The Roll of Honour, Volume 1 : A biographical record of all members of His…
1914. He served in South Africa, Mauritius and India, and with the
4389 words | Chapter 25
Mediterranean Expeditionary Force. Landed from the River Clyde with
the 29th Division, and died of wounds received in action following
the landing at the Dardanelles on 25 April, 1915. He was _unm._
A brass plaque to the memory of this officer was erected in the south
aisle of St. Peter’s, Cowfold, Sussex.
[Illustration: =Caryl Lermitte Boxall.=]
=BOXALL, CHARLES BERT=, A.B. (R.F.R., B. 3515), 210631, H.M.S.
Good Hope; lost in the action off Coronel, on the coast of Chili, 1
Nov. 1914.
=BOXWELL, FRANCIS JEFFARES TILSON=, A.B. (R.F.R., B. 3598),
188877, H.M.S. Good Hope; lost in the action off Coronel, on the coast
of Chili, 1 Nov. 1914.
=BOYCE, JOHN HENRY=, Trooper, No. 1626, Buckinghamshire Yeomanry
(Royal Bucks Hussars), only _s._ of Henry Boyce, of Woodford
Green, Essex, and grandson of the late Henry Boyce, of the Leman
School, Beccles, Suffolk; _b._.........., 1889; joined the Royal
Bucks Hussars early in Oct. 1914; left England for Egypt just before
Easter, 1915; went to the Dardanelles early in June, and was killed in
a charge at Suvla Bay, 21 Aug. 1915; _unm._
[Illustration: =John Henry Boyce.=]
=BOYD, DAVID=, A.B., 229233, H.M.S. Good Hope; lost in the action
off Coronel, on the coast of Chili, 1 Nov. 1914.
=BOYD, HAROLD ALEXANDER=, 2nd Lieut., 2nd Battn. Royal
Inniskilling Fusiliers, only _s._ of Dr. Alexander James Boyd, of
The Manor House, Ware, co. Herts (who served for 13 years in the 1st
(Herts) Vol. Battn. Bedfordshire Regt., and retired as Capt. in 1902),
by his wife, Constance Mary, dau. of Brackenbury Comyns Berkeley, of
Collett Hall, Ware, and grandson of the late Samuel Boyd, of Illerton,
Killiney; _b._ at The Manor House, Ware, 19 Jan. 1895; educ. at
the Preparatory School, Castle Park, Dalkey (co. Dublin), Rugby, and
Trinity College, Cambridge, where he was studying medicine at the
time of mobilisation and had passed his first M.B. examination at the
end of his first year. He had joined the Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers
in April, 1913, as a Special Reserve officer, and was called up for
service and at first put on Coast Defence duty at Lough Swilly, co.
Donegal, being afterwards sent to France on 31 Aug. He was killed in
action at Crecy, 7 Sept. 1914, during the Battle of the Marne; unm.
Corpl. W. Poots wrote: “On the morning of Monday, 7 Sept., we were
reinforced by a draft of a hundred men from the depôt in Ireland under
Lieut. Boyd, and continued the advance all day. In the evening the
Inniskillings had to find the outposts at a village to which we had
come--on the right being an open road with a row of apple trees, and
on the left a clear open plain. In the distance, about 1,000 or 1,200
yards, was a broad belt of woods and shrubs, from which came rifle and
big gun fire. This took us by surprise. We lined out and retaliated,
but their shelling was terrific, and we had no artillery with us.
Our officers were trying to find the range and had no cover from the
shells, thus exposing themselves, notably Mr. Boyd, who was standing by
an apple tree by the right of the road. He was struck on the body by
shrapnel and killed instantly; also Private Cousins, and 14 wounded.
We continued all night in this position. In the morning the enemy had
retired.” 2nd Lieut. Boyd was a fine athlete, gaining his colours at
Rugby in football, swimming, shooting and cross-country running; and
he also won the Royal Humane Society’s medal and Dr. Duke’s cup for
life-saving competition. At Cambridge he was a member of the First
Trinity Boat Club, and in 1914 he won the swimming championship of his
regt. at Aldershot.
=BOYD, NIGEL JOHN LAWSON=, 2nd Lieut., 1st Battn. The Black Watch,
yr. _s._ of William Boyd, of 26, Inverleith Place, Edinburgh,
Writer to the Signet, Member of the King’s Body Guard for Scotland
(R.C.A.), by his wife, Laura, dau. of the late John Crerar, of Halifax,
Nova Scotia, and grandson of the late Sir John Boyd, of Maxpoffle,
co. Roxburgh, by his wife, Isabella, 2nd dau. of John Lawson, 14th
Laird of Cairnmuir, co. Peebles; _b._ Edinburgh, 14 Sept. 1894;
educ. Cargilfield School, Midlothian, Winchester College and the Royal
Military College, Sandhurst. In passing into the latter he obtained a
Prize Cadetship, and in passing out he was fourth on the list. He was
gazetted 2nd Lieut. to the Black Watch, 25 Feb. 1914, and joined the
1st Battn. at Oudenarde Barracks early in March. After the declaration
of war he left Aldershot with his regt. in the beginning of Aug. for
France, and took part with it in the memorable retreat from Mons to
the Marne. He was fatally wounded on the morning of 14 Sept., his
birthday, during the early days of the great Battle of the Aisne. From
a description which he subsequently gave when in hospital in Rouen to
his father, it appears that in the early morning of 14 Sept., which
was misty, the Black Watch were acting in concert with the Cameron
Highlanders on the banks of the Aisne, and found themselves opposed
to a strong force of the Germans, and came under a very severe fire.
Lieut. Boyd with his platoon had been directed to take up a position,
and it had been indicated to him that it must be held at all costs.
The Germans continued to press on in overpowering numbers at that
point, and they could see them within 100 yards. He stated that he
had personally fired 10 rounds at them with a rifle, and afterwards
emptied his revolver at them. The shrapnel, machine gun and rifle fire
at the time was terrific. The enemy continued to press on from all
sides. He was standing up and had drawn his Claymore, and in turning
to the side to give a signal to those of his men who survived he was
hit. The bullet struck the scabbard of his Claymore, glanced off it,
entered the left hip and lodged in the bladder. After that he said
the Germans rushed the position. Words are unnecessary, and no effort
of the imagination required to show that this young officer and his
small force of men had made a gallant stand against overpowering odds,
and that they had acted in accordance with the best traditions of
their grand old regt. When on the ground wounded he asked a German who
was passing for assistance, but all that the man did was to threaten
to shoot him. After that he stated that he pretended to be dead when
other Germans passed. Some time after this a party of the Cameron
Highlanders appear to have been in the vicinity, and he was observed
by the late Capt. Napier Cameron of that regt. Capt. Cameron gallantly
went under fire to his assistance, and carried him to the shelter of
a lane some distance in the rear. Lieut. Boyd told his father that he
owed his life at the time to Capt. Cameron, as the ground on which he
had fallen was swept afterwards by a terrible cross fire, and if he
had been left there he could not possibly have survived. He lay where
Capt. Cameron had put him for 16 hours in the rain. A stretcher party
of the Gloucestershire Regt. found him and brought him in. Afterwards
he was for 36 hours in a cattle truck being taken to the Base hospital.
The officers in charge of No. 8 General Hospital, Rouen, and the Rev.
W. G. Arrowsmith, one of the Chaplains, there stated that the whole
of the time in that cattle truck, and afterwards in the hospital, he
had never complained, and had shown extraordinary fortitude, and that
the example shown had the most wonderful effect upon the wounded men
there. An instance told was this: a Quartermaster-Sergt., who was badly
wounded and was suffering a lot, had been calling out a great deal, and
disturbing the other men. After they had tried to soothe him without
effect he was told that in the next ward there was a young officer of
the Black Watch who was far worse than he was, and who never complained
at all. After that the man was quiet. Although very severely wounded,
great hopes were entertained of Lieut. Boyd’s recovery, as he had been
operated upon successfully. But it was not to be, as he collapsed
suddenly in the early morning of 12 Oct., the immediate cause of death
being a blood clot. As he died in hospital his body was brought back to
Scotland in the hospital ship St. Patrick. The Headquarters, Scottish
Command, arranged for a military funeral, which took place in the Dean
Cemetery, Edinburgh, on 19 Oct. From earliest boyhood he had taken
the keenest interest in all outdoor sports. He played in the “Houses
fifteen” matches at Winchester. At cricket he was a fair performer, and
at golf a Scratch player. He was a good rider, a keen fisherman, and an
excellent shot both with the gun and rifle. He represented Winchester
College at Bisley in 1911, when he shot for the Cadet Trophy, and was
again at Bisley in 1912, when he was in the Winchester “eight.” It had
been his greatest ambition from earliest childhood to be in the Black
Watch.
[Illustration: =Nigel John Lawson Boyd=]
=BOYD, PERCY GERNON=, Private, No. 3158, 10th (Liverpool Scottish)
Battn. King’s Liverpool Regt., eldest _s._ of Samuel Boyd, of
19, Hale Road, Liscard, Cheshire, Accountant and Secretary, Liverpool
Shipping Company, by his wife, Emma, dau. of William Ker, of Liverpool;
_b._ Egremont, Wallasey, co. Chester, 1 Sept 1890; educ. Liscard
High School, and joined the Army on the outbreak of the war Aug. 1914.
He died from shell wounds received in action at Locre, Flanders, 22
Jan. 1915, and was buried in the churchyard there; _unm._ Major N.
S. Anderson, D.S.O., wrote: “He was in my company (No. 1) and was under
my command. I was thoroughly satisfied with all his work. He was a good
soldier.” And a comrade wrote: “He was a real good soldier, and a very
brave one too. It was only the night before Lieut. Turner was killed
that he was out with him putting barbed wire in front of the trenches.”
He was an active and keen footballer, being a member of the Liscard
Old Boys’, Brompton, and other clubs, and won the mile handicap at his
school annual sports.
[Illustration: =Percy Gernon Boyd.=]
=BOYLE, HON. JAMES=, Capt., Royal Scots Fusiliers, 2nd surviving
_s._ of David, 7th Earl of Glasgow, G.C.M.G., by his wife,
Dorothea Elizabeth Thomasina, dau. of Sir Edward Hunter-Blair, 4th Bt.;
_b._ Shewalton, co. Ayr., 11 March, 1880; educ. Wanganui College,
New Zealand, and Trinity Hall, Cambridge, and joined the Ayrshire
Militia 27 May, 1898, and served through the South African War,
1901–2, part of the time with mounted infantry and for some time on
staff duties, receiving the Queen’s medal with five clasps. In 1903 he
joined the Regulars and was gazetted as 2nd Lieut. to the Royal Scots
Fusiliers, becoming Lieut. 6 June, 1906, and Capt. 10 April, 1912.
From 1908–9 he was extra Aide-de-Camp to the Governor of Victoria,
and from 1909–11 Aide-de-Camp, and later, 1912–14, A.D.C. to Gen. Sir
H. Smith-Dorrien, Commander-in-Chief of the Southern Command. He was
killed in action at Chateau Warneton, near La Bassée, on 18 Oct. 1914
(being officially reported wounded and missing for seven weeks, until
a letter was received from a German officer who reported he was buried
at Chateau Warneton). He _m._ in London, 15 Sept. 1908, Katherine
Isabel Salvin (Marston House, Banbury), sister of Capt. Geoffrey Vaux
Salvin Bowlby, Royal Horse Guards, killed in action 13 May, 1915, and
dau. of the late Edward Salvin Bowlby, of Gilston Park, Herts, and had
three children: Patrick John Salvin, _b._ 21 April, 1910; Edward
James, _b._ 26 Feb. 1912; and Belinda Margaret Graeme, _b._ 4
Dec. 1913.
[Illustration: =Hon. James Boyle.=]
=BOYLE, THOMAS=, Private, No. 15645, 13th (Service) Battn. Royal
Scots (Lothian Regt.), _s._ of Thomas Boyle, of 33, Lyons Lane,
Port Glasgow; served with the Expeditionary Force in France, etc.;
killed in action at Hooge, 27 Sept. 1915.
=BOYLE, THOMAS WILLIAM=, Private, No. 10345, 1st Battn. Coldstream
Guards, only _s._ of William Boyle, Coldstream Guards, by his
wife, Bridget (102, Marian Street, Gateshead, co. Durham), dau. of
Thomas Jackson; _b._ Gateshead, 18 July, 1896; enlisted 4 Sept.
1913; died of wounds received in action at Ypres, 23 Oct. 1914;
_unm._
[Illustration: =Thomas William Boyle.=]
=BOYLE, WILLIAM=, Private, No. 14602, 4th Battn. Middlesex Regt.;
served with the Expeditionary Force in France, etc.; died 4 Nov. 1914,
while a prisoner of war.
=BOYS, CHARLES HENRY=, A.B. (R.F.R., Ch. B. 9527), 200302, H.M.S.
Cressy; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BRABAZON, HON. ERNEST WILLIAM MAITLAND MOLYNEUX=, =D.S.O.=,
Staff Capt., 3rd Battn. Coldstream Guards, 4th and yst. _s._ of
Reginald, 12th Earl of Meath, P.C., K.P., by his wife, Lady Mary Jane
Maitland, only surviving dau. of Thomas, 11th Earl of Lauderdale,
G.C.B.; _b._ Richmond, co. Surrey, 22 March, 1884; educ. Dover
College and Sandhurst; gazetted 2nd Lieut. 2nd Battn. Coldstream
Guards, 9 Jan. 1904, promoted Lieut. 5 Sept. 1906, and Capt. 3rd Battn.
4 April, 1912. On the outbreak of war he went to the front with his
regt., was attached to the Staff, and was killed in action near La
Bassée, 17 June, 1915. He was buried in Cambrin Cemetery, near where he
fell. Capt. Brabazon was mentioned in F.M. Sir John French’s Despatch
[London Gazette, 1 Dec. 1914], in the following terms: “Has shown
conspicuous efficiency in Staff duties and in keeping up communication
with a long line of front composed of many units, where communication
was often difficult. He has carried and delivered messages under fire
with promptness and dispatch.” For these services he received the
D.S.O. Lord Cavan, commanding the Guards’ Brigade, wrote: “We simply
loved him. I can never tell you what he was to me, not only as a
Staff Officer but as a friend. He was priceless, invaluable and never
wearying in his work for the Brigade.” And Col. J. R. Drummond Hay,
commanding Coldstream Guards: “By his death the Army, as well as the
regt., has lost heavily.” He was keen on musketry and sport and a good
shot. He _m._ at the Guards’ Chapel, Wellington Barracks, S.W., 29
Oct. 1912, Dorothy Mary, yst. dau. of Col. Horace Ricardo, of Bramley
Park, Surrey, C.V.O.; _s.p._ His three brothers are now (1916) on
active service: Col. Lord Ardee, C.B., in command of the 1st Battn.
Irish Guards, has been wounded; Capt. the Hon. Arthur Brabazon, on
special service in Egypt; and Major the Hon. Claud Brabazon, of the
Irish Guards, now in the Royal Flying Corps.
[Illustration: =Hon. E. W. M. M. Brabazon.=]
=BRABROOK, ARTHUR HENRY=, Sergt., 1/3rd Battn. (Royal Fusiliers)
City of London Regt. (T.F.), 2nd _s._ of Frederick Joseph
Brabrook, of Bury St. Edmunds, Fish Merchant, by his wife, Emma;
_b._ Bury St. Edmunds, 18 Jan. 1879; educ. St. John’s Church
School. He joined the 18th Middlesex V.R.C. (Paddington Rifles) in
1904, which became the 10th Battn. of the London Territorials. He
became Colour-Sergt. of D Coy. in 1912, in which year the battn. was
disbanded and transferred to Hackney. This was too far away, so with
his Capt. (now Major Prance) and other men he formed a Paddington Coy.,
attached to the 3rd Battn. of the London Regt., and received the rank
of L.-Sergt. He went through the School of Instruction at Chelsea and
received a certificate and was promoted Sergt. When the battn. was
mobilised in Aug. 1914 they were sent to guard railway stations for a
month, and he was stationed at Arlesford with his section. On 4 Sept.
1914, he sailed for Malta, and after Christmas went to France, and
served through the Battles of Neuve Chapelle and La Bassée, where he
had a narrow escape, a shell bursting, knocking him down and burying
him under some bricks. He died 10 May, 1915, of wounds received at
Festubert, and was buried in Bethune Cemetery. Capt. C. E. Rochford
wrote: “He was killed through a shell bursting while advancing in an
attack on a German trench. He has been with me ever since we left
England, so I knew him well. He was a splendid man and a splendid
soldier.” He _m._ at. North Kensington, 5 Sept. 1908, Clara
Louisa (322, Ladbroke Grove, W.), 2nd dau. of Robert Wollington, of
Ladbroke Grove, W., Builder, and had two children: Ralph Robert Arthur,
_b._ 15 March. 1914; and Beatrice Caroline, _b._ 23 Sept.
1909.
[Illustration: =Arthur Henry Brabrook.=]
=BRACEY, HUMPHREY ALFRED=, L.-Corpl., No. 1768, 21st Battn. (1st
Surrey Rifles) The London Regt. (T.F.); _b._ Stoke Newington, 6
Sept. 1891; elder _s._ of Alfred Bracey, of Ashcroft, 30 Seymour
Gardens, Ilford, by his wife, Bertha, dau. of William James Hagger,
_b._ ....; educ. Grocer’s Company School, Hackney Downs, and
County High School, Ilford, and was in the employ of Parrs’ Bank
when war broke out. He enlisted in the 1st Surrey Rifles, 8 Aug.
1914, went to the front 15 March, 1915, and was killed in action at
Festubert, 25–26 May, 1915; _unm._ His commanding officer, Capt.
A. Hutchinson, wrote that he was exceptionally popular with all ranks
and that he, personally, regretted the “loss of a very promising and
fearless N.C.O.” And “Parrs’ Bank Magazine,” in recording his death,
said: “At the outbreak of war he was one of the first to offer his
services to his country. In the departments in which he was formerly
employed, he was ever ready to assist his colleagues, and was a most
generous and jovial companion. His absence will be especially noticed
on balance nights, settling days, &c., when the heavy work was much
lightened by his ready wit and humour. He was also well known in the
rifle section of the Sports Club, where he was one of the best shots.”
[Illustration: =Humphrey Alfred Bracey.=]
=BRACHER, GEORGE=, Private, No. 9139, 2nd Battn. Coldstream
Guards, _s._ of Matthias Bracher of Gerrards Farm, Favant, near
Salisbury; _b._ co. Wilts; served with the Expeditionary Force in
France, etc.; killed in action at Rentel, 12 Nov. 1914; _unm._
=BRACKEN, JOHN=, Private, No. G. 773, 8th (Service) Battn. Royal
West Surrey Regt.; served with the Expeditionary Force in France, etc.;
killed in action, 26 Sept. 1915; _m._
=BRACKSTONE, HENRY=, Corpl., No. 7248, 1st Battn. East Surrey
Regt.; served with the Expeditionary Force in France, etc.; killed in
action, 20 April, 1915; _m._
=BRADBURY, EDWARD CHAPNESS=, Private, No. 9409, 2nd Battn.
Coldstream Guards, 2nd _s._ of Samuel Bradbury, of 65, Queen
Street, Palfrey, Walsall, by his wife, Annie, dau. of William Baker;
_b._ Walsall, 18 Dec. 1893; educ. Palfrey School, Walsall, and
on leaving there was employed by Neville Bros. as a Portmanteau Lock
Maker. He enlisted 18 Jan. 1911, and three months before war was
declared was transferred to the 2nd Life Guards, but then transferred
back to his old regt., and was killed in action by a shell in an attack
on a farmhouse, 16 Nov. 1914; _unm._
=BRADBURY, EDWARD KINDER, V.C.=, Capt., L Battery, Royal Horse
Artillery, only _s._ of the late Judge James Kinder Bradbury,
J.P., Fellow of Caius College, Cambridge, by his wife, Grace
(Parkfield, Altrincham, Cheshire), dau. of the Rev. Edward Dowling;
_b._ Bowden, co. Chester, 16 Aug. 1881; educ. St. Ninian’s,
Moffat, Marlborough College and Woolwich; gazetted to the Royal Field
Artillery, 2 May, 1900, and promoted Lieut. 3 April, 1901, and Capt.
4 Feb. 1910. He joined the 125th Battery in Ireland, and in the later
stages of the South African War obtained a commission in Fincastle’s
Horse, with which he served on active service, obtaining the Queen’s
medal with two clasps. After the close of that campaign he returned to
Ireland, but in 1905 went to Uganda, and served with the 4th Battn. of
the King’s African Rifles till Aug. 1906, when he was invalided home
after severe fever. Coming home, he was transferred to the R.H.A., and
on the outbreak of war went to France with the Expeditionary Force. At
Néry, near Compiegne, on the last day of the retreat from Mons (1 Sept.
1914), L Battery, while covering the retreat, was attacked by a strong
German force with ten field guns and two Maxims. Three British guns
were brought into action, but two were quickly silenced. Capt. Bradbury
and his men served the remaining gun so well, however, that all but one
of the German guns were silenced; and when L Battery was relieved this
gun was captured. “Bradbury,” writes an artillery officer, recounting
this story, “was the real hero. He got the gun into action and gave
the orders. Mundy knelt on one side and did ranging officer, and
Brad., Campbell and Giffard, with the Battery Sergt.-Major, Gunner and
Driver, served the gun. Brad. had one leg taken off above the knee, but
still went on; Campbell ... was killed; Mundy was hit in both legs;
the Major, coming back hastily, was hit in the throat as he arrived.
Bradbury had his other leg taken off. Giffard was badly wounded,
and still they kept the last gun firing, and when I Battery and the
other Brigade came up they found that the Germans had left their guns
and bolted.” Capt. Bradbury, who was _unm._, was buried in the
cemetery at Néry. He was mentioned in F.M. Sir John (now Lord) French’s
Despatch of 7 Sept. [London Gazette, 19 Oct. 1914], and was awarded the
Victoria Cross “For gallantry and ability in organising the defence of
L Battery against heavy odds at Néry on 1 Sept.” A General wrote: “Your
son was simply beloved by us all from me, his General, down to the last
joined subaltern. He was very nearly four years under my command, and I
looked upon him as one of the most brilliant officers I had ever come
across, one who, had God willed it, had a great career in front of him,
and the manner in which he met his death fighting a single gun to the
end after the loss of one leg was worthy of him.”
[Illustration: =Edward Kinder Bradbury.=]
=BRADDOCK, ARTHUR LESLIE=, Assistant Paymaster, R.N.R., H.M.S.
Cressy, _s._ of William Braddock, of Sydney, New South Wales,
Chartered Accountant, by his wife, Alice, dau. of (--) Norman, Dental
Surgeon; _b._ Adelaide, South Australia, 22 Feb. 1877; educ.
Adelaide; joined the Royal Naval Reserve, Jan. 1908, and was appointed
Assistant Paymaster, 3 Feb. 1911, with seniority of 30 Jan. 1908.
He was appointed to the Cressy 1 Aug. 1914, and was lost when that
ship was torpedoed in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914. He _m._
at Liverpool, 15 July, 1912, Jeannie Scott (19, Huskisson Street,
Liverpool), dau. of the late Capt. William Henry Burt; _s.p._
=BRADDOCK, HARRY=, Stoker, 1st Class, K. 13669 (Ports.), H.M.S.
Cressy; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BRADFORD, ARTHUR JESSE GEORGE=, L.-Corpl., No. 766, B Coy., 16th
Battn. Australian Imperial Force, elder _s._ of the late Arthur
Jesse Bradford, of Clapton, N.E., by his wife, Gabriella (now a nurse,
of 106, Valkyrie Road, Westcliffe-on-Sea), dau. of Jesse Witts, of
Gloucester; _b._ Plaistow, co. Essex, 14 Nov. 1895; educ. London
Orphan School, Watford; joined the (Temperley & Co.) Merchant Service
when 16; then settled in Bunbury, Western Australia (1913), and
when war broke out was in the Bush, engaged in the lumber trade. He
immediately volunteered; left for Egypt with the Second Reinforcements
in Dec. 1914; took part in the landing at the Dardanelles, 25 April,
1915, and was killed in action there the same day; _unm._ His yr.
brother, Edward Lionel Bradford, L.-Corpl., No. 142397, No. 1 Co., R.E.
(Signal Service), is now (1916) on active service.
[Illustration: =Arthur Jesse G. Bradford.=]
=BRADFORD, SIR EVELYN RIDLEY=, 2nd Bt., Lieut.-Col. 2nd Seaforth
Highlanders, eldest _s._ of Sir Edward Ridley Colborne Bradford,
1st Bt., some time (1890–1903) Commissioner of Police of the
Metropolis, and an extra Equerry to His Majesty the King, by his 1st
wife, Elizabeth Adela, dau. of Edward Knight, of Chanton House, Alton;
_b._ India, 16 April, 1869; educ. Eton and Sandhurst; gazetted
2nd Lieut. 22 Aug. 1888, and promoted Lieut. 11 June, 1890, Capt. 3
July 1895, Major 26 June, 1902, Brevet Lieut.-Col. 10 May, 1913, and
Lieut.-Col. 10 June, 1913. He served with the Soudan Expedition in
1898, being present at the Battles of the Atbara and Khartoum, and on
the staff in the South African War, 1899–1902. He took part in the
operations in the Orange Free State from May to 29 Nov. 1900, including
actions at Poplar Grove, and Driefontein, and Witteberjer (1–29 July),
and during the operations in Cape Colony, Feb.-March, 1901. His
services were twice mentioned in Despatches [London Gazette, 7 May and
10 Sept. 1901], and in addition to the Queen’s medal with four clasps
and the King’s medal with two clasps, he received his brevet majority
and was placed on the list of officers considered qualified for staff
employment in consequence of service on the Staff in the field. At
the time of the outbreak of the European War he was in command of the
2nd Battn. of the Seaforths, the old 78th, and took them out from
Shorncliffe in Brig.-Gen. J. A. L. Haldane’s 10th Infantry Brigade,
which was brought up from the lines of communication in France to cover
the retirement of the Expeditionary Force on Cambray. This duty was
performed in the centre of the line by Major-Gen. Snow’s 4th Division,
consisting of the 10th, 11th and 12th Infantry Brigades. These units
broke the front of the German pursuit, and suffered in consequence.
as the 1st and 2nd Army Corps fell back. He was killed in action at
the Battle of the Aisne, 14 Sept. 1914, and was buried at Bucy Le
Long, near Soissons. Sir Edward Bradford was a famous cricketer and
played many fine games for Hampshire and the Army with Major Poore and
Capt Wynyard, of the Staff College, as contemporaries, the last time
he played in the County Eleven being against Surrey, at Aldershot, in
Reading Tips
Use arrow keys to navigate
Press 'N' for next chapter
Press 'P' for previous chapter