The Wartime Memories Project - The Second World War

Those who Served - Surnames beginning with H.

Surnames Index


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World War 2 Two II WW2 WWII 1939 1945

Lt. Col. Finbarr Cornelius Hyland .     British Army No 7 Field Hygiene Section Royal Army Medical Corps   from Beecholm, 75 South Parade, Pudsey, West Yorkshire

My dad Finbarr Hyland never really talked about the war, and he died when I was 13.




Sgt Jack Hyland .     British Army 64th Field Regiment Royal Artillery

Jack Hyland served with the 64th Field Regiment Royal Artillery in WW1.




P/O Peter Joseph Hyland .     Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve 101 Sqdn. (d.29th July 1944)

ABC Lancaster SR-V2 (LM462) from 101 Squadron, Ludford Magna was shot down near Orleans, France 28/29th July 1944.

All the crew were killed in action on this mission and are buried in Rebrechien Communal Cemetery. The crew were:

  • F/Sgt C.E. Smith - navigator
  • Sgt J. Hodgson - flight engineer
  • Sgt E.R. Brown - airgunner
  • Sgt T. Crane - airbomber
  • Sgt W.H. Engelhardt - wop
  • P/O P.J. Hyland - pilot
  • Sgt J.T.V. Moore - wop
  • P/O A.W. Turri - airbomber




  • Pte Roger Lee Hymer .     British Army 4th Btn. Yorkshire Regiment (Green Howards)   from Thornaby, Yorkshire

    My father, Roger Hymer served with 4th Battalion, Yorkshire Regiment (Green Howards). Recruits were trained at Bourton on the Hill, Moreton in Marsh, Cotswold. Roger served in the 150th Brigade of the 50th (Northumbrian) Infantry Division at Arras, fighting for the BEF in France. Later to withdraw to Dunkirk after heavy fighting. The unit was then sent to North Africa where the 150th Brigade, located at the Caldron became depleted of ammunition and were captured. The prisoners were taken to PG 66 Capua and PG 53 Sforzacosta Macerata in Italy then finally to Stalag XVII B in Austria.




    Doreen Hynam .     Land Army

    Doreen worked with me in Somerset, I would love to get in touch with her again.




    Herbert John Hynds .     British Army 20 DID Royal Army Service Corps   from Barnsley, Yorkshire

    Herbert John Hynds, my Uncle Bert, was my mother's brother and sadly no-one of that generation is still alive. I know that my uncle was in the British Army during WWII and from the few photographs taken of him at that time I can see that he was in 20DID RASC.

    After the war he gave me a bracelet made of a silver coloured material. It consists of eight linked segments, all slightly rounded, each about half-an inch square. Each segment is stamped with a place name - Livorno, Africa, Napali, Pisa, Naples, Roma, Siena and Sicily. A photograph taken during the war shows him and 42 colleagues standing in front of St Peter's, Rome, Italy. Another taken in Durban, South Africa, is of Bert and two friends, all wearing shorts, shirts and forage caps riding in a local "taxi"/ricksaw, which can best be described as an open- topped two-wheeled sawn-off carriage which is being pulled by a South African in native clothing and wearing a very elaborate headdress. Another treasure he gave me after the war was an oblong cocktail watch with a bevelled glass and a plaited silk strap which has been replaced many times since. Bert told my Mum that he gave 2lbs of sugar for it and it came from Italy. Finally I have his medals.




    Pte. Frederick Frances Hynes .     British Army 2nd Parachute Battalion Air Corp   from Brighton, UK

    My late father, Frank Hynes, was in the 2nd Parachute Battalion of the Army Air Corps. He came from a long line of professional army men, enlisting in the 4/7 Royal Dragoon Guards as a boy aged 14.

    He served in North Africa and Italy and was captured at Arnhem where he received a gunshot wound to his left forearm. He was transferred Prisoner of War to Fallingbostel, Stalag 11B on 25th September, 1944 and was released on 23 April 1945.

    He went home to Brighton, UK and worked in the Special Constabulary, a bar manager at the British Legion Club at Shoreham-by-Sea and as a diamond polisher in Brighton and London. He emigrated to Sydney, Australia at the age of 30 where he met and married my mother. He worked as a Plant Controller at the Shell Oil Refinery for many years, then as a Clerk of the Court. He died in 1978 of a stroke at the age of 56. I was 23 when he died, and had not talked to him in detail about his war service or time as a POW, I had no idea really until recently when I began to look at my family history and obtained his military records. I would love to know more if anyone has more information regarding his service.




    GJ Hynes .     British Army

    GJ Hynes served with the British Army. I have his unissued dogtags, made in preparation for deployment to the Far East and would love to get them home to his family. I am happy to cover all costs. If you are a family member or can put me in touch with them please get in touch.

    Update: The Wartime Memories Project is no longer in contact with Dan , his website, facebook page and email have all ceased to function. But if you can add any details about the person listed, please use the add to record link below.




    Joan Hynes .     Womens Land Army

    Our Mum, Joan Hynes, was in the Farthingstone Hostel Litchborough in 1945/46 from the age of 16 or 17. We have no idea how long she served. She talked about a very tall woman who befriended her in the Land Army and is next to her in the group photo I found. She met my father John Rickards at the Old Lion Pub through his father Lawrence (Yank) Rickards. They were engaged for 5 years while Jack served in the British Army of Occupation after WW2.

    When she turned 21 she told her father that she was going to Kenya to marry her Rhodesian sweetheart. Mum travelled on a troop ship to Mombasa. Mum and Dad married in 1951 in Kenya whilst Dad was still in the British Army during the Mau Mau War. In 1953 they moved to Rhodesia where my Dad started farming with his Uncle Chummy Acutt. Dad eventually bought his own farm and Mum and Dad farmed in Centenary. Dad died at 58 of cancer and Mum passed away at 72 after a long illness. We had a wonderful life growing up on the farm, going to boarding school, and being around Mum and Dad till their last days.




    P/O. Terence Gearld "Turlough" Hynes DFC..     Royle Air Force 44 (Rhodesia) Squadron   from Glasnevin, Dublin, Ireland

    Terence Hynes was shot down during a bombing raid on oil refinery in Glenererhin on the night of 29th of August 1940 and was a POW until May 1945 and as far as I know he was in Oflag VI B.




    A/Cpl. Wallace F R "Snow" Hynes .     New Zealand Army   from New Zealand

    My father, Wallace Hynes, served with the New Zealand Army in WW2 and was a prisoner of war in Italy and in Stalag 6A, I am looking for information, if anyone remembers him or his diaries.





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