or recovered. [1][2] The Menin Gate bears the names of over 54,000 officers and men of the British and Commonwealth forces who died in the Ypres sector without known graves, making it one of the most significant monuments to the missing of the First World War. [8][11]

The Commonwealth War Graves Commission record for William, available at https://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/919099/norris,-william/, confirms his details: Private L/8705, 2nd Bn. The Buffs (East Kent Regiment), date of death 14 February 1915, son of the late John and Charlotte Ann Norris of Boughton Lees, Ashford, Kent. [1] His Find a Grave memorial (ID 12043537) further records his commemoration on the Menin Gate and provides a virtual place of remembrance for relatives and researchers. [1][5]

William’s entitlement to the 1914–15 Star, British War Medal, and Victory Medal, together with the Memorial Plaque sent to next of kin, underscores his status as an early-war regular who served overseas from the outset of the battalion’s Western Front deployment. [1] These decorations would have been sent to his surviving family in Kent, probably his mother (if then alive) or siblings, forming tangible tokens of his service and sacrifice. [1][12]

Legacy

Within the family, William Norris is remembered as a 3rd cousin 2x removed to the present researcher, linking his story to a broader Kentish kin network. [1] Genealogical work drawing on birth registrations, census returns and CWGC data has re-established his place in the Norris family of Petham and Boughton Lees, ensuring that his name and service are not lost to history. [1][2] The description in CWGC records of him as “son of the late John and Charlotte Ann Norris, of Boughton Lees, Ashford, Kent” anchors his identity firmly to his home community. [1]

More widely, William represents the many pre-war regular soldiers of The Buffs who went to France and Flanders in the early months of the war and who bore the brunt of front-line service before the arrival of Kitchener’s New Army battalions and territorial reinforcements. [3][4] His presence on the Menin Gate links him to the great narrative of the Ypres battles, a place where, as later commentators noted, casualties across several major engagements may have exceeded one million. [8] For Kent and for The Buffs’ regimental community, his name is one among many on memorials, but each represents an individual life, family and story.

Modern digital resources such as the Imperial War Museum’s “Lives of the First World War” project and websites like A Street Near You record William’s service as Private L/8705, The Buffs, born 1886 and died 1915, and highlight his inclusion among the day’s casualties on 14 February 1915. [2][12] Through these resources, along with the Menin Gate and CWGC records, William Norris’s memory continues to be preserved and accessible, allowing descendants, local historians and the broader public to reflect on his journey from Petham and Boughton Lees to the Ypres salient, where he gave his life in the service of his country. [1][2]

Sources
[1] Individual-Report-for-William-Norris.pdf
[2] Sunday 14 February 1915 – First World War Casualties https://astreetnearyou.org/date/1915/02/14
[3] Buffs (Royal East Kent Regiment) – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buffs_(Royal_East_Kent_Regiment)
[4] [PDF] Buffs (Royal East Kent Regiment) https://www.queensregimentalassociation.org/media/Buffs%20(Royal%20East%20Kent%20Regiment).pdf
[5] Lives of the First World War https://livesofthefirstworldwar.iwm.org.uk/lifestory/3283493
[6] Historical records of the Buffs, East Kent Regiment (3rd Foot) https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/73159/pg73159-images.html
[7] WW1 Roll of Honour – Leonard Terry of Teynham http://lynsted-society.co.uk/research_ww1_casualties_terry_l.html
[8] Battle of Ypres https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Ypres
[9] 2nd Btn The Buffs East Kent Regiment – Great War Forum https://www.greatwarforum.org/topic/152452-2nd-btn-the-buffs-east-kent-regiment/
[10] On This Day – from culturepics.org https://culturepics.org/on-this-day/index-bos.php?year=1915&month=02&day=14&collection=
[11] 2nd Lieutenant Elton Cyril Wanstall 8th Battalion The Buffs Royal … https://www.facebook.com/groups/436081820298097/posts/1680673975838869/
[12] Search for “Norris” in lastname | Lives of the First World War https://livesofthefirstworldwar.iwm.org.uk/searchlives/field/lastname/Norris/filter/?page=4
[13] Has anyone got any information on the 2nd Battalion? Doing some … https://www.facebook.com/groups/436081820298097/posts/1041976759708597/
[14] The Buffs – The Royal East Kents – Great War Forum https://www.greatwarforum.org/topic/12626-the-buffs-the-royal-east-kents/
[15] Second Battle of Ypres – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Battle_of_Ypres
[16] List of battalions of the Buffs (Royal East Kent Regiment) – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_battalions_of_the_Buffs_(Royal_East_Kent_Regiment)
[17] The Menin Gate Trilogy – AC https://www.remembering1418.com/menin-gate-triology-a-d
[18] Wednesday 10 February 1915 – First World War Casualties https://astreetnearyou.org/date/1915/02/10
[19] [PDF] st gregory the great – Canterbury Christ Church University https://repository.canterbury.ac.uk/download/66323ecf40dfc5587aa3219fc1760425100a35b817ef8f122d03b5c11d3205f0/508443/17494a_St.%20Gregory’s%20pamphlet.pdf
[20] Search for “East Kent Regiment, The Buffs.” in unit | Lives of the First … https://livesofthefirstworldwar.iwm.org.uk/searchlives/field/unit/East%20Kent%20Regiment,%20The%20Buffs./filter/span%5B/?page=11
[21] Buffs (East Kent) Regiment https://vickersmg.blog/in-use/british-service/the-british-army/buffs-east-kent-regiment/