Title: 95 Years Ago Post by: leefer on Wednesday, September 18, 2013, 19:04:03 (http://i934.photobucket.com/albums/ad185/swindon123/pop_zps4ef99b93.jpg) (http://s934.photobucket.com/user/swindon123/media/pop_zps4ef99b93.jpg.html)
95 Years ago tomorrow John Ferris was killed in Battle during WW1. John was my grandads brother...the oldest of the family and was dong well running a shop and pub with his dad(my great grandad) in Harptree and later in Southampton....as a young man he joined the Hants regiment in Bitterne and saw lots of action in France,the Hants regiment was almost wiped out John being one of the few to dodge the shrapnel and gas. After a brief spell resting he was drafted into the Wilts regiment(PROUD)....and dodged the flak until cruel fate decided he fell fighting in Israel a few weeks before the wars end...he is buried there still. http://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/652340/FERRIS,%20J Talking to my dad about him i knew it knocked the family for six..i didn't know about John untill a few years ago...i have done a lot of research on my family in recent years and have grew very fond of this man who is still a long,long way from home. Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: sonicyouth on Wednesday, September 18, 2013, 19:14:10 My great grandfather died shortly before Armistice Day as well.
http://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/529200/WARREN,%20H There's a long boring story about how I found out but nobody gives a fuck and will have stopped reading by this point. Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: Batch on Wednesday, September 18, 2013, 19:15:41 My great grandfather died shortly before Armistice Day as well. http://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/529200/WARREN,%20H There's a long boring story about how I found out but nobody gives a fuck and will have stopped reading by this point. I hadn't stopped reading. Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: donkey on Wednesday, September 18, 2013, 19:18:21 Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: Sir Pissalot on Wednesday, September 18, 2013, 19:19:52 Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: sonicyouth on Wednesday, September 18, 2013, 19:38:19 Fair enough! I warn you that it's boring though.
I moved to Kenilworth in 2010, saw the surname on the war memorial and knew that there was some sort of family connection to Warwickshire although nobody really knew any details about whom or where. After a little research it transpired that my grandfather had been born in a house in Kenilworth just around the corner from where I lived. Nobody in the family knew where my great grandfather had died in WWI and everyone had believed that he had died after armistice day which turned out to be incorrect. The sad part is that my great grandfather died before my grandfather was even born. I never knew either of my grandfathers and that little connection to the past meant quite a lot to me when I lived there. Title: Re: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: Batch on Wednesday, September 18, 2013, 19:45:47 That's not boring. Thanks for sharing.
Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: Samdy Gray on Wednesday, September 18, 2013, 20:09:00 Thanks leefer and sonic.
It was a previous post of leefer's on here which helped me track down my great great grandfather who died in August 1917. http://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/4019683/BARTLETT,%20RICHARD%20THOMAS Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: leefer on Wednesday, September 18, 2013, 20:19:13 Thanks leefer and sonic. It was a previous post of leefer's on here which helped me track down my great great grandfather who died in August 1917. http://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/4019683/BARTLETT,%20RICHARD%20THOMAS Looked everywhere for that thread Sam...hence the new one :-[ :-[ Nice story Sonic :thumb: Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: Sir Pissalot on Wednesday, September 18, 2013, 20:30:30 Not boring at all SY. My grandfather drove ammunition trucks in France in the first War. I wish I had asked him more about his experiences before he died but I was too young.
Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: Honkytonk on Wednesday, September 18, 2013, 21:19:38 I have a maternal grandfather I never met (he died several years before I was born) who was one of the architects on the CWGC when the great cemeteries were set up between the wars. He also fought at el Alamein in the Yeomanry, and his diaries from the time (scribbled in pencil, with plenty of illustrations and rude limericks and found in the loft a year ago) are currently being recorded for posterity by my grandmother and step-grandfather.
It makes me feel proud to think that wherever people go to look for their relatives or loved ones, he was partly responsible for organising and creating the cemeteries that mark their sacrifice. We went on a trip to Belgium in Sixth form as part of our history module, and whilst others got emotional about finding their relatives at cemeteries or on memorials, just seeing the layouts and scale of what was partially my grandfather's work really got me. The menin gate was one of his projects, and being there whilst hundreds of people wept or remembered their relatives who paid the ultimate price, I looked around and felt proud that, despite his name not being on the memorial, he has made it possible for people to tap into those emotions and memories, and his work will be as much of a testament as their sacrifice down the years. Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: leefer on Wednesday, September 18, 2013, 21:28:08 Love to see some of that stuff if you ever get the chance to show it.
Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: Red Frog on Wednesday, September 18, 2013, 22:46:10 Well thanks to this thread, I dug up the record of my great-uncle Reggie's death in 1915, aged 22, on HMS Amethyst in the Dardanelles. http://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/3033657/GUMBLETON,%20REGINALD%20CHARLES (http://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/3033657/GUMBLETON,%20REGINALD%20CHARLES)
The family story was that he'd left his towel in the showers, and had the bad luck to have gone back for it just as a Turkish shell hit the spot. He wasn't alone. The ship's history http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Amethyst_(1903)#Dardanelles_Campaign (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Amethyst_(1903)#Dardanelles_Campaign) says that on the day of his death: Quote at 04:10 she was hit by field artillery and lost 22 men killed. A further 38 men were wounded, of whom 4 later died. There's even a link to a scan of the captain's hand-written log for the day http://oldweather.s3.amazonaws.com/ADM53-33548/ADM53-33548-012_0.jpg (http://oldweather.s3.amazonaws.com/ADM53-33548/ADM53-33548-012_0.jpg), which includes Reggie's name in the list of casualties, and says that at 3.30pm the bodies were transferred to HMS Ribble for burial at sea 4' north-west of Ponente Point. So this is precisely where Reggie was buried. http://mapcarta.com/12989364 (http://mapcarta.com/12989364) Sorry if this is boring, but I'm amazed at what I've been able to find. I now know more detail than any of his immediate family did. Thanks for prompting me to look. The wonder of the internet. Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: Peter Venkman on Thursday, September 19, 2013, 07:20:15 My great uncle was killed 99 years ago on 13th November 1914, we are going over for the 100th anniversary of his death next year to Ypres where he was killed and the Menin Gate where he is commemorated.
This is his Soldiers Penny that was given to every serviceman that died in WWI, its about 4 inches accross. (http://i56.photobucket.com/albums/g171/jjedmunds/PICT2870.jpg) Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: fatbasher on Thursday, September 19, 2013, 07:43:44 Well thanks to this thread, I dug up the record of my great-uncle Reggie's death in 1915, aged 22, on HMS Amethyst in the Dardanelles. http://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/3033657/GUMBLETON,%20REGINALD%20CHARLES (http://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/3033657/GUMBLETON,%20REGINALD%20CHARLES) It's 100% more interesting than the 80% bollocks and 25% football posts we all generally post and read.The family story was that he'd left his towel in the showers, and had the bad luck to have gone back for it just as a Turkish shell hit the spot. He wasn't alone. The ship's history http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Amethyst_(1903)#Dardanelles_Campaign (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Amethyst_(1903)#Dardanelles_Campaign) says that on the day of his death: There's even a link to a scan of the captain's hand-written log for the day http://oldweather.s3.amazonaws.com/ADM53-33548/ADM53-33548-012_0.jpg (http://oldweather.s3.amazonaws.com/ADM53-33548/ADM53-33548-012_0.jpg), which includes Reggie's name in the list of casualties, and says that at 3.30pm the bodies were transferred to HMS Ribble for burial at sea 4' north-west of Ponente Point. So this is precisely where Reggie was buried. http://mapcarta.com/12989364 (http://mapcarta.com/12989364) Sorry if this is boring, but I'm amazed at what I've been able to find. I now know more detail than any of his immediate family did. Thanks for prompting me to look. The wonder of the internet. On that note, i had the privalige to visit Pegasus Bridge & museum last month and the Merville battery along with the local war cemetary. Takes your breath away if you have a heart and is very humbling. Then last week my eldest who is studying French (reason for the week in France) and German @ Reading uni had a week in Germany for the first time. He visited a museum in Munich dedicated to the Jews who perished in the camps. What i found ironic is this. The jews were being exterminated on an industrial scale and civilians throught europe were also being caught up in the conflict. On the beaches in and around Merville the British landed and died trying to defeat the third reich who were killing all and sundry. The German soldiers were dying trying to defend the third reich and by default the killing going on in occupird europe. The net result was death all over the place on all sides, who actually won, was it worth it all in the end? Does anyone actually "win" anything? Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: china red on Thursday, September 19, 2013, 07:58:42 Great grand father was in WWI looking after horses, returned home and was diagnosed as having TB, spent 5 years in a caravan at the end of the garden so as not to infect anyone else and then they found out it was a severe case of asthma (which was nicely passed down the family).
Anyone watch Wipers Times? Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: donkey on Friday, September 20, 2013, 16:35:29 Some interesting stories, a good read.
Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: leefer on Sunday, October 6, 2013, 20:22:04 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BsOsdGtBBTg&feature=youtu.be
Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: leefer on Wednesday, October 16, 2013, 20:03:02 http://www.swindonadvertiser.co.uk/news/3835499.tragic_end_for_highworth_s_band_of_brothers/
Heard of this a few years back...an older brother served in the Navy and survived the war. Wiltshire's Band of Brothers. Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: Red Frog on Thursday, February 12, 2015, 00:50:45 Coming back to an old topic, and for anyone who's interested in this sort of stuff, I've just posted a summary of the research I found into the death of my great-uncle in WW1 on the British Legion's brilliant Every Man Remembered site, just in time for the centenary of his death in March.
http://www.everymanremembered.org/profiles/soldier/3033657/ (http://www.everymanremembered.org/profiles/soldier/3033657/) I was frankly amazed by how much I could piece together from the internet, so I now know more than his family did. Would encourage anyone with a story of a relative lost in WW1 to publish it on the Legion's site for posterity. Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: Batch on Thursday, February 12, 2015, 07:25:17 Horrible thing to happen, but good that you found out.
Can't imagine what a different world it was to be an 18 year old going to war. Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: Peter Venkman on Thursday, February 12, 2015, 08:25:57 Coming back to an old topic, and for anyone who's interested in this sort of stuff, I've just posted a summary of the research I found into the death of my great-uncle in WW1 on the British Legion's brilliant Every Man Remembered site, just in time for the centenary of his death in March. As posted on here before I too lost my Great Uncle in WW1, the centenary of his death was back on November 13th and his body never found so is commemorated on the Menin Gate. http://www.everymanremembered.org/profiles/soldier/3033657/ (http://www.everymanremembered.org/profiles/soldier/3033657/) I was frankly amazed by how much I could piece together from the internet, so I now know more than his family did. Would encourage anyone with a story of a relative lost in WW1 to publish it on the Legion's site for posterity. http://www.everymanremembered.org/profiles/soldier/1611175/ But after doing a lot of searching we cannot find any more details than this. (http://i56.photobucket.com/albums/g171/jjedmunds/30850_A000490-02932_zpszc5axbki.jpg) (http://s56.photobucket.com/user/jjedmunds/media/30850_A000490-02932_zpszc5axbki.jpg.html) We do in the family still have his dead mans penny which is about 5 inches in diameter. (http://i56.photobucket.com/albums/g171/jjedmunds/PICT2870.jpg) (http://s56.photobucket.com/user/jjedmunds/media/PICT2870.jpg.html) Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: herthab on Thursday, February 12, 2015, 12:44:20 No disrespect meant JJ, but the first thing that caught my eye was the address. Benny Hill!??
Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: Bob's Orange on Thursday, February 12, 2015, 12:47:47 No disrespect meant JJ, but the first thing that caught my eye was the address. Benny Hill!?? Surely Berry Hill? Title: Re: 95 Years Ago Post by: Peter Venkman on Thursday, February 12, 2015, 12:51:14 No disrespect meant JJ, but the first thing that caught my eye was the address. Benny Hill!?? Berry Hill Coleford mate :) |