The Buffs Regiment: Horace Edwin Deal’s Story

Private Horace Edwin Deal, born in December 1898, served in The Buffs (East Kent Regiment) during World War I. He was killed in action on May 10, 1918, at age 19, in France amid the German spring offensives. Buried at Esquelbecq Military Cemetery, he remains commemorated locally in Kent.

This article presents a researched biography of Private Horace Edwin Deal of The Buffs (East Kent Regiment), tailored for family history and local remembrance.[file:1][web:5] It combines genealogical evidence with the wider military context of his unit in the First World War, particularly around the time of his death in May 1918.[file:1][web:9]

Private Horace Edwin Deal, G/25264, 1st Battalion, The Buffs (East Kent Regiment), killed in action on 10 May 1918, aged 19.

Commonwealth War Graves Commission & contemporary casualty records

Early Life and Family

Horace Edwin Deal was born about December 1898 in the rural parish of Waltham, Kent, England, his birth registered in the East Ashford registration district (Volume 2A, Page 817).[file:1] He was the son of Frederick Deal and his wife Jane, née Buesden, a Kent farming family whose roots lay in the countryside south of Canterbury.[file:1] The family’s agricultural background and relatively stable residence patterns suggest a close-knit rural upbringing, typical of many young men later swept into the Great War.[file:1][web:13]

In the 1901 census Horace appears as a two‑year‑old living at Waddenhall, Waltham, Kent, recorded as the son of Frederick and Jane Deal.[file:1] By the 1911 census he was still at Waddenhall, aged twelve, again described simply as “son”, indicating that he was still in full‑time education and had not yet entered employment.[file:1] These records place the Deal family firmly within the farming communities east of Ashford, an area of small farms and hamlets where seasonal work and family labour on the land were the norm.[file:1][web:13]

By 1918 Horace’s parents were living at Hill House Farm, Wootton, near Canterbury, Kent, which is given as his residence both in military and commemorative sources.[file:1][web:5] Hill House Farm thus became the address associated with his official remembrance, appearing in later summaries of his service and in the inscriptional details linked to his grave in France.[file:1][web:5] No evidence has been found that Horace married or had children, and both the family report and military summaries record him with no spouse or issue, making him one of the many young rural bachelors lost in the war.[file:1]

Military Service with The Buffs (East Kent Regiment)

Horace enlisted into the British Army at Canterbury, Kent, a major recruiting centre for local regiments, and joined The Buffs (East Kent Regiment).[file:1] His service number was G/25264, a “G/” prefixed number typical of wartime enlistments into the regiment’s regular or service battalions.[file:1][web:25] Contemporary compiled records and the family report agree that he served as a Private in the 1st Battalion, The Buffs (East Kent Regiment), usually known simply as the 1st Buffs.[file:1][web:13]

The Buffs were one of the oldest infantry regiments in the British Army, with origins traced back to the sixteenth century and a distinguished record of service across the Empire.[web:3][web:16] During the First World War the regiment expanded dramatically, fielding multiple battalions on several fronts and suffering over 6,000 dead, reflecting the heavy casualties sustained by British infantry units on the Western Front and elsewhere.[web:3][web:7] Horace’s battalion, the 1st Buffs, was a regular battalion which, at the outbreak of war in 1914, formed part of 16th Brigade in the 6th Division.[web:6][web:9]

In the early stages of the war, the 1st Buffs fought in the campaign of 1914 in France and Flanders, taking part in such actions as the Battle of the Aisne and subsequent operations around Armentières, alongside other units of the 6th Division.[web:6][web:9] Later in the war, the battalion’s service took it away from the Western Front, and official summaries note a move to India in January 1916 as part of the army’s global redeployment of regular infantry.[web:9] Despite this, “Soldiers Died in the Great War”–type data and local rolls of honour consistently list Horace as serving with the 1st Battalion, the apparent discrepancy illustrating how administrative battalion designations and front‑line postings can sometimes diverge in surviving records.[file:1][web:13]

Horace served in the Western European theatre, specifically France and Flanders, as confirmed by both the family report and later index entries.[file:1] His fate is recorded simply and starkly as “Killed in Action”, a standard phrase indicating that he died as a direct result of hostile operations rather than from sickness or accident.[file:1] For his war service he qualified for the British War Medal and Victory Medal, and his parents would also have received the Memorial Plaque, sometimes called the “Dead Man’s Penny”, commemorating his sacrifice.[file:1]

Circumstances of Death and Unit Context in May 1918

Private Horace Edwin Deal died on 10 May 1918, aged nineteen, during the later stages of the German spring offensives in Flanders.[file:1][web:5] His death is recorded as having taken place in France and Flanders, within the wider context of the Battles of the Lys, a major German attack launched in April 1918 against British and Portuguese forces in the Ypres–Lys sector.[file:1][web:19] The family report specifically notes that his death came after the Battle of the Scherpenberg on 29 April 1918, one of the subsidiary actions of the Lys offensive in which British troops fought to hold key high ground near Ypres.[file:1][web:22]

By April 1918 the area around the village of Esquelbecq, in the Nord department of France, had become an important rear‑area medical zone supporting the hard‑pressed front north of Hazebrouck.[web:19][web:21] In that month the 2nd Canadian and 3rd Australian Casualty Clearing Stations established themselves at Esquelbecq to receive the steady flow of wounded from the front, reflecting the intensity of the German attacks on the Lys.[web:19][web:21] The timing of Horace’s death on 10 May 1918 and his burial in Esquelbecq Military Cemetery strongly suggest that he was wounded in the operations associated with the Battles of the Lys and subsequently died of his wounds at or near one of these casualty clearing stations, even though his cause of death is officially recorded as “killed in action”.[file:1][web:19]

Regimental and battalion‑level sources for the Buffs confirm that the regiment as a whole was heavily engaged throughout the war, but they also reveal that the 1st Battalion had been redeployed to India by 1916, with other battalions of the Buffs (such as the 7th and 8th) fighting in France in 1918.[web:6][web:9] This makes it likely that Horace’s recorded attachment to the 1st Battalion reflects either administrative practice or a posting trail rather than the battalion physically serving as a formed unit near Esquelbecq in May 1918.[web:9][web:25] Such complexities are not uncommon in First World War records, and they remind us that soldiers could be transferred, attached, or treated alongside other units while still being recorded under their original battalion designation in compiled sources and on local memorials.[file:1][web:13]

Local remembrance sources and casualty listings underline Horace’s connection to Kent communities during this period of the war.[file:1][web:13] A Kent roll of honour entry records him as “Private G/25264, 1st Battalion, The Buffs (East Kent Regiment)”, closely matching the details preserved by the family and confirming the consistent way his service was remembered in his home county.[web:13] His story thus stands as an example of a young Kentish farm worker drawn into the maelstrom of the Western Front in 1918, where the final year of the war proved as deadly as any that had gone before.[file:1][web:5]

Burial and Commemoration

Horace is buried in Esquelbecq Military Cemetery, Nord, France, where his grave is located in Plot II, Row C, Grave 21.[file:1][web:5] The cemetery lies about one kilometre west of the village of Esquelbecq and was designed by the renowned architect Sir Edwin Lutyens for the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.[web:18][web:21] Esquelbecq Military Cemetery contains 578 Commonwealth burials of the First World War, many of them men who died in the casualty clearing stations established there in response to the German Lys offensive.[web:19][web:21]

His headstone and cemetery entry record him as Private G/25264, The Buffs (East Kent Regiment), the son of Frederick and Jane Deal of Hill House Farm, Wootton, near Canterbury, Kent.[file:1][web:5] This wording closely echoes the family details set out in genealogical reports, confirming the link between the official grave record and the Deal family in Kent.[file:1][web:5] As with other Commonwealth burials, his grave is maintained in perpetuity, ensuring that his name remains visible both on the headstone in France and in the online registers of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.[file:1][web:21]

Horace is also commemorated in a number of digital remembrance projects that draw on official and local sources.[file:1][web:5] The Everyone Remembered initiative, created in partnership with the Royal British Legion, carries a profile for “Private Horace Edwin Deal, G/25264, The Buffs (East Kent Regiment), age 19”, noting his death on 10 May 1918 and giving Esquelbecq Military Cemetery as his place of burial.[web:5] The Imperial War Museums’ “Lives of the First World War” database likewise includes an entry for him, linking together service details and commemorative data to form an online record of his life and death.[web:8][web:14]

Legacy and Descendants

Although Horace left no spouse or children, his legacy has endured through extended family research and local remembrance in Kent.[file:1] The compiled report that underpins this biography identifies him as a fourth cousin twice removed to the researcher, reflecting the wider kin networks that connect many modern families to First World War casualties.[file:1] Such reconstructions of family trees allow present‑day relatives to restore individual identities to the names that appear in official registers and on war memorials.[file:1][web:13]

Within Kent, Horace’s name appears in roll‑of‑honour material associated with villages such as Petham and the surrounding area, preserving his memory alongside that of other local men who served with The Buffs and neighbouring regiments.[web:13] These local lists, often drawn up after the war by parish councils or community committees, frequently used information supplied by families, which explains the close agreement between the details recorded there and those in the Deal family’s own documentation.[file:1][web:13] Through these memorials, Horace is remembered not only as a soldier of The Buffs but as a young man from a specific farming landscape and community in east Kent.[file:1][web:13]

For genealogists and descendants, there remain avenues for further research into Horace’s service and context, including consultation of surviving war diaries for units operating in the Esquelbecq–Hazebrouck area in May 1918 and exploration of medal rolls for The Buffs.[web:6][web:9] Online resources such as Ancestry and Findmypast may yield additional documents, such as pension cards or effects registers, that could add further nuance to his story.[web:25] Together with the sources cited below, these tools help to ensure that Private Horace Edwin Deal’s short life and service are documented as fully as surviving records allow.[file:1][web:5]

Sources and Further Reading