Site Home
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this site you agree to accept cookies.
If you enjoy this site please consider making a donation.
Great War Home
Search
Add Stories & Photos
Library
Help & FAQs
Features
Allied Army
Day by Day
RFC & RAF
Prisoners of War
War at Sea
Training for War
The Battles
Those Who Served
Hospitals
Civilian Service
Women at War
The War Effort
Central Powers Army
Central Powers Navy
Imperial Air Service
Library
World War Two
Submissions
Add Stories & Photos
Time Capsule
Information
Help & FAQs
Glossary
Volunteering
News
Events
Contact us
Great War Books
About
211800Pte. Percival Frederick King
British Army First Eastern General Hospital Royal Army Medical Corps
from:7 De Greville Avenue Cambridge
Percy King was from a technically minded family, two of his brothers were car mechanics and engine fitters and worked in the Family Business, King and Harper in Cambridge,(This business was started by their Father, William King, who was also Chief Engineer in a scheme running tractors for the Board of Agriculture during WW1). However Percy did not go into the family business and became a scientific instrument maker and worked for the Cambridge Scientific Instrument Company.
On 18 November 1913 he joined the RAMC (TF) for 4 Years service and he worked at the First Eastern General Hospital (1191 other ranks beds and 151 Officers Beds) in Cambridge the entire time until his on discharge 17 November 1917. Even though it was the height of the war, he was released for essential war work (making instruments) back at his old company, instead of being re-enlisted. His elder brother 2nd Lt Reginald King 48425 was also in the Army (RFC)and served as a pilot, and one of his younger brothers Private Augustus King 202906 was an engine fitter in the Army Service Corps.
Percy was one of the many soldiers who survived the war unscathed and did not see front-line action but did essential work on the home front. He was my uncle and although he married, he never had any children to research or tell his story.
2338792nd Lt. Percy James Church King MM.
British Army 315th Brigade, D Bty. Royal Field Artillery
from:Leeds
(d.24th Oct 1917)
250682Cpl. Ralph King
British Army 2nd Btn. Royal Munster Fusiliers
from:Wimborne, Dorset
(d.4th October 1918)
Ralph King served with 2nd Royal Munster Fusiliers.
216350Spr. Sidney King
British Army 22nd Light Railway Train Crew Company Royal Engineers
from:Ferryhill
(d.23rd July 1917)
Sidney King served with 22nd Light Railway Train Crew Company and was aged 19 when he died on 23rd July 1917. He was born in Jarrow, son of Frederick and Mary A. King (nee Thurston) of North Eastern Gas Works House, Castle Eden County Durham. On the 1911 census he is listed as Sidney King age 12 at School living with his parents Frederick and Mary A. King at North Eastern Gas Works, Ferryhill
Sidney is buried in Vlamertinghe New Military Cemetery.
210121Sgt. Thomas William King
British Army 189th "Hackney" Bty. Royal Field Artillery
from:Wick Road, Homerton
My Great grandfather was in the Royal Marine Light Infantry before the war but enlisted as a Private in the Royal (London) Welsh Fusiliers 15th Battalion on the 2/11/1914. He was quickly promoted due to his previous experience and transferred to the RFA on the 2/10/1915 as a Sergeant. He was demobbed in January 1919. In May 1916 he was severely reprimanded for an improper reply to an officer and his rank was reduced to Corporal and his pay stopped for 2 months. He didn't regain his rank as Sergeant again until November 1917. He claimed to have fought at the Somme and alongside the Guerkas of which he was very proud. Apart from that he spoke very little about the war.
210307Pte. Thomas King
British Army Machine Gun Corp
(d.02 December 1917)
211565Pte. Thomas William King
British Army 12th Btn. Suffolk Regiment
from:London
Tommy King was my wonderful father who was born in Bermondsey (London's East End) on March 25th 1894. He was educated at Holy Trinity Church school and his mother, Elizabeth King (nee Carr), cleaned the church most of her adult life. His father, John James King, was a Hop Porter. Dad used to talk about Peak Freans, Oxo etc. who were based in the East End too. Dad worked at some time on the docks. He was also (after the war) a wood block floor layer with a firm called Hollis Brothers from London.
Because he was scarcely five feet tall I suspect that he was in the Bantams. Following a brief period of training dad was sent to France in about October 1916 and was posted to Loos. He was severely injured when a grenade went off in his hand causing severe damage to his back and side, and the loss of a finger. Following emergency first aid on the front line he was brought back to England and spent some time at the Red Cross Convalescent home at Newlands Corner,near Guildford. From there he went with other soldiers to Shoreham. When the military staff considered that he was fit enough again they put him to work in the Labour Corps.
216446Pte. Thomas William King
British Army 12th Btn. Suffolk Regiment
from:Rotherhithe, East London
Thamas William King was born in East London on March 25th 1894. He served with the Suffolk Bantams in WW1 and was very badly injured and treated on the Front Line.
225789Pte. Thomas King
British Army 2nd/5th Btn. C Company Yorks & Lancaster Regiment
from:Rotherham
(d.13th March 1917)
235899Pte. Thomas King
British Army 17th Btn. Sherwood Foresters (Notts and Derby Regiment)
(d.22nd May 1916)
Thomas King was killed on the 22nd of May 1916. He was 32 years old, son of Thomas and Eliza King of Keyworth, Nottingham, husband of Lydia H. King of 10, Allen St., Hucknall, Notts.
250058Pte. Thomas William King
British Army 12th Btn. Suffolk Regiment
from:London
My wonderful father, Tommy King was less than 5ft tall and was in the Bantams, I think. After suffering terrible injuries he was in the Labour Corps. Any help to find out more would be so kind, at 77 time is not on my side.
232765Pte. Thos. King
British Army 24th (Tyneside Irish) Battalion Northumberland Fusiliers
from:Gateshead
Thomas King is buried in Fabourg dAmiens
231015Victor Charles King
British Army 8th Btn. Somerset Light Infantry
from:Pensford
224428Cpl W H King
British Army 8th Btn. Somerset Light Infantry
(d.29th June 1916)
348W. R. King
Army 9th Btn. Durham Light Infantry
148082Cpl. William George King
British Army 6th Btn. Ox & Bucks Light Infantry
from:Wolverton
My Dad, William King, joined up in Wolverton on 14 November 1914, aged almost 21. He first went to France in April 1915 as, having previously been in Wolverton TA, he was classed as an experienced soldier. I believe he was involved in the battle of Festubert south of Vimy Ridge in the Bethune area. I am currently trying to find out where else he was whilst in Ox & Bucks Light Infantry. He left them in 1917 after being recommended for a commission.
He did his officer's training at Bristol University. He was commissioned in April 1918 & joined the Rifle Brigade. A war diary entry for September 1918 shows he was among a group of 2nd Lieutenants who joined the regiment at a village in Northern France called Frevillers. The diarist described this village as "quite the nicest billet we have been in for many a long time, we have organised a sports day for the local children who run for pennies we throw to them". I, my husband and son have been privileged to have walked along the road running through this village where my father walked in September 1918 when he was just 24 years old.
He was injured some weeks later and demobbed in 1919 from Chiseldon in Wiltshire, only a few miles from where he would eventually spend the rest of his life.
238796Drvr. William King
British Army 4A Res. Bde. Royal Field Artillery
(d.17th December 1915)
Driver King was 24 when he died and is buried in the south east part of the Edgeworthstown Cemetery, Mostrim, Co. Longford, Ireland.
239046Pte. William King
British Army 1st Battalion Gordon Highlanders
from:Aberdeen
250879William George King
British Army 33rd Battalion Royal Fusiliers
from:Norfolk, UK
250750L/Cpl. Ernest William Francis Kingdon
British Army 1/6th Battalion Devonshire Regiment
from:South Molton, Devon
Ernest Kingdon was born 1st February 1898 at 10 Cooks Cross, South Molton. He died 16th June 1951, 18 Barnstaple Street, South Molton My father, Ernest was brought up by his grandparents, Edwin Kingdon and Mary Jane who lived at 10 Cooks Cross, South Molton in 1901 and at number 14 Cooks Cross in 1911. In 1911 Ernest, age 13, was working as a mason's assistant.
Ernest enlisted with the Devonshire Regiment, when he was 15 years old. His Territorial Force number, 1833, indicates an enlistment date of around the 10th January 1914. He served with the 1/6th Battalion, Devonshire Regiment in England, India and Mesopotamia during the Great War 1914 -1919. Although the government of the day said that members of the Territorial Army would not be recruited for War and that men under the age of 19 would not have to serve overseas, this proved not to be the case.
On 31st August 1914 the Devon Battalions volunteered for Foreign Service. Field Marshal, Lord Kitchener inspected the Devon and Cornwall Brigade on that date. On the 15th September the Battalion was warned for service in France but on the 16th September the order was cancelled and the whole of the Wessex Division was put on order for India. On 9th October 1914, 30 Officers and 803 NCO's and men, embarked on H.M.T Galeka en route for India from Southampton Docks. They arrived at Karachi on the 3rd January 1915. They remained in India for several months. Orders to join the Mesopotamia Expeditionary Force were received on 17th December 1915 and the battalion embarked for Mesopotamia (modern day Iraq) on the 29th December 1915 on the H T Elephanta. They reached Shat-El-Arab, port of Basra on the 3rd January 1916. (River formed by the Union of the Tigris and Euphrates).
The battalion arrived at Karachi at 6 a.m on the 11th November 1914 and on the 12th November 1914 they left by train for Lahore, arriving there on the 14th November. Machine guns were issued to the battalion on the 5th January 1915. On the 10th May 1915 the battalion was reorganised. A and B Company became A Company at Lahore Cantonment, C and G Companies became B Company at Dalhousie, E and F Companies became C Company at Fort Lahore and D and H Companies became D Company at Lahore Cantonment. The battalion took over Fort Lahore on the 16th January 1915. The 4th battalion sent many of their men to signalling courses at Kasauli and to machine gun courses at Kota Gheri and musketry courses at Rawal Pindi. The 5th battalion was in the Lahore Divisional and spent over a year at Multan which had the reputation of being the hottest and dustiest cantonment in India. Both the 4th and the 5th sent drafts to Mesopotamia but most of the 5th were in the hills at Dalhousie, India, where it was cooler. The 6th battalion had to find two companies to proceed to Amritsar and a detachment for Lahore Fort, better known to the Army in India as Mian Mir Barracks. The political situation in the Punjab around Lahore and Amritsar caused anxiety and there were problems at Rawal Pindi. This meant that 500 men were kept on the plains in extremely hot weather. Many were young and untrained soldiers and the heat was unbearable.
The British Army was responsible for internal security. The 1/6th completed their training in India, which included "The Kitchener's Test." This consisted of a 15 mile march, an attack on an entrenched position with ball cartridge, laying out a bivouac, an advance followed by a two mile retreat, the fortification of a position, relief and occupation of trenches by night, physical drill and bayonet fighting. Whilst in India in 1915, the 6th sent two small drafts of men to Mesopotamia. The soldiers were anxious for active service and when asked for an officer and 29 volunteers to go to Mesopotamia almost the whole battalion volunteered. On the 14th May 1915, 29 NCOs and men under Lieut H G Waldram volunteered for Mesopotamia and left Lahore to assist the 2nd Dorsets at Kut. Another 15 men followed two months later. In December 1915 the Viceroy of India visited Lahore. He was very impressed by the guards of honour which the 6th provided. Subsequently on the 17th December 1915 the 6th received orders and twelve days later embarked for Mesopotamia.
The main reason for the invasion of Mesopotamia was to protect the oil wells at the head of the Persian Gulf. Britain and France, Russia's allies, declared War on Turkey on the 5th November 1914 because of the help the Turks gave to the Germans in attacking Russia. Winston Churchill, First Lord of the Admiralty, planned to attack the Dardanelles waterway and the battle of Gallipoli followed from the 19th February 1915 to January 1916. The British in Mesopotamia took Basra in November 1914, Shaiba in December 1914, Qurna in April 1915 and the major Turkish supply base of Nasiriyeh on the 27th June 1915. The British regional Commander-in-Chief, Sir John Nixon, decided that because British losses had been light it merited a continued advance to Kut. Sir John Nixon's ultimate aim was to capture Baghdad. If Kut was captured it would mean that a garrison at Nasiriyeh would not be required. Sir Charles Vere Ferres Townshend was instructed to proceed with his 6th (Poona) Indian Division, along with a cavalry brigade, to take Kut. The British Forces arrived there on the 26th September 1915. Kut was defended by 12 Turkish battalions which included a large number of Arab soldiers. The 10,500 Turks had entrenched themselves on both banks of the River Tigris under the command of General Nur-ud-Din.
Early on the 28th September 1915, Sir Charles Townshend and his forces successfully crossed the River Tigris and attacked the Turkish positions from the north. The Turks suffered 1,700 casualties and 1,300 prisoners were taken. The Turkish Forces retreated 93 miles up the Tigris River to the ancient Persian town of Ctesiphon, 22 miles from Baghdad. The Battle of Ctesiphon, 22nd November 1915 to the 25th November 1915, resulted in a humiliating retreat, by the 6th (Poona) Division of the Indian Army, under Major-General Charles Townshend, back to Kut al Amara in early December 1915.
Kut was in a good defensive position but it was extremely difficult to get supplies there because it was contained within a long loop of the river Tigris and it was a long way from Basra. Townshend and his men were trapped. The Turkish force of 10,500 men advanced on the 7th December. On the previous day, 6th December 1915, the division's cavalry had been despatched back to Basra reducing the number of men in the division when they again came under siege by the Turks. Leading the Turks were Nur-Ud-Din and the German commander Baron von der Goltz. They had been ordered to force the British out of Mesopotamia. To do this they attacked the British on three separate occasions in December 1915, but failed. Sir Charles' force was exhausted and unable to retreat further. He decided to stay and hold Kut supported by the regional Commander-in-Chief, Sir John Nixon. Although the town was of importance to the British, the War Office in London favoured a retreat still further south. However, by the time Townshend received this news he was already under siege. In Britain and India, the news of Townshend's setback had stunned the government. They immediately sent additional forces to the region, diverted from the Western Front. Townshend was informed that a relief operation might take two months to arrange so he proposed breaking out of Kut and heading further south. Nixon however insisted that he remain at Kut and therefore tie up as many Turkish forces as possible.
In due course the first British expedition to break the blockade at Kut was set underway from Basra in January 1916, led by Sir Fenton Aylmer. Sir Fenton Aylmer had already suffered heavy losses at Sheikh Saad, the Wadi and Hannah during January and had not recovered, but his plan was to advance up the right bank of the Tigris and take the very strongly defended position of Es Sinn. Kut could be easily seen from there because apart from ancient canal banks and the Dujailah Depression the land in this area was flat. The Depression ran from the right bank of the Tigris for some distance upstream of Magasis, past the tomb of Imem al Mansur and it contained the strongly entrenched position which became known as the Dujailah Redoubt. The Dujailah Redoubt was 150 yards wide and 6 feet below the level of the surrounding countryside and was key to the plan. It was covered in thorny scrub where jackals, wild cats and other animals took cover. Aylmer planned to pivot around the Redoubt towards the rear of the Turks so he could cut off their communications and make the right bank of the river untenable. He hoped that the Turks would then evacuate the left bank, leaving him to command the river and have an open door to Kut. Which is where the 1/6th battalion of the Devonshire Regiment came in. The 1/6th battalion, 32 officers and 642 other ranks, left Karachi on the 29th December 1915 on the H T "Elephanta", bound for Mesopotamia (modern day Iraq). They reached Shatt-Al-Arab, port of Basra on the 3rd January 1916. (River formed by the Union of the Rivers Tigris and Euphrates off Basra). The aim of the 1/6th was to relieve General Townshend in Kut al Amara which was 100 miles south of Baghdad. The distance from Basra to Kut was about 230 miles. On the 10th January 1916 the 36th (mixed) Infantry Brigade commenced their long march under Brigadier General Christian. The 36th consisted of the 1/6th Battalion of the Devonshire Regiment, the 26th, 62nd and the 82nd Punjabis. The Battalion was hard and fit and the men had come through Kitchener's test with flying colours. They were desperately keen to be in a War Zone and keen to assist in the attempt to relieve the garrison at Kut al Amara, up the Tigris river. The British garrison at Kut al Amara was exhausted and starving. Many were wounded or sick. The weather conditions at the time were atrocious - mud, rain and hurricane. Much of what I have written here is based on "Dujailah Days" written by Col G B Oerton published, privately, in 1948 and Lt Col C L Flick's account entitled "The Sixth Battalion Devonshire Regiment in The Great War - Actions marches, movements and stations in England, India and Mesopotamia" printed in 1920. Col G B Oerton wrote that the conditions in Mesopotamia were indescribable. It was common for temperatures to reach 120 degrees Fahrenheit (about 49 degrees Celsius). The arid desert, regular flooding; flies, mosquitoes and other vermin led to appalling levels of sickness and death through disease. There was a shortage of officers and men, and many of the reinforcements were half-trained and ill-equipped. He described the march from Basra to El Orah as 230 miles of mud, filth, cold, starvation and desolation. The men were on half rations, a tin of bully (corned beef) and two biscuits a day. Occasionally they might have a tin of Australian jam. They had no fuel but even if they had it was impossible to light fires anyway. The men often lay in the mud all night without cover of any kind. The Mahelas (local boats) were unable to get tents and rations to the soldiers because the banks of the River Tigris were flooded and the river was full of bends which proved to be too much for the boats. He described how moved he was listening to the boys singing "The Farmers Boy", "One Man went to Mow" and "Widecombe Fair" as they almost fought their way along the banks of the Tigris. He remarked on how cheerful and unselfish they were, turning everything into a laugh, helping and carrying the rifles of their weaker pals. He also wrote of Sergeant George who had a wonderful singing voice and how he helped to lift the spirits of the men.
Colonel Oerton described how, on the 5th February 1916, after a month's marching, the battalion came across the Sheikh Saad battlefield about 20 miles downstream from Kut. It was where the 7th Division had dislodged the Turks on the 7th January. It was the first frontal attack of its kind which proved to be an expensive and ghastly one. Lt Col Oerton wrote that there were over 4,000 casualties which could not be dealt with. Swollen, naked, mutilated bodies, friend and foe, mule and camel. Many had been butchered stripped and mutilated by "those human jackals" the Arabs. Some Devon lads looked white and sick seeing such a sight but it made them more determined to advance to Kut to help their comrades. The Battle of Dujailah, which was originally scheduled to begin on the 6th March, was postponed until the 8th March on account of heavy rainfall. On 7th March, Shrove Tuesday, the battalion moved out and marched to Es Sinn. On the way there they encountered various skirmishes with the Arabs. On the extreme right was the Dujailah Redoubt. There was a force of about 6,500 men in all, supported by twenty four guns. Three columns of infantry together with the Cavalry Brigade were to march on the Dujailah Depression by night and assault the Turkish line. 20,000 men were to assemble, quietly, at the Pools of Siloam, about 3 miles due south of the Hanna position, after dark on the 7th March. Column A (under Brigadier-General G Christian) - it included the 36th and 37th Brigades (newly arrived) and the 9th Brigade (from D'Urban Keary's 3rd Dvision). A total of 22,000 men and six guns - including the 1/6th Devons. Column B (under Major General Kemball who was in overall command of both A and B Columns, 28th Brigade (Aylmer's Corps Troops Reserve). Another 8,000 men and 24 guns. Column C (under Major-General D'urban Keary) 7th and 8th Brigades (from his own 3rd Division) 6,500 men with 32 guns. 6th Cavalry Brigade (under Brigadier-General R C Stephen). Four Cavalry Regiments with S battery Royal Horse Artillery 1,150 sabres and 4 guns. The main striking force was to be Columns A and B under Major-General Kemball. They were to make for a point south of the Dujailah Redoubt. Meanwhile Column C was to veer a mile or two towards the north. The Cavalry Brigade did not appear to have been given any particular objective and seemed to "swan around in open desert." The organisation proved to be the first mistake because Columns A and B were made up of brigades which had never worked together. Kemball, the commander, nor his staff were known to the troops. Another hindrance was that the brigades moved with all of their transport, ambulances and guns accompanying them instead of behind them. In spite of this the Turks seem to have been taken by surprise but although Aylmer wanted to advance he was ordered to stick to the programme. A J Barker wrote in his book, that if the Dujailah Redoubt had been occupied at dawn on the 8th March, not only would Kut have been relieved but the whole safety of the Turkish Army on the left bank of the Tigris would have been imperilled. Three precious hours were wasted before an advance took place. So the element of surprise had been lost. As a result Turkish reinforcements poured into the trenches of the redoubt - 3,000 of them had come from Magasis Fort to strengthen the line and many more were ferried in on skin rafts towed by motor boats. Reconnaissance by air showed at least another 3,000 came across the river during the day. As the British infantry advanced it was met with heavy rifle and machine gun fire at a range of about 700 yards. By noon Kemball's men had only gained a couple of hundred yards and in doing so they had suffered heavy casualties. Lt Col Flick's diary shows that on the 7th March the men had marched all through the night and fought all through the 8th in torrid, sultry heat, water bottles were empty or nearly so, thoroughly exhausted, their only thought was to get the wounded in.
The battalion lost 19 officers and nearly 300 men were killed, wounded or missing at Es Sinn on the 8th March 1916. Most of the officers were picked off as they charged away ahead of their equally gallant men. The 6th Devons were seriously under strength. The heat was terrific and accentuated by a severe lack of water. On the 9th March 1916 the whole of the troops, who had been engaged in the attack on Es Sinn and Dujailah, retreated. The march back to the Wadi was depressing. Aylmer lost almost a half of his men. The 8th brigade alone, which had gone into action with 2,300 men, came out with 1,127 men. 33 British Officers and 23 Indian officers fell in the attack and the 2nd Rajputs lost all of their British Officers and 12 out of 16 Indian officers. A company, in which my dad served, and a half of the 1/2nd Ghurkas, who went in with them, were practically annihilated. Casualties in the whole force during the action were close to 3,500 including 123 British. The Turks were reported as having suffered 1,200. It was disastrous for Aylmer. He was suspended and replaced by Gorringe who was Townshend's junior. The troops suffered low morale they were depressed after the loss of so many of their comrades, and felt the situation was hopeless, they had lost faith in high command, mail from home was irregular, the rain, mud, wet, dull rations, no canteen or a place to rest made their situation worse. There were still skirmishes with Turkish snipers, the trenches were subject to flooding and had to be repaired, the artillery was immobile. Lack of organisation meant that canteen stores did not reach the men who needed them. In the meantime the Turks just waited for Kut to fall. 22,000 men were lost in attempts to relieve the garrison. The Seaforths and Black Watch were so depleted that they had to be amalgamated to make a "Highland Battalion". The 9th Bopals had to be reinforced with oddments from the Rajput regiment, the Norfolks and Dorsets became the "Norset" Battalion and the Hunts and Buffs became the "Huffs." There were reinforcements at Basra but they could not get up to the front line.
Edmund Candler wrote in "The Long Road to Baghdad"- "The fighting in Mesopotamia from January to April 1916 was unlike any other fighting that British Troops have had to undergo. It was an army wasted in detail, expatiating the folly of statesmen and generals in which blunder piled upon blunder made it evident to the troops that their sacrifice was in vain - and at the time thankless. The force who fought to save Townshend was ill fed, ill equipped and in many cases their sick were unattended."
The first cadre of the 1/6th battalion left Mesopotamia for Karachi on the 30th March 1919. The Western Times & North Devon Journal reported that many of the 1/6th battalion returned home on the P & O Transport ship Somali, arriving in Plymouth Sound on Friday night 2nd May 1919. My dad arrived back in England on the Somali. He attended the wedding of his aunt, Charity May Kingdon & Arthur Bowker on the 9th June 1919 at South Molton. Dad was disembodied on the 16th June 1919.
When I was young my dad and I used to go for walks in the countryside and he spoke about India and snake charmers, men lying on beds of nails, fire eaters and the colour and smells of India. He made it sound magical. I never heard him speak about Mesopotamia. When I was older I understood why. My mother told me that my father had seen where The Garden of Eden had been at Qurna (or Kurna), when he was in the war. I am sure that it was no Garden of Eden when he was there (14th January 1916). He also saw the area, on the banks of the Euphrates, where the Gardens of Babylon had been. Dad sent lots of postcards to his grandparents, Edwin and Mary from India and Mesopotamia. On one card, postmarked Bombay, he says he is "in the pink", a term used in those days. Siegfried Sassoon wrote a poem entitled "In the pink". I do not think that dad would have used the term when he was in Mesopotamia.
The battalion was not supplied with suitable clothing when it left India. The men were dressed in thin Indian Drill uniform. They lived on half rations of a tin of bully and two biscuits a day. The conditions were appalling. The Tigris was in flood and it was extremely cold. The only drinking water was from the filthy river. They walked through miles of mud. I first learned about how things were in Mesopotamia, when I read Lt Col C L Flick's account entitled "The Sixth Battalion Devonshire Regiment in The Great War - Actions marches, movements and stations in England, India and Mesopotamia" printed in 1920. Also Dujailah Days by Colonel G B Oerton gives a snapshot of how bad things were. The following is from Col. Oerton's book. There were boatloads of wounded going down the Tigris, huddled on the bare decks without even a covering from sleet and rain. No lint and gauze dressings, nor splints. Not enough doctors, suffering increased by cold, hunger, thirst, dirt, exposure and neglect. Those wounded at Amara and Basra unfed, untended with bed, or rather deck, sores and some dying, first field dressings, eight days old, unchanged, maggots on their wounds, gangrene and other abominations too revolting to mention. Other wounded were not so fortunate as these, they were lost in the mud. All this happening within a few days voyage from India.
My dad was not yet 17 years old when the Battalion landed at Basra. The dreadful conditions and the horrors he saw does not bear thinking about. Many were wounded or killed, at Es Sinn in March 1916 and many died of sickness and disease. Margaret Austin, daughter of Sidney Cole told me that Sidney described how the wounded cried out for their mothers, even those who were married. Sidney also enlisted when he was under age.
Ernest had two service numbers, 1833, the number recorded on the circumference of his Medals and 265375, the number shown in the list of names at the back of Lieutenant Colonel C L Flick's book, where Ernest is shown as L/Cpl in D company. The latter number was his Territorial Army service number. He received the British War Medal and the Victory Medal. Unfortunately my dad's service records, from WWI, did not survive. Like many others they were destroyed in the bombing of London in WWII. The National Archives at Kew hold some records that did survive in The Burnt Records Collection.
The Battalion returned to England in August 1919. Dad met my mother, Annie Bellew. She worked for a wealthy family close to where dad's grandparents lived. Dad was unable to find work in South Molton. He lived with relatives and found work as a bricklayer in Lutterworth for a time and my mother joined him there. They eventually returned to South Molton, where they married in 1921. During the 1920s Dad opened a shop at 56 Summerland Place, Cooks Cross, South Molton where he sold newspapers, confectionery and tobacco. Later they moved to premises in Barnstaple Street, at first No. 18 and then number 20, where Dad continued his newsagent business and also sold and repaired crystal sets and wirelesses. He also sold and recharged batteries for the wirelesses. He moved to larger premises at 18 Barnstaple Street between 1932 and 1935. My sister Betty was the eldest child born in 1921, my brother Ronald was born in 1932 and I was born in 1941
Dad was an active member of the Royal Antediluvian Order of Buffaloes and was a member of the British Legion. He served with the National Fire Service (Devon Fire Brigade), throughout the 1930s and probably before that. He served as a fire fighter during World War Two. There were several notable fires during that period. In 1932 there was a fire at the Church in Mariansleigh and there were two fires at Castle Hill, Lord Fortescue's home, on the 7th and 10th March 1934. Two people died in the fire. On the 5th December 1936, there was a fire at John Heathcoat and Co. Tiverton, and there were two separate fires at Skinners bakery in South Molton. South Molton Fire Brigade attended all of these. Sometime between 1935 and 1939 Dad was made up to Sergeant in the Fire Brigade.
During the 2nd World War, whilst serving in the National Fire Service, he fought fires in Plymouth, Bristol and Exeter during and after bomb raids. The devastating German air raids on the nights of March 20th and 21st and April 21st, 22nd, 23rd, 28th and 29th have become termed the Plymouth Blitz. My mother told me that when Dad was fighting the fires, she would look southwards from South Molton and the sky would glow red from the fires. I was born on 6th March 1941. It was very worrying for her. I was only a few weeks old when South Molton Fire Brigade attended the fires in Plymouth on the 20th and 21st March 1941. There is a copy of a letter from Plymouth City Police dated 1st April 1941 thanking South Molton Fire Brigade for fighting fires caused by enemy action. The original letter is held by South Molton Museum. Dad received the Defence Medal for his service with the National Fire Service.
It was difficult to get parts for wirelesses during the second world war, and newsprint was scarce, so Dad gave up his Newspaper and wireless business. He found work with Southcombes Auctioneers in South Molton. On 26th April 1945, Dad sent a postcard to me, aged 4, of Rum Beach, Jennycliff Bay near Plymouth. He must have found work there. There are a lot of military establishments in the area. Mum also said that he worked at Winkleigh aerodrome for a while. Dad's cousin, Edwin John Kingdon (Jack) returned from New Zealand and started up a building business in North Street, South Molton in the mid 1940s. Dad worked for Jack as a mason until, sadly, he died in June 1951, aged 53.
251108Pte. Gilbert Kinghorn
British Army 10th Btn. Highland Light Infantry
from:Rotten Row, Glasgow
Gilbert Kinghorn was sent to get information out of a safe in Ypres. He was shot in the arm and captured. Medics set his arm incorrectly. As a result he had to have a number of operations after the war to straighten it.
856Cpl. Robert Kinghorn
British Army 2nd Btn. Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders
This is a extract from an Autograph Book which at a guess belonged to a nurse who treated wounded soldiers in various hospitals in the UK between 1913 and 1917. My Mother rescued the book which was about to be thrown away with the rubbish in 1968.Robert Kinghorn served with the 2nd Battalion, Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders. He must have recovered from his injuries as his medal card shows him as Lance Corporal and later a Lance Sergeant with the Royal Highlanders.
254516Sgt. Walter Kingsford MM & bar.
British Army 6th Btn East Kent Regiment
from:Sandwich
(d.23rd Aug 1917)
220931L/Cpl. Frederick William Kingsland
British Army 22nd Btn. Royal Fusiliers
from:Crawley Down
(d.2nd February 1917)
240813Spr. Joseph Henry Kingsland
British Army 171st Tunnelling Company Royal Engineers
from:Wood Green, London
Joseph Kingsland was born in 1878. He enlisted age 37 in the 222nd Tottenham Company Royal Engineers and was engaged in tunnelling attached to 33 Division. He transferred to 171 Tunnelling Coy on the 12th of August 1916 and served to 13th of April 1918 when he was honourably discharged after being gassed.
231630Spr. H. Kingsley MM.
British Army 419th (West Lancs) Field Coy. Royal Engineers
245389Pte. Paul Kingston
British Army Royal Army Ordnance Corps
238866Pte. William Kingston
British Army 10th Btn. Royal Munster Fusiliers
from:Leap, Co. Cork
(d.23rd November 1918)
Private Kingston was the son of Samuel and Fanny Kingston, of Keelinga, Leap, Co. Cork.
He was 21 when he died and is buried in the north east corner of the Fanlobbus (St. Mary) Church of Ireland Churchyard, Fanlobbus, Co. Cork, Ireland.
243522Lt. Col. Philip Laurence Kington-Blair-Oliphant CMG DSO
British Army 11th Btn. Royal Irish Rifles
(d.6th April 1918)
Lt Col Blair-Oliphant served as the Commanding Officer of 11th Battalion Royal Irish Rifles and also of the 11/13th Battalion. He later served in the 22nd (Entrenching) Battalion of the same Regiment.
He died of wounds and was buried in St Sever Cemetery, Rouen in Grave B.8.13.
238335Pte. John Pattison Kinnard
British Army 15th Btn. Durham Light Infantry
from:Battersea, London
(d.23rd March 1918)
John Kinnard is remembered at the Pozieres Memorial, France.
Page 17 of 24
Can you help us to add to our records?
The names and stories on this website have been submitted by their relatives and friends. If your relations are not listed please add their names so that others can read about them
Did your relative live through the Great War? Do you have any photos, newspaper clippings, postcards or letters from that period? Have you researched the names on your local or war memorial?
If so please let us know.
Do you know the location of a Great War "Roll of Honour?"We are very keen to track down these often forgotten documents and obtain photographs and transcriptions of the names recorded so that they will be available for all to remember.
Help us to build a database of information on those who served both at home and abroad so that future generations may learn of their sacrifice.
Celebrate your own Family History
Celebrate by honouring members of your family who served in the Great War both in the forces and at home. We love to hear about the soldiers, but also remember the many who served in support roles, nurses, doctors, land army, muntions workers etc.
Please use our Family History resources to find out more about your relatives. Then please send in a short article, with a photo if possible, so that they can be remembered on these pages.
The free section of The Wartime Memories Project is run by volunteers.
This website is paid for out of our own pockets, library subscriptions and from donations made by visitors. The popularity of the site means that it is far exceeding available resources and we currently have a huge backlog of submissions.
If you are enjoying the site, please consider making a donation, however small to help with the costs of keeping the site running.
Hosted by:
Copyright MCMXCIX - MMXXIV
- All Rights Reserved -We do not permit the use of any content from this website for the training of LLMs or for use in Generative AI, it also may not be scraped for the purpose of creating other websites.