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World War 1 One ww1 wwII greatwar great 1914 1918 first battalion regiment
250892Pte. Samuel Eric Tysoe
British Army 2nd/4th (Hallamshire) Btn. York and Lancaster Regiment
from:Liverpool
(d.3rd Oct 1918)
Samuel Tysoe was the elder brother of Catherine Moore (nee Tysoe). He joined the 2nd/4th (Hallamshires) Battalion, York and Lancaster Regiment during WW1 and was first drafted to France in August of 1918. His regiment took part in the battle for Havrincourt 12th/13th of September 1918, during this battle he was wounded. It was as a result of these wounds that he subsequently died at No 83 General Hospital in Bolougne. He is buried at Terlincthun Cemetery at Wimille.
220845Pte. Bertram Tyson
British Army 16th Btn. Highland Light Infantry
from:16 South Port, Selkirk
(d.27th Nov 1917)
Bertram Tyson died aged 21 and is commemorated on the Tyne Cot Memorial in West-Vlaanderen, Belgium.
208243Staff Nurse Cecilia Gertrude Tyson
Queen Alexandria's Imperial Military Nursing Serv. HMHS Syria
from:St Helens, Lancashire
My Great Aunt, Gertie Tyson enlisted in 1915 in the Queen Alexandria's Imperial Military Nursing Service having been a Sister at the Royal Infirmary in Hull. She served on the Hospital ships Syria and Varsover for 2 years before choosing not to re-enlist due to 'urgent family matters'. Her brother Fred had died in Belgium 8 months earlier, his body never having been found. His name is on the Menin Gate. I have a photo of Aunt Gertie on board one of the ships with some of her patients. After the war she continued her nursing career and became Matron of a hospital in Hull and after her retirement, a District nurse in Rawcliffe, near Goole.
710Pte. Edward "Ned" Tyson
Army 6th (Service) Btn. East Lancashire Rgt.
from:Darewn, Lancashire.
Grandad was severely wounded at Gallipoli, where the 6th were fighting. He came from a large Liverpool family who moved to Darwen around 1891. He moved to the Isle of Man in 1930 for health reasons and died in 1967 after a successful business career.
619Gnr. Harry Tyson
Army Durham Royal Garrison Artillery
Gunner Tyson was serving at the Heugh Battery on the 16th December 1914 when the Bombardment of the Hartlepools took place.
The men were billeted at the Borough Hall and at 7.30 that morning, they marched to the battery singing 'Tipperary'. Each man was issued with 250 rounds of .303 for their Lee Enfield rifles, at this time there was a shortage of webbing so the ammunition had to be carried in the pockets of their Greatcoats. Harry Tyson and Jack Wilkinson were assigned to look out duty and whilst most of their fellow gunners retired to the shelters, they marched back and firth btween the Heugh guns with bayonets fixed. As dawn broke the German raiderswere spotted by the gunners aty South Gare on the southern bank of Teesmouth, and Heugh Battery was alerted by telephone,though at this stage the ships were beleived to be British as they were flying the White Ensign and had responded to the signal. There was a British ship in the area, HMS Doon, whose Captain was aware of the true nationality of the newcommers but was out of range of his guns. He led HMS Moy, Test and Waveney as they closed the range and began firing.
At Heugh Captain Trenchman ordered the gun crews to man the guns, Tyson and Wilkinson took up their posts at No. 1 gun as Number 2 and Loading number respectivley. The rangefinder crew took the barings and the guns were laid on the inavders.
"Then all of a sudden the three ships gave us a broadside and Captain Trenchmann called 'Action'"
The first of the shells began to fall and the men at the Maxin machine gun post were wounded. Shells also fell on the houses behind the Battery. The elctrical firing mechanism of No 1 Gun failed after firing two shots and it too several minutes to change to percussio firing whilst No 2 gun continued to get off 30 rounds. The German fire was very accurate, the shells hitting the concrete and bouncing over the Battery to explode on the houses and in the field behind. One shell landed next to the doors of teh ammunition locker but fortunatley did not explode. Teh German ships continued to fire on the Battery and the town for about 15 minutes before repossitioning and aiming at the docks and West Hartlepool.
The ceasefire was ordered at 8.53, after 38 minutes in action, as the German ships retreated into the mist. Gunner Tyson noted in Ward's book "Dawn raid"
"I would like to say a word of praise to our cooks, Billy Sanderson and Arthur Hall. They must have been making tea all the time we were in action. As soon as we stopped firing out came buckets of hot tea."
Later that afternoon a group photograph of the gunners was taken
Page 41 of 41
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