Lance Corporal Percy Victor Mount (service number 23256) served with the 7th (Service) Battalion, East Surrey Regiment, and was killed in action on 9 April 1917 during the opening day of the Battle of Arras, in the First Battle of the Scarpe.[file:114][web:121][web:123]
He has no known grave and is commemorated on the Arras Memorial, Bay 6, in northern France, alongside thousands of comrades who fell in the same offensive.[file:114][web:121]
Early Life and Family
Percy Victor Mount was born about February 1890 in Newington, Kent, his birth registered in the Eastry registration district (volume 2A, page 1043, line 342). He was the son of George Marsh Mount and Mary Jane (née Raines), who later lived at 154 High Street, Cheriton, near Folkestone, Kent.[file:114][web:119]
In the 1891 census he appears as a one‑year‑old child in Cheriton; by 1901 the family were still in Cheriton, living at 9 Park Road. By 1911, aged twenty‑one and single, Percy was working as a servant and general assistant at the Nelson Head Inn, 6 Chapel Street, Hythe, indicating that he had moved into the licensed trade and hospitality work.[file:114]
Between May 1915 and February 1917 he is recorded as resident at the Nelson’s Head Ale House in Hythe, suggesting that he remained closely linked to the inn and the local community; Hythe records also note that he was a member of the Hythe Fire Brigade. On 11 October 1913 he married Annie Elizabeth Johnson at Ss Peter & Paul, Saltwood, following banns read at St Leonard’s, Hythe, in September, and the couple had at least two children, Lucy Margaret Mount and Percy Charles Mount.[file:114][web:128]
From Cheriton and Hythe, where he worked at the Nelson’s Head and served in the Fire Brigade, Percy Mount took his place in Kitchener’s New Army.
Reconstructed from census, parish, and local notes
Enlistment and the 7th (Service) Battalion, East Surrey Regiment
Percy enlisted at Canterbury between 15 June 1916 and 9 April 1917, joining the East Surrey Regiment and being posted to the 7th (Service) Battalion. His service number is given as 23256, and he rose to the rank of Lance Corporal, a junior non‑commissioned officer responsible for leading a small section of men.[file:114][web:116][web:118]
The 7th (Service) Battalion, East Surrey Regiment, was formed at Kingston‑on‑Thames in August 1914 as part of Kitchener’s First New Army (K1), joining 37th Brigade in the 12th (Eastern) Division. After training at Purfleet and Aldershot, the battalion landed at Boulogne on 2 June 1915 and thereafter served on the Western Front.[file:114][web:123]
The battalion saw heavy action throughout the war, fighting at the Battle of Loos in 1915; on the Somme in 1916 at the Battles of Albert, Pozières, and Le Transloy; and in 1917 at the First and Third Battles of the Scarpe and the Battle of Arleux, as well as later in the Cambrai operations. It was disbanded in France on 5 February 1918, its survivors redistributed to other units.[file:114][web:123]
As a Lance Corporal in the 7th East Surreys, Mount fought with 12th (Eastern) Division – a New Army formation that saw repeated service on the Western Front.
Summary of the battalion’s war service
The 7th East Surreys at the First Battle of the Scarpe
Percy was killed on 9 April 1917, the opening day of the Battle of Arras, during the First Battle of the Scarpe. On this day, 12th (Eastern) Division, including 37th Brigade and the 7th East Surreys, attacked from the south‑eastern outskirts of Arras, north of the Arras–Cambrai road, across Observation Ridge towards Monchy‑le‑Preux.[file:114][web:121][web:123]
The divisional objective was to capture three systems of German trenches and the communication trench known as Feuchy Switch, together with strongpoints in and around Feuchy. Within this plan, 36th Infantry Brigade attacked on the left, with 7th Royal Sussex Regiment and 11th Middlesex Regiment leading, while 37th Infantry Brigade, with the 7th East Surrey Regiment and 6th Queen’s (Royal West Surrey Regiment) in the lead, attacked on the right.[file:114][web:121]
After an artillery barrage beginning at 05.30, the initial attack went well and the forward German positions fell quickly. However, when the second‑wave battalions advanced to attack the second‑line objectives on Observation Ridge and Feuchy Switch, resistance stiffened significantly, particularly around Feuchy Switch and Feuchy Chapel Redoubt; casualties among battalions such as the 8th Royal Fusiliers, 6th The Buffs (East Kent), and 6th Queen’s Own (Royal West Kent) were heavy as they pressed on through German fire.[file:114][web:121]
By nightfall the division held a line between La Chapelle de Feuchy and the Feuchy Road, short of its final objectives, after fierce fighting over Observation Ridge and Battery Valley. It was for actions on this day that Sergeant H. Cator of the 7th East Surreys was later awarded the Victoria Cross. Percy’s death on 9 April 1917 places him squarely within this costly but ultimately successful assault.[file:114][web:121]
Mount fell on the first day of the Battle of Arras, as 12th (Eastern) Division fought its way over Observation Ridge towards Monchy‑le‑Preux.
Context from divisional and battalion histories
Circumstances of Death
The individual report gives Percy’s cause of death simply as “Killed in Action” on 9 April 1917 in France. Local notes describe him as the son of the late Mr and Mrs George Mount of 154 High Street, Cheriton, Folkestone, and husband of Annie Elizabeth Mount, of 2 Ivy Cottages, Bradstone Road, Folkestone; they also record that he was a member of the Hythe Fire Brigade.[file:114][web:115]
He has no known grave and is commemorated on the Arras Memorial rather than in a marked burial plot, indicating that his body was either not recovered or could not be identified following the fighting. This was common in large‑scale offensives such as the Battle of Arras, where intense shelling and rapid advances and withdrawals made battlefield burial difficult.[file:114][web:121]
Burial and Commemoration
Percy Victor Mount is commemorated on the Arras Memorial, Bay 6, which stands in the Faubourg d’Amiens Cemetery at Arras. The memorial honours nearly 35,000 servicemen of the United Kingdom, South Africa, and New Zealand who died in the Arras sector between spring 1916 and 7 August 1918 and have no known grave.[file:114][web:121]

His Commonwealth War Graves Commission entry can be viewed here: CWGC casualty details for Lance Corporal P. V. Mount. An additional memorial entry, which may include photographs and personal tributes, is available at Find a Grave memorial 124741590.[file:114]
Family and Legacy
Percy left behind his widow, Annie Elizabeth, and their children Lucy Margaret and Percy Charles, as well as his wider family in Cheriton, Hythe, and Folkestone. For them, his name on the Arras Memorial and in local commemorations represented not only a national sacrifice but the loss of a husband, father, and son who had been active in his community as a publican’s assistant and fireman.[file:114][web:115][web:128]
Regimentally, his story forms part of the East Surrey Regiment’s wider record in the First World War, particularly the service of its New Army battalions in battles such as Loos, the Somme, and Arras. As a Lance Corporal of the 7th (Service) Battalion, Percy Victor Mount stands among those citizen‑soldiers who enlisted from small towns and villages and gave their lives in major offensives on the Western Front.[file:114][web:117][web:123]
For descendants and family historians, resources such as Ancestry, the Imperial War Museum’s Lives of the First World War project, and local Hythe and Cheriton history publications help to place his life—from his birth in Newington to his last day on Observation Ridge—within a richer family and community context.[file:114][web:116][web:118]
Sources
- Individual report for Lance Corporal Percy Victor Mount (family tree compilation, including birth and residence details for Newington, Cheriton, Hythe and Folkestone; marriage to Annie Elizabeth Johnson; children Lucy Margaret and Percy Charles; enlistment at Canterbury; service with 7th (Service) Battalion, East Surrey Regiment; and Arras Memorial commemoration).[file:114]
- Commonwealth War Graves Commission – casualty record for “MOUNT, PERCY VICTOR”, Lance Corporal 23256, 7th Bn., East Surrey Regiment, commemorated on the Arras Memorial, Bay 6: CWGC casualty details.[file:114]
- Find a Grave – memorial for Percy Victor Mount (Arras Memorial, Bay 6, with scope for photographs and tributes): Find a Grave memorial 124741590.[file:114]
- East Surrey Regiment – general regimental history and outline of New Army battalions’ service on the Western Front (Loos, Somme, Arras, Cambrai): East Surrey Regiment and casualty/roll material at A Street Near You – East Surrey Regiment.[web:123][web:117]
- Battle of Arras, 1917 – context for the First Battle of the Scarpe (9 April 1917), including objectives on Observation Ridge, Feuchy, and Feuchy Switch, and the role of British divisions such as 12th (Eastern) Division: Battle of Arras (1917).[web:121]
- 12th (Eastern) Division and Hythe connections – local and social context, including references to Percy Mount as a member of the Hythe Fire Brigade and material on Hythe’s First World War servicemen: Hythe History Blog (general local history context; Percy Mount references in posts on Hythe war dead).[web:128][web:115]