The Roll of Honour, Volume 1 : A biographical record of all members of His…
1915. He was buried in the cemetery Noeux des Mines; _unm._ His
13415 words | Chapter 33
Capt. wrote: “Your son was a universal favourite--cheerful, willing,
and a hard worker, and a very promising soldier”; and his platoon
sergt.: “In the Army the best that can be said of any man is that ‘he
is a good soldier.’ Without any hesitation I can say that your son
had fully qualified for this high standard. He was well disciplined,
obedient, and always ready to do anything he was called on to
undertake; the mere fact that he was selected for instruction in bomb
throwing shows that his superiors had a thorough confidence in his
abilities.”
[Illustration: =John Henry Bunce.=]
=BUNN, GEORGE=, Seaman, R.N.R., 5222B, H.M.S. Cressy; lost in
action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BUNYAN, BENJAMIN JAMES=, Ship’s Steward, 340125, H.M.S. Hawke;
lost in action in the North Sea, 15 Oct. 1914.
=BURBRIDGE, WALTER=, A.B. (R.F.R., B. 794), S.S. 103586, H.M.S.
Hawke; lost in action in the North Sea, 15 Oct. 1914.
=BURCH, ARTHUR THOMAS=, Private, No. 27, 8th Battn. (90th
Rifles) Canadian Expeditionary Force, _s._ of George Burch, of
Woodnesborough, co. Kent, Agricultural Labourer, by his wife, Mary
Jane, dau. of the late William Oldfield; _b._ Woodnesborough, 20
Dec. 1887; educ. there; emigrated to Canada in July, 1910; enlisted
on the outbreak of the war, Aug. 1914, and was killed in action at
Ypres between 24–30 April, 1915; _unm._ He was at first reported
missing, then in Aug. to have died, and finally (2 Dec. 1915) was
officially stated to have been killed between the dates given above.
=BURCH, WILLIAM JOHN=, Petty Officer, 2nd Class (R.F.R., B. 229),
153490, H.M.S. Hogue; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BURCHELL, FRED=, Private, R.M.L.I. (Ports.), 11716, H.M.S. Good
Hope; lost in the action off Coronel, on the coast of Chili, 1 Nov.
1914.
=BURCHELL, FREDERICK HUGH=, A.B., J. 9672, H.M.S. Good Hope; lost
in the action off Coronel, on the coast of Chili, 1 Nov. 1914.
=BURCHETT, ARTHUR=, Sergt., No. 7882, 3rd Battn. Coldstream
Guards, _s._ of the late William Burchett, Labourer, by his wife,
Eliza (Peal Common, Elstead), dau. of George Pullen, Farmer; _b._
Peal Common, Elstead, co. Surrey, 3 March, 1890; educ. National School
there; enlisted 10 June, 1908, and served in Egypt 1909–11, and
afterwards became a postman at Elstead. On the outbreak of war he was
called up, went to France 12 Aug. 1914, and was killed in action at
the Battle of the Aisne, 14 Sept. following, being buried at Soupir;
_unm._ His brother, Private Thomas Burchett, No. 7285 (sometime a
postman at Godalming), was officially reported missing, 30 Aug. 1914,
and is (1916) a prisoner in Germany.
=BURCHILL, THOMAS=, Leading Stoker, 276152 (Dev.), H.M.S. Hogue;
lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BURDEKIN, GEOFFREY ERIC=, 2nd Lieut., 3rd Battn. Notts and Derby
Regt. (Sherwood Foresters), attd. 1st Loyal North Lancashires; yst.
_s._ of Benjamin Thomas Burdekin, of Sheffield and Baslow, co.
Derby, Solicitor, by his wife, Emily Jane, dau. of the Rev. Jeremiah
Stockdale, Vicar of Baslow; _b._ Sheffield, 29 March, 1893; educ.
Bramcote, Scarborough, Rugby and Woolwich. He was gazetted to the 2nd
Battn. Dorsetshire Regt. 20 Sept. 1911, and served with it in India
for two years. In 1913 he resigned his commission owing to ill-health,
and was articled to his father as a solicitor. At the outbreak of the
European War he applied for a commission, and was given one in the 3rd
Reserve Battn. of the Sherwood Foresters, and was afterwards attached
to the 1st Loyal North Lancashire Regt. with which he was serving when
he was killed in action at Beuvry, 26 Jan. 1915. He was buried at a
farm near Beuvry; _unm._ His Capt. wrote: “The circumstances
under which your boy and many other valuable men lost their lives
were perhaps the most unfortunate that can be imagined. We were some
four miles distant from the firing line at the time, and it was one
of three shells that happened to strike us when the battn. orderly
room was being held in the morning. Being in temporary command, I was
taking orderly room myself and was only some six or seven yards distant
from the spot where the shell burst, and how I and the Adjutant, who
was standing beside me, escaped I really don’t know, for men within a
couple of yards of us were killed instantaneously. What I remember was
a deafening crash, a blackness, and the noise of broken glass falling.
As soon as the air had cleared of débris we saw the fearful havoc that
had been caused. You have one great consolation, however. Your son was
spared all pain and suffering, for death was absolutely instantaneous;
also that he was buried. The inability to bury one’s dead owing to
their having been killed on the ground between the opposing trenches
has, I think, been one of the most horrible features of the war. It
is, I think, unnecessary for me to assure you that your son maintained
to the end the high traditions of a British officer and gentleman. We
were together during the night attack on 31 Dec., and his coolness
under a heavy fire was very marked. Although he did not belong to the
Loyal North Lancashires but to his own county regt., yet he always took
an interest in his men and was a zealous officer. On the very morning
that he was killed, I had picked him out to take command of a company
because I had the greatest confidence in him. He was always cheerful,
and had endeared himself to us all. We feel the loss greatly.”
[Illustration: =Geoffrey E. Burdekin.=]
=BURDISS, WILLIAM=, Stoker, R.N.R., 2985T. H.M.S. Aboukir; lost in
action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BURDON, EDWARD=, Pioneer. No. 110982, Royal Engineers, 3rd
_s._ of Edward Burdon, of Southwick-on-Wear, Joiner, by his wife,
Margaret, dau. of Richard Wake, of Southwick; _b._ Southwick, 26
Dec. 1873; educ. Southwick Board School, and was a miner. He enlisted
for the period of the war, 29 July, 1915; went to France the following
week; was invalided home, 16 Sept. 1915; and died on active service, 13
Oct. 1915, following an operation for appendicitis. He _m._ at St.
Columbus, Southwick, 7 June, 1887, Isabella (18, Edward Murdis Street,
Southwick, Sunderland), dau. of James Turnbull, of Southwick, and had
seven children: Edward, _b._ 19 Sept. 1888; James, _b._ 28
Aug. 1889; Sidney, _b._ 2 May, 1903; Nicholas, _b._ 29 Dec.
1908; Thomas, _b._ 28 Dec. 1910; Mary, _b._ 7 May, 1905; and
Jenny, twin with Thomas.
[Illustration: =Edward Burdon.=]
=BURGES, WILLIAM ARMSTRONG=, Lieut., 1st Battn. Royal Irish
Rifles, 2nd _s._ of the late Francis Lockie Burges, of Irwin
House, Irwin, Western Australia, Squatter, and grandson of the late
Francis Carleton Burges, of Fethard, co. Tipperary, M.D.; _b._
Irwin aforesaid, 3 June, 1889; educ. Campbell College, Belfast; Armagh
Royal School, and Sandhurst; gazetted 2nd Lieut. 2nd Battn. Royal Irish
Rifles, 20 April, 1910, transferred to the 1st Battn. 20 April, 1911,
and promoted Lieut. 15 Oct. 1914; killed in action at Neuve Chapelle,
while leading a charge of his platoon, 10 March, 1915; _unm._
Rifleman James Scott of this regt. wrote that in the attack on the
German second line they “were met with a murderous fire from a machine
gun which for an instant made our men waver. An officer, Lieut. Burges,
leading our platoon, No. 8, B Coy., dashed into a stream of water which
reached to his neck, and which ran parallel to the second German line
wire entanglements. He called out as he plunged into the water: ‘Follow
me, No. 8; be quick and we will capture that machine gun.’ Straight
away every man followed this gallant officer. Once across the stream,
‘Form up, No. 8,’ and away we went towards the machine gun like hounds
after the hare. We followed this officer over the German third line of
trenches, and away in full cry towards the village of Neuve Chapelle,
in our efforts to capture the accursed machine gun, which was playing
the deuce with our men. Dashing forward to a wood on our right where
the gun was concealed, our gallant officer received a bullet wound in
the neck, which ended in his death.... As our Colonel said, by his dash
and contempt of death, he brought victory to our arms and credit to our
regt. At 12 noon our regt. found itself close up to the village, more
advanced than any other regt. of the division, thanks to the gallant
lead of a gallant officer.” Lieut. Burges was mentioned in F.M. Sir
John French’s Despatch of 5 April [London Gazette, 22 June], 1915, for
gallant and distinguished conduct in this action.
[Illustration: =William A. Burges.=]
=BURGESS, HERBERT WILLIAM=, 1st Class Stoker, Ch/SS. 103633,
R.F.R., B. 7981, R.N.R., _s._ of Charles Henry Burgess, of 2,
Gills Cottages, Wouldham, Rochester, by his wife, Elizabeth, dau. of
the late John Callhoming; _b._ Wouldham, 25 Jan. 1890; educ.
National School there; joined the Navy 2 April 1906, and was lost on
H.M.S. Cressy, 22 Sept. 1914, when that ship was torpedoed in the North
Sea; _unm._
[Illustration: =Herbert William Burgess.=]
=BURGESS, JOHN DONALD=, Volunteer, King’s East African Mounted
Rifles, 3rd _s._ of Rev. Samuel Burgess, of 10, Holly Road,
Edgbaston, by his wife, Annie, dau. of the late John Peed, of
Whittlesey, Solicitor; _b._ Guilsborough, Northampton, 23 March,
1876; educ. Eastman’s Royal Naval Academy, Southsea. At the outbreak
of the European War was the Engineer of the Magadi Soda Co., but
immediately joined the King’s Mounted Rifles, and was killed in action
at Ingito Hill, British East Africa, 25 Sept. 1914. His commanding
officer wrote: “He was one of a party of 30 men who had followed up
what was said to be a smaller party of Germans, but when they came
up with them were found to consist of about 150 men with two maxims.
The Germans opened fire at once, and for a time there was some little
confusion. The four men of the Magadi Force, one of whom was your
husband, stood fast, however, and returned the fire, and then our men
rallied. This lasted for about 10 minutes, when the Germans started to
advance. The officer in command decided that our men could not hold
out, so he ordered a retirement, and Burgess and three others were
told off to cover it. They lay down, taking cover as best they could,
and when next day our men went out (the Germans having retired) all
four were found dead, just as they had laid down; and if ever men gave
their lives to save others, it was those four.” He _m._ at Christ
Church, Woburn Place, London, 21 Oct. 1902, Ethel M., 2nd dau. of the
late W. J. Roseby, of Doncaster, and left two daus.: Kathleen Constance
and Joyce Averil.
=BURGESS, RICHARD=, A.B. (R.F.R., B. 10674), 238875, H.M.S. Hogue;
lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BURGESS, WILLIAM=, Stoker, 1st Class, S.S. 111339, H.M.S. Cressy;
lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BURGESS, WILLIAM HENRY GEORGE=, A.B. (R.F.R., B. 3611), 185552,
H.M.S. Aboukir; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=DE BURIATTE, JOHN PHILIP=, 2nd Lieut., 2nd Battn. East Surrey
Regt., yr. _s._ of William Warwick de Buriatte, of The Mill House,
Wraysbury, co. Bucks, by his 1st wife, Mary, dau. of James Edmund
Huxley, M.D., and niece of Prof. Huxley; _b._ Aylesford, Kent, 28
Oct. 1887; educ. Dulwich College, and Manchester University, where he
studied in the Faculty of Technology, in chemical technology (paper
manufacture) from 1905–8; joined the Artists’ Rifles in 1912, and went
to France as Sergt. with them, 28 Oct. 1914; was given a commission
in the 2nd East Surrey Regt., 14 Feb. 1915, and was killed in action
leading his platoon at Lindenhoeck during the Battle of Neuve Chapelle,
12 March, 1915, and was buried 20 yards behind the trenches.
[Illustration: =John Philip de Buriatte.=]
=BURINI, CHARLES LEWIS=, Sergt., No. 7510, 2nd Battn. Yorkshire
Regt. (the “Green Howards”), _s._ of the late Sergt. Lewis
Augustus Burini, for ten years drill instructor of the local company
of the 2nd Vol. Battn. of the Yorkshire Regt., by his wife, Maria
(Scorton, Darlington), dau. of William Winslow, of Trowbridge, co.
Wilts (who served for 21 years in the Army); _b._ Norton, Malton,
co. York, 2 Aug. 1891; educ. Bower Memorial Schools, Norton; enlisted
2 Oct. 1903, appointed L.-Corpl. 16 Feb. 1914, served in India for 15
months, in Africa for three years, and with the Expeditionary Force in
France from 5 Oct. 1914 to 20 March, 1915, on which latter date he was
severely wounded in the head in action at Neuve Chapelle, and died in
No. 2 Stationary Hospital at Boulogne, 20 March following; _unm._
He was buried in the Casten Cemetery there, grave No. 136.
[Illustration: =Charles Lewis Burini.=]
=BURKE, CORNELIUS=, Stoker, 1st Class (R.F.R., B. 7775), S.S.
103254, H.M.S. Aboukir; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BURKE, THOMAS=, A.B. (R.F.R., Ch. B. 9051), S.S. 2130, H.M.S.
Cressy; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BURKE, THOMAS CAMPBELL=, Capt., 1st King George’s Own Gurkha
Rifles, 2nd _s._ of Joseph Francis Burke, of Stratford-on-Avon,
Civil Engineer, by his wife, Kate Marlow, dau. of the late William
Cruickshank, Deputy Inspector-General of Hospitals (who served through
the Crimean War, for which he received medal, and died at Simla during
the Indian Mutiny); _b._ Stratford-on-Avon, 27 May, 1877; educ.
Trinity College, Stratford-on-Avon and Sandhurst; gazetted 2nd Lieut.,
unattached, Indian Army, 4 Aug. 1897; served his first year with the
Royal Irish Rifles; entered the Indian S.C., 23 Oct. 1898, and was
appointed to the 125th (Napier’s) Rifles, being promoted Lieut. 4 Nov.
1889, and Capt. 4 Aug. 1906. He served in China in 1900 with the 122nd
Rajputana Infantry during the Boxer Rebellion, receiving the medal,
and was afterwards Assistant Inspector of Imperial Service Troops in
Rajputana from 1903–6. After three years’ service as Adjutant of the
Bangalore Volunteer Rifles (during which time he started the first
corps of Boy Scouts in India); he was (26 March, 1912) transferred as
Double Company Commander to the 1st Gurkha Rifles, then stationed at
Dharmsala, Punjab. On the outbreak of the European War the regt. was
ordered to France, but was detained for 10 weeks guarding the Suez
Canal, and arrived at the Front late in Nov. 1914. He was killed in
action at Festubert, 19 Dec. 1914. He was ordered to lead a party
against a German advanced trench, but the men were waist deep in mud,
and he was only able to get 24 ready to start, and with these and his
subaltern, Lieut. Rundall (who was ordered not to go, but would not let
his Capt. go alone), left the trench in broad daylight. The Colonel
stated the action was most gallant, and recommended him for the V.C.
The Brigade-Major officially reported that Capt. Burke and Lieut.
Rundall were killed, and more than 50 per cent. other ranks hit. He
_m._ at Agra, 1906, Ada Mary Jane, dau. of the Rev. J. Langshaw.
[Illustration: =Thomas Campbell Burke.=]
=BURKETT, WALTER=, Private, No. 1976, machine gun section, 17th
Battn. (Poplar and Stepney Rifles) The London Regt. (T.F.), _s._
of John Isaac Burkett, of 12, Remus Road, Old Ford, E., by his wife,
Annie; _b._ Old Ford, Bow, 26 Dec. 1896; educ. Smeed Road Board
School; enlisted, 8 Aug. 1914, and was killed in action at Morrock,
France, on the night of 22 Sept. 1915, being shot through the body
while with a working party; _unm._ Sergt. Morgan wrote of him as
one of his best men and a general favourite.
[Illustration: =Walter Burkett.=]
=BURN, JOHN=, Private, No. 8806, 2nd Battn. Northumberland
Fusiliers, _s._ of Thomas Burn, of 113, Conyers Road, Byker,
Newcastle-on-Tyne, Labourer; _b._ Byker, 27 March, 1885; educ.
Jubilee School, Byker Hill; was employed in Locke Blackett’s Lead
Works, St. Anthony’s; joined the Army 29 Aug. 1914; died of wounds
received in action at Ypres, 21 Feb. 1915, and was buried in the
cemetery there. He _m._ at Byker 6 Aug. 1906, Mary Jane (113,
Conyers Road, Byker, Newcastle-on-Tyne), dau. of Aaron, Richardson,
and had three children: Thomas, _b._ 22 Nov. 1906; Margaret
Richardson, _b._ 9 Oct. 1908; and Elizabeth Collins, _b._ 28
Dec. 1910.
[Illustration: =John Burn.=]
=BURN, WILLIAM=, Sergt., No. 8356, 1st Battn. Royal West Kent
Regt. served with the Expeditionary Force in France, etc.; killed in
action, 13 Sept. 1914; _m._
=BURNAND, CYRIL FRANCIS=, 2nd Lieut., 1st Battn. Grenadier Guards,
only _s._ of Charles Hubert Burnand, of 1, Cavendish Square,
London, Banker, by his wife, Mary Tirzah, dau. of James Nelson, and
grandson of Sir Francis Burnand, late Editor of “Punch”; _b._ at
1, Cavendish Square, London, 31 July, 1891; educ. Downside School,
and Trinity College, Cambridge. When the war broke out he was in
the General Superintendent’s department of the Midland Railway at
Nottingham, but immediately offered his services and was given a
commission in the Special Reserve of the Grenadier Guards, 18 Aug.
1914, and later appointed to the 1st Battn. at the front. He was killed
in action near Neuve Chapelle, 11 March, 1915; _unm._ Lieut.
Burnand was a Cambridge rowing “blue,” and Capt. of the 1st Trinity
Rowing Club.
[Illustration: =Cyril Francis Burnand.=]
=BURNARD. LEONARD=, Leading Stoker (R.F.R., Ch. B. 1153), 149707.
H.M.S. Cressy; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BURNELL, GEORGE CUTHBERTSON=, 2nd Lieut., 10th Battn. (Liverpool
Scottish) King’s Liverpool Regt. (T.F.), yst. _s._ of the late
Robert Burnell, of Egremont, co. Chester, by his wife, Mary (The
Bungalow, Whitby, near Chester), dau. of John Cuthbertson, of Govan,
M.D.; _b._ Egremont, co. Chester, 6 April, 1890; educ. Liscard
High School; joined the Liverpool Scottish as a private the day
war broke out, and after three months’ training at Edinburgh and
Tunbridge Wells, went out with his battn., 31 Oct. 1914. He was given
a commission in his own regt. 16 March, 1915. He was wounded at Hooge,
16 June, 1915, while leading his platoon in the famous charge of the
Liverpool Scottish, and lay on the battlefield for two and a-half
days, and at last crawled within sight of the British trenches, when
an officer saw him and brought him in. He died at No. 7 Stationary
Hospital, Boulogne, 24 June, 1915, from his wounds; _unm._ Lieut.
Burnell played Rugby for the Cheshire XV for two seasons, and was a
member of the Birkenhead Park Football Club.
[Illustration: =George C. Burnell.=]
=BURNELL, JOHN SIDNEY=, Private, No. 2321, 2nd Battn. (Royal
Fusiliers) The London Regt. (T.F.), eldest _s._ of John
Burnell, an employee of Watney, Coombe & Reid, Brewers, by his wife,
Elizabeth (14, Castle Buildings Castle Lane, Westminster), dau. of
James Woodland; _b._ Holborn, 7 Sept. 1891; educ. St. Albans,
Holborn; enlisted on the outbreak of war, and was killed in action at
Armentières, 19 May, 1915. He was buried in Esquingham Cemetery; unm.
2nd Lieut. Frank C. Langley, 2nd Battn. The London Regt., wrote from
France: “He was engaged with other fellows filling sandbags when it
happened, and he was awfully brave right up to the time he was sent
to hospital. I was proud to feel that he was in my platoon”; and the
Chaplain, 17th Field Ambulance, writing to his father, said: “Your son
... has died of a bullet wound received yesterday. It went through his
right arm and into his stomach. An operation was attempted, but in
vain. He did not suffer much pain, and was very calm and brave.” The
following extract is from a letter to his mother, sent by L.-Corpl. A.
N. Fegat, No. 2134, No. 9 Platoon, C Coy., 2nd Battn. London Regt.:
“Your son, who was in my section, was wounded yesterday afternoon
about 4 o’clock. He was working behind the trench when a bullet hit
his arm, inflicting a cut 1½ inches long and ¾ inch deep. The bullet
then ricochetted across his stomach, inflicting a very nasty wound.
The doctor attended immediately and we soon got him to hospital. The
news from there was very good at first, but later reports were not so
hopeful, and the news came through this morning that he died peacefully
at 6.30 a.m.”
=BURNET, ROBERT=, Lieut.-Col. and Sanitary Staff Officer, 1st
Wessex Division, R.A.M.C. (T.F.), 4th _s._ of George Burnet, of
Wigan, co. Lancaster; _b._ 9 Feb. 1875; educ. King William’s
College, Isle of Man, and University College, Liverpool, graduating
B.Sc. Hons. 1897, M.B., Ch.B., 1900, and M.Sc. 1904. Four years later
he qualified D.P.H., Birmingham. After holding appointment as House
Surgeon to the Rawcliffe Hospital, Chorley, he secured the appointment
of Medical Officer of Health for the County Borough of Bury, and
Medical Superintendent, Bury and District Joint Hospital Board, Fever
and Smallpox Hospital, and Aitken Sanatorium for Consumption. Later
he was appointed Medical Officer of Health for Cornwall and Principal
Medical Officer, Cornwall Education Committee. He joined the R.A.M.C.
(T.F.) in 1907, was for some time Capt. 2nd Wessex Field Ambulance, and
in Feb. 1913 was promoted Major upon appointment as Divisional Sanitary
Officer to the 1st Division. On the outbreak of war he joined his unit
for active service, and was promoted Lieut.-Col. On the afternoon of
Thursday, 28 Jan. 1915, he was riding between Newton St. Cyres and
Exeter, accompanied by Col. H. J. Mackay, when his horse was frightened
by some colts in a field near the roadway, and bolted. Half a mile
further on Col. Burnet was thrown and died within a few minutes from
injuries caused by a fracture of the skull. He was buried at Chorley,
Lancashire, the family burial place. An order issued by Brig.-Gen.
G. S. McD. Elliott, Commanding R.A.M.C. (T.F.), Wessex Division
said: “Lieut.-Col. Burnet was an officer of very high professional
attainments, and these he devoted unceasingly with never-failing energy
and earnestness to the welfare of the Division. By his death the Army
has been deprived of the services of an officer who can ill be spared,
and those who knew him have lost a valued friend.” Col. Burnet was a
Fellow of the Society of Medical Officers of Health, and a member of
the British Medical Association, and had held the offices of Senior
Steward in Phœnix Lodge of Honour and Prudence, No. 331, Truro, and of
Junior Steward in the Royal Cornubian Chapter, No. 331, Truro, of Royal
Arch Masons. He was author of “Poliomyelitis and Dust Nuisance,” in The
British Medical Journal, 1911; and “Poliomyelitis, as illustrated by an
English Epidemic,” Paris Health Congress, 1913. He _m._ at Whalley
Range, Manchester, 2 April, 1903, Alice, 3rd dau. of Thomas Thornber,
of Vivary Bridge, Colne, co. Lancaster, and Westbourne, Rusholme,
Manchester, and had three children: Gordon, _b._ 29 Sept. 1904;
Georgina, _b._ 28 Jan. 1906; and Monica, _b._ 12 June, 1912.
[Illustration: =Robert Burnet.=]
=BURNETT, CHARLES=, A.B. (R.F.R., Ch. B. 10276), 204551, H.M.S.
Cressy; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BURNETT, FRANCIS=, Private, No. 8578, 2nd Battn. Scots Guards,
_s._ of J. Burnett, of Slew House, Broadwood Widger, Difton,
Devon; _b._ Ashwater, Holsworthy, co. Devon; enlisted 19 March,
1913; served with the Expeditionary Force in France, etc.; killed in
action, 18 Dec. 1914.
=BURNETT, GEORGE=, Private, No. 7591, 1st Battn. Coldstream
Guards, _s._ of George Burnett of Chichester; served with the
Expeditionary Force; reported missing and now assumed to have been
killed in action between 29 Oct. and 2 Nov. 1914.
=BURNETT, NOEL FLETCHER=, Private, No. 6/18, Machine Gun
Section, 1st Canterbury Infantry Battn. New Zealand Expeditionary
Force, yst. _s._ of James Burnett, M.Inst.C.E., Chief Engineer,
New Zealand Government Railways, by his wife, Ellen, dau. of Wilson
Gibson, of Waitangi Station, South Canterbury, New Zealand; _b._
Christchurch, New Zealand, 2 Dec. 1889; educ. Wellington College,
Victoria College and Canterbury College (all New Zealand), where he
was in his last term at the Engineering School when war broke out;
volunteered and enlisted in the Expeditionary Force; left for Egypt
with the main body in Oct. 1914; took part in the repulse of the
Turkish attack on the Suez Canal in Feb. 1915; in the landing at the
Dardanelles, 25–26 April, and in the great attack on Krithia, where
he was severely wounded by a bullet in the lung; was six weeks in
hospital at Alexandria, and was then invalided to England, where he
was in various hospitals till Oct., when he rejoined at the Base
Camp, Weymouth; went out with a draft, 15 Nov., and returned to the
trenches early in Dec. and was shot at Chunock Bair, near Anzac, on
the 13th of that month, and died the same day on board the hospital
ship Dunluce Castle. Buried at sea between Anzac and Lemnos the same
night; _unm._ His College Professor wrote: “He was a thoroughly
sterling character, and commanded alike the respect and affection of
his fellow-students and teachers. It was really his great influence
which led to many College men enlisting after he had set the example.
As a power for good and a standard for manliness amongst the students
I shall greatly feel his loss.” He was a keen sportsman and athlete,
member of his college football fifteen for three years, and secretary
of the College Engineering Society.
[Illustration: =Noel Fletcher Burnett.=]
=BURNHAM, CHARLES RICHARD=, Private, No. 1791, 4th Battn. West
Riding Regt., _s._ of John Burnham, Commercial Traveller;
_b._ Halifax, 16 Oct. 1872; educ. there. He was a member of the
National Reserve, and on the outbreak of war joined the 4th Battn.
West Riding Regt., 8 Aug. 1914, and was killed in action in France, 4
May, 1915, while carrying rations and water from the headquarters to
the trenches. He was buried in the Military Burial Ground, Sailly. He
_m._ at the Parish Church, Halifax, 19 May, 1894, Mary Emma, dau.
of Isaiah Tawton, and had a dau: Ivy Eastwood, _b._ 16 May, 1907.
=BURNS, ALBERT HORACE=, Private, No. 10720, 2nd Battn.
Bedfordshire Regt., _s._ of Harry Walter Burns, of 97, Chingford
Road, Walthamstow, Silversmith, by his wife, Emma Esther, dau. of
Richard Rolph; _b._ Camden Town, 4 Feb. 1899; educ. Oldfield Road
School, Willesden; joined the Army at the outbreak of the war, 11
Aug. 1914, and was killed in action at Festubert, 14 May, 1915, five
days after his brother, Drummer Harry Walter Burns (see his notice);
_unm._
[Illustration: =Albert Horace Burns.=]
=BURNS, DAVID=, Private, No. 9413, 1st Battn. Scots Guards;
_b._ Keith, co. Banff; enlisted 23 Aug. 1914; served with the
Expeditionary Force in France, etc., and died a prisoner of war, 27
Jan. 1915, and was buried at Pont-a-Vendin, Pas de Calais, by the
German authorities.
=BURNS, HARRY WALTER=, Drummer, No. 1441, 3rd Battn. (Royal
Fusiliers) The London Regt. (T.F.), _s._ of Harry Walter Burns,
Silversmith, by his wife, Emma Esther, dau. of Richard Rolph;
_b._ Kentish Town, London, 20 Nov. 1896; educ. Oldfield Road
School, Willesden; enlisted 22 Feb. 1911, and was killed in action at
Festubert, 9 May, 1915; _unm._
[Illustration: =Harry Walter Burns.=]
=BURNS, JOHN=, Private, No. 77984, 15th Battn., Canadian
Expeditionary Force, 2nd _s._ of the late Robert Burns, of Dublin,
by his wife, Lizzie (20, Longford Street, Dublin); _b._ Dublin,
10 April, 1890; educ. there; went to Canada about 1907, and settled
in Victoria, British Columbia; volunteered after the outbreak of
war; joined the Canadian Expeditionary Force in Oct. 1914; came over
with the second contingent; went to France, and was killed in action
at Festubert, 20 May, 1915. Buried first line trenches, north-east
of Festubert village, about 500 yards from church. He _m._ at
Victoria, B.C., 16 Nov. 1912, May (Box 934 Nelson, British Columbia,
Canada), dau. of Thomas Carlisle, and had a son: John Carlisle,
_b._ 15 June, 1914.
=BURNS, MICHAEL=, Private, No. 5973, 2nd Battn, The Border Regt.;
served through the South African War with the 1st Border Regt. (Queen’s
medal with four clasps and King’s medal with two clasps), and with
the Expeditionary Force in France, etc.; killed in action at Neuve
Chapelle, 12 March, 1915; _unm._ Previous to the outbreak of the
European War he was employed at the Ravensworth Colliery, Gateshead.
=BURNS, THOMAS=, Private, No. 10646, 3rd Battn. Coldstream Guards,
_s._ of Patrick Burns, of 4, Spring Row, Knowle Park, Keighley,
Yorkshire; served with the Expeditionary Force in France, etc.;
reported missing 29 Oct. 1914, and now assumed to have been killed in
action that day.
=BURNS, WILLIAM=, Private, No. 3321, 2nd Battn. Royal Scots
(Lothian Regt.), _s._ of Thomas Burns, of 299, Hilltown, Dundee;
served with the Expeditionary Force in France, etc.; died in the 13th
General Hospital at Boulogne, 28 May, 1915, from wounds received in
action.
=BURNS, WILLIAM GORDON=, L.-Corpl., No. 9217, 1st Section, 2nd
Battn. Durham L.I., _b._ Dumfries, 14 Sept. 1885; educ. there;
enlisted after the outbreak of war, 2 Sept. 1914, and was killed
in action at Ypres, 5 Aug. 1915. He was buried north of Hop Store,
just outside Vlamertinghe, on the Poperinghe Road. He _m._ at
Wallsend-on-Tyne, Northumberland, Jennie (now training as a Nurse),
eldest dau. of John Steele, of Wallsend-on-Tyne; _s.p._
[Illustration: =William G. Burns.=]
=BURR, HAROLD=, A.B., J. 2742, H.M.S. Aboukir; lost in action in
the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BURRARD, NORMAN SIDNEY=, Stoker, 1st Class, K. 14263 (Ports.),
H.M.S. Aboukir; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BURRELL, ALEXANDER=, Private, No. 13676, 1st Battn. Coldstream
Guards, _s._ of John Richard Burrell, of 70, Victoria Street,
Shotton Colliery, Durham, Miner, by his wife, Isabella, dau. of William
Keen, of Haswell; _b._ Haswell, co. Durham, 2 May, 1894; enlisted
at Sunderland, 14 Nov. 1914, and was killed in action near Vermelles,
29 Sept. 1915; _unm._
[Illustration: =Alexander Burrell.=]
=BURRELL, FREDERICK=, A.B., 192688, H.M.S. Aboukir; lost in action
in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BURRELL, JOHN WILLIAM=, Corpl., No. 1519, B Coy., 9th Battn. 3rd
Infantry Brigade, 1st Division, Australian Imperial Force, _s._
of Richard William Burrell, of 46, Croyland Road, Lower Edmonton, N.,
Confectioner, by his wife, Louisa Matilda, dau. of George Watling;
_b._ Islington, 19 Sept. 1895; educ. Chequer Street School, E.C.;
went to Australia, and enlisted there in Aug. 1914, after the outbreak
of war, and was killed in action at Gaba Tepe, Gallipoli, 28 June,
1915; _unm._ His elder brother was killed in France in Sept. (see
following notice).
[Illustration: =John William Burrell.=]
=BURRELL, RICHARD GEORGE=, Corpl., No. 1197, D Coy., 7th Battn.
The London Regt., 47th London Division (T.F.), eldest _s._ of
Richard William Burrell, of 46, Croyland Road, Lower Edmonton, N., and
elder brother of the preceding; _b._ St. Luke’s, E.C., 13 July,
1893; educ. Chequer Street School, E.C.; enlisted in June, 1911, and
was killed in action at the Battle of Loos, 25 Sept. 1915. He _m._
at Watford, 16 March, 1915, May, dau. of Henry Knowles, of King’s Road,
Fairfield Road, Edmonton.
[Illustration: =Richard George Burrell.=]
=BURRELL, WILLIAM MATTHEW=, of Broome Park, co. Northumberland,
and Hampton Court, co. Hereford, Major, Northumberland Hussars
Yeomanry, elder _s._ of William John Burrell, by his wife, Helena
Elizabeth, 2nd dau. of Major Alexander Browne, of Doxford Hall;
_b._ Glen Allen, Alnwick, co. Northumberland, 2 Feb. 1876; educ.
Harrow; gazetted 2nd Lieut. 12th Royal Lancers, 15 May, 1897, and
promoted Lieut. 1900, and Capt. 22 Nov. 1902; served in South African
War, 1899–1902; took part in advance on, and relief of, Kimberley,
including action at Maggersfontein; operations in the Orange Free
State, Feb. to May, 1900; operations in the Transvaal, May and June,
1900, including actions near Johannesburg and Diamond Hill; operations
in the Transvaal, west of Pretoria, July to 29 Nov. 1900; operations
in the Orange River Colony, May to 29 Nov. 1900, including actions at
Lindley, Bethlehem and Wittebergen; operations in the Transvaal, 30
Nov. 1900, to July, 1901; and in Cape Colony, July, 1901, to 31 May,
1902 (Queen’s medal with four claps and King’s medal with two clasps);
and retired 15 May, 1907. He then joined the Northumberland Yeomanry
Hussars; was Adjutant for three years, and became Major, 7 June, 1913.
On the outbreak of war he was _en route_ for France with his
regt. when he contracted pneumonia at Southampton, and died of septic
pneumonia at a nursing home in Bath, 10 Nov. 1914. He _m._ at
Carham, 13 May, 1903, Nancy (Hampton Court, Leominster, Herefordshire),
2nd dau. of the late Charles Perkins, of Carham Hall, Coldstream, N.B.,
and Birkley Hall, co. Durham, and had four children: Michael, _b._
8 July, 1909, _d._ 4 Jan. 1910; Charles Dominic (now of Broome
Park), _b._ 11 Aug. 1914; Cornelia Mary, _b._ 12 Jan. 1911;
and Philippa, _b._ 25 Aug. 1912.
[Illustration: =William Matthew Burrell.=]
=BURRIDGE, ARTHUR CHARLES=, L.-Corpl., East African King’s Mounted
Rifles, elder _s._ of the late Arthur Francis Burridge, a Fellow
of the Institute of Actuaries and a Vice-President of that Society,
by his wife, Emily (Elmington, Bexley, Kent), dau. of Major-Gen.
Charles James Green, R.E., for many years Chief Engineer of Mysore;
_b._ Bedford Park, W., 7 Jan. 1883; educ. Rugby 1896–99, winning
his house cup for running; entered Huth’s Bank 1899, and joined the
Inns of Court Officers Training Corps; but in 1910 emigrated to British
East Africa, where he took up a large tract of land; became a coffee
planter, and started the raising of the Legion of Frontiersmen. On the
outbreak of war he enlisted in C Squadron, King’s Mounted Rifles, was
made L.-Corpl., and took part in the fighting along the British-German
frontier during Sept. On 25 Sept. he was one of a small party, 30
in number, of the Rifles who were attacked in the Ingito Hills by a
greatly superior force of the enemy, with two Maxim guns. After an
hour’s severe fighting the enemy were driven off, but not until the
Rifles had lost eight of their number killed, among them Mr. Burridge.
The “Morning Post” for 1 Jan. 1915, contained a letter, in which the
writer says: “One poor youngster in my section and mess got shot
through the leg, and a man named Burridge attended him in the firing
line and refused to retreat when the order was given. That was the last
seen of either of them alive, for when we returned later the poor boy
was found bayoneted through the neck and his companion shot through
the head.” He was buried in the Ingito Hills the following day, and a
handsome brass memorial tablet was placed in Bexley Parish Church.
[Illustration: =Arthur Charles Burridge.=]
=BURRIDGE, FREDERICK WILLIAM=, Private, R.M.L.I., Ch. 15303,
H.M.S. Hawke, lost in action in the North Sea, 15 Oct. 1914; _m._
=BURRIDGE, HENRY GARDINER (Lal)=, Lieut., 107th Pioneers, Indian
Army, _s._ of the late Lieut.-Col. Francis John Burridge, R.A.
(2nd _s._ of the late William Burridge, of Bradford Court, West
Somerset), by his wife, Kitty (The Croft, Lee-on-the-Solent), dau. of
Capt. E. Stannard, R.H.A.; _b._ Bareilly, India, 20 Jan. 1890;
educ. Winton House, Winchester, Wellington College (1902–8), and
Sandhurst; gazetted 2nd Lieut. 8 Sept. 1909, he was attached to the
North Staffordshire Regt. at Nowshera for a year, and on 31 Dec. 1910,
was transferred to the Indian Army and posted to the 15th Ludhiana
Sikhs; promoted Lieut. 8 Dec. 1911, he transferred to the 107th
Pioneers in 1912, and was killed in action (being shot through the
head) while ascertaining the extent of damage done by high explosives
at La Bassée, 17 Nov. 1914; _unm._ He was buried in Bethune
Cemetery, the men of his company carrying his body back some three
miles. His Colonel wrote: “During the short time I knew him I got to
recognise and admire his many qualities. He was always bright and jolly
whatever his hardships might be, and I have seldom met a more unselfish
fellow. He was always keen both at work and play, and was much loved
by his men. Since we have been at the front I have much relied on his
judgment, and he was my right hand. I miss him greatly. He had endeared
himself to me.” At Wellington he was second of three brothers in the
Anglesey, a school prefect, a member of the XI and XV, and a gentleman
of the Hunt, and won the Challenge Cup in 1908. In 1908 he was passed
for Sandhurst, but was sent to the infantry company attached to the
R.M.A.
[Illustration: =Henry G. Burridge.=]
=BURRINGTON, HARLEY=, Private, No. 13615, Grenade Coy., 2nd
Infantry Brigade, Canadian Expeditionary Force, 4th _s._ of the
late Gilbert George Burrington, of Bridgwater, co. Somerset, Bank
Manager, by his wife, Amelia Frances (Burnham, co. Somerset), dau. of
Edward Bryant; _b._ Bridgwater, 1 Dec. 1883; educ. Haileybury
College; went to Canada in 1902; enlisted on the outbreak of war; came
over with the first contingent in Oct. 1914; went to France in Feb.;
was wounded when coming out of the trenches at Festubert, and died in
the General Hospital at Boulogne, 23 July, 1915; _unm._ He was
buried in the Eastern Cemetery there.
=BURROW, THOMAS=, Private, No. 20447, 10th Battn. 2nd Infantry
Brigade, Canadian Expeditionary Force, _s._ of the late James
Burrow, Water Bailiff (died 1905), by his wife, Agnes (Grange Fell,
Grange Over Sands, co. Lancaster), dau. of John Rigg, of Hill Farm,
Cartmel; _b._ Grange Over Sands, 5 May, 1893; educ. National
School there; went to Canada in 1913, and settled in Alberta. He
joined the 103rd Calgary Regt. in 1913, and after the outbreak of war
volunteered for service oversea. He came to England with the first
Canadian Contingent, was severely wounded at 3 p.m. on 20 March,
1915, in action at Neuve Chapelle, and died the following evening;
_unm._ He was buried in Merivale Cemetery, France.
[Illustration: =Thomas Burrow.=]
=BURROWS, LEOPOLD CHARLES=, A.B. (R.F.R., B. 10748), 203733,
H.M.S. Hogue; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BURROWS, SAMUEL JOSEPH=, Private, R.M.L.I. (Ports.), 12278,
H.M.S. Good Hope; lost in action off Coronel, on the coast of Chili, 1
Nov. 1914.
=BURSNALL, FRANCIS GEORGE=, Stoker, R.N.R., 1734U, H.M.S. Cressy;
lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BURT, ROBERT WILLIAM=, Stoker, 1st Class (R.F.R., B. 4559), S.S.
103678, H.M.S. Good Hope; lost in action off Coronel, on the coast of
Chili, 1 Nov. 1914.
=BURTON, ALFRED WILLIAM=, Private, No. 7803, 1st Battn. North
Staffordshire Regt., _s._ of the late William Burton; _b._
Haynford, 5 Feb. 1888; educ. there; enlisted 7 Dec. 1904; died 14
March, 1915, of wounds received in action at Neuve Chapelle two days
previously. He _m._ at Haynford, 7 Oct. 1913, Edith Miriam, dau.
of Charles Golding; _s.p._
=BURTON, JAMES ALBERT=, Stoker, 1st Class (R.F.R., B. 7513), S.S.
102819, H.M.S. Aboukir; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BURTON, JOHN=, Stoker, 1st Class, K. 10637 (Ports.), H.M.S.
Hogue; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BURTON, REES THOMAS=, Private, No. 64831, Royal Field Artillery,
_s._ of the late William Burton (died 20 May, 1898); _b._
Tylorstown, co. Glamorgan, 26 Sept. 1888; educ. there; enlisted 24
March, 1911, and had finished his three years’ service just five months
before the outbreak of war; he immediately rejoined and was killed in
action in France between 11 and 14 Sept. 1914; _unm._
=BURTON, WILLIAM HARRY=, Sergt., No. 1420, C Coy., 1st/14th Battn.
(London Scottish) The London Regt. (T.F.), _s._ of Herbert Burton,
of North Street, Atherstone, Foreman Hatter, by his wife, Annie,
dau. of William Lucas; _b._ Atherstone, 15 March, 1887; educ.
Atherstone Grammar School; joined the London Scottish 1910, and was
killed in action at Vermelles, 27 May, 1915; _unm._ His Commanding
Officer, Capt. Claud Low, wrote he “was killed by a shell at 10.15 this
morning, in a trench about 2,000 yards east of Vermelles. At the moment
of writing this letter your son has not been buried but I am making
arrangements for this. If the shelling does not stop before nightfall
it will be done then. It may interest you to know that when the shells
commenced to strike in this section this morning, your son immediately
took steps to get his men into safety, and it was in doing so, in the
exercise of his duty as a non-commissioned officer, that he lost his
life.”
[Illustration: =William Harry Burton.=]
=BUSH, ARTHUR DOUGLAS=, Private, R.M.L.I. (Ports.), 6857, H.M.S.
Good Hope; lost in action off Coronel, on the coast of Chili, 1 Nov.
1914.
=BUSH, CHARLES FREDERICK=, Private, R.M.L.I. (R.F.R., B. 819),
H.M.S. Cressy; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BUSHELL, WILLIAM THEODORE=, L.-Corpl., No. 2816, A Coy., 16th
Battn. (Queen’s Westminster) The London Regt. (T.F.), eldest _s._
of Arthur Forest Bushell, of 39, Moreton Place, Pimlico, S.W., and
Biggin Hill, Westerham, Kent, by his wife, Sarah Ann, dau. of William
Cooper, of Milton, Kent; _b._ Pimlico, 17 July, 1883; educ.
Westminster Training College, and was for some 14 years in the employ
of Messrs. J. W. Benson, Ltd., of Ludgate Hill. On 27 Feb. 1899, at
the age of 15, he joined the 1st Cadet Battn. of the Queen’s Royal
West Surrey Regt., and leaving them 11 Jan. 1900, joined the old 13th
Middlesex Queen’s Westminster Volunteers 5 Nov. following, with whom
he served till 8 Dec. 1904. After the outbreak of war he rejoined 2
Sept. 1914, and went to the Front at the end of Jan. The Westminsters
were stationed at Houplines, near Armentières, until 28 May, when they
were moved up to Ypres. At the Battle of Hooge they were in reserve and
were heavily bombarded the whole time. Bushell was hit in the head by
a piece of shrapnel shell, and was killed instantaneously at midnight
on 16–17 June, 1915. He was _unm._, and was buried on the side of
the Potjhe-Hooge Road, about half a mile from Potjhe. His Commanding
Officer, Capt. Stanley Low, wrote: “He was killed by shrapnel whilst
doing his duty nobly in the trenches. He was very popular and will
be sadly missed by his comrades. I should like to say how well his
brother (who recently joined us) behaved, by restraining his natural
inclination to go to his brother’s assistance, and remaining on sentry
go until someone came to relieve him”; and Lieut. R. S. Dickinson wrote
of him as “One of the best soldiers” in his platoon. His third brother,
Harry George, joined the Warwickshires on the outbreak of war, and was
later transferred to the Westminsters, being with his brother when he
was killed. He is now (1916) a 2nd Lieut. in the 10th Suffolks. His
next brother, Arthur Frederick, is serving with the Army Service Corps.
[Illustration: =William T. Bushell.=]
=BUSK, EDWARD TESHMAKER=, Lieut., London Electrical Engineers
(T.F.), _s._ of Thomas Teshmaker Busk, of Fords Grove, Winchmore
Hill, and Hermongers, Rudgwick, co. Sussex, M.A., J.P., by his wife,
Mary, dau. of Nathaniel Brindley Acworth, of the Hook, co. Herts,
J.P., Chairman of Petty Sessions; _b._ Fords Grove afsd., 8
March, 1886; educ. Bilton Grange, Rugby, Harrow (Mr. Marshall’s House,
1900–04) and King’s College (Foundation Scholar), Cambridge, where
he secured a 1st Class in Part 1 of the Mechanical Sciences Tripos
(1907), and carried off the John Winbolt prize next year. He joined the
staff of the Royal Aircraft Factory as Assistant Engineer in charge
of physical experimental work on 10 June, 1912. There he devoted
much of his time to the mathematics and dynamics of stable flight on
the full size, as distinct from the model aeroplane. He introduced
many valuable improvements, of which it is not permissible to give
particulars at the present juncture, his work not being confined to
the solution of aeroplane stability, but covering a wide and varied
range. His valuable researches into the nature and cause of wind gusts
and his work in connection with the offensive and defensive uses of
aircraft in warfare may be specially mentioned. He also guided his
branch in the production of aeroplane instruments, some of which were
exhibited at the Royal Society in May and June, 1913, by permission
of the Superintendent, Mr. Mervyn O’Gorman, C.B., Royal Aircraft
Factory. By the autumn of 1913, Mr. Busk had carried his researches
so far that complete stability without material loss of efficiency
could be obtained for any aeroplane designed in accordance with his
results. Such an aeroplane was then produced for the first time, and
in Nov. 1913, he was able to make flights of several hours’ duration
in winds up to thirty-eight miles per hour, without at any time using
any balancing, controlling, or steering mechanism whatever, save for
alighting purposes. He took Col. Seely on such an uncontrolled flight,
and later on made demonstration flights before the King and Queen.
The matter was introduced in practical form to the Royal Flying Corps
by his taking his Commanding Officer, Col. Sykes, as passenger, from
the Royal Aircraft Factory, Farnborough, to Salisbury Plain and back,
while both passenger and flier, being freed from the use of controls,
wrote notes and observations continuously throughout the journey. This
trial was repeated by Col. now Gen. Brancker as pilot as well as many
other officers. When at the Wilbur Wright Memorial Banquet (1914), Col.
Seely made the first public announcement of his flight on the stable
aeroplane produced at the Royal Aircraft Factory, the pilot’s name was
veiled in anonymity, only a privileged few knowing that Lieut. Busk
was, in fact, the designer of the R.E. 1 now known as B.E. 2C. He was
flying over Laffan’s Plain in his own stable aeroplane on 5 Nov. 1914,
when it was destroyed by fire at a height of some 800 ft. The cause
of the accident is unknown, as he was engaged on experimental work of
which he had not given information. Mr. Busk’s scientific attainments
and versatility were shown by the variety of matters entrusted to him
by the Superintendent of the Royal Aircraft Factory. He resembled other
men of genius in the simplicity of his methods, and the speed at which
he worked, and he was remarkable for the soundness of the scientific
judgments he reached. His mother received the following letter from
H.M. the King:--
Buckingham Palace, 11 Nov. 1914.
Dear Mrs. Busk,
The King has heard with much concern of the tragic death of your
son Mr. Busk. His Majesty well remembers meeting him at the
Royal Aircraft Factory on the occasion of Their Majesties visit
to Aldershot last summer, and was much struck by his ability and
technical knowledge of the machinery of aeroplanes.
The King and Queen also saw him give an exhibition of flying in
a stable aeroplane of his own invention.
In offering you his sincere sympathy in your bereavement, the
King feels that the Country has lost the services of one, who,
by experiment and research, contributed, in no small measure,
towards the Science of flying.
Yours very truly, (Signed) CLIVE WIGRAM.
Mr. Mervyn O’Gorman, C.B., Superintendent R.A.F. wrote: “He did the
most magnificent things without announcing any intention and without
applauding audience. He merely took all the sane precautions of a
clever engineer. Later with his hair blown about by a hatless flight,
he would walk into my office, report the success of an experiment. He
knew it was interesting, he forgot that it was brilliant or it did not
occur to him. He worked out a result, knew he was right, but simply had
his results checked and then proved them in his own person over and
again. He was a genius, that we knew and you knew. He knew what he was
about when he relinquished his volunteer regimental duty for the risks
of this service, he talked it all over with me and he took this course,
because he knew that he served his country better that way”; and Lord
Rayleigh, President, writing on behalf of the Advisory Committee for
Aeronautics: “At the National Physical Laboratory the assistance he
was constantly able to give, from his experience in actual flying and
his wide knowledge of his subject, in the critical examination of
the difficult problems presented for investigation was very greatly
valued.... The Committee have had many opportunities of appreciating
the services he was able to render to the development of flying, and
to his country, and wish to offer their tribute of admiration of the
courage, skill, and devotion he brought to his work.” He was also
awarded the posthumous honour of the Gold Medal of the Aeronautical
Society.
[Illustration: =Edward T. Busk.=]
=BUTCHER, CHARLES GEOFFREY=, Lieut., 1st Battn. Dorsetshire Regt.,
3rd _s._ of George William James Butcher, of 9, Tregunter Road,
South Kensington, by his wife, Mary, dau. of Samuel Debenham; educ.
St. Paul’s School, and was for some time in the H.A.C. He was gazetted
to the Special Reserve in Aug. 1912. On 10 June, 1914, he joined the
2nd Battn. Dorsetshire Regt., and on the outbreak of war was appointed
to the 1st Battn. At La Bassée on 22 Oct. 1914, he was wounded in
the leg by a bullet, his life being saved by Sergt. H. Cox, of the
Dorsetshire Regt. who carried him from the trenches into cover under a
very heavy fire. For this Sergt. Cox received the D.C.M. Lieut. Butcher
was mentioned in F.M. Sir John (now Lord) French’s Despatches [London
Gazette, 17 Feb. 1915], and was promoted Lieut. 15 Nov. 1914, returning
to the Front on 25 March. He was killed in action by asphyxiating gas
at Hill 60 on 2 May, 1915, and was buried at Reninghelst, Belgium;
_unm._ His Adjutant wrote: “I knew him very well and looked upon
him always as a man of unusual character, ability, and promise; his
loss is a severe one for the Dorset Regt.”; and another officer wrote
“He is a real loss to the regt. in every way. I am sure he had great
prospects before him as he was an extraordinarily keen subaltern and
very popular with both officers and men. He was always ready for any
amount of work.” Two of his brothers are in the Army and one in the
Navy.
[Illustration: =Charles Geoffrey Butcher.=]
=BUTCHER, HARRY STANLEY=, A.B., J. 3004, H.M.S. Cressy; lost in
action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BUTCHER, WILLIAM=, Signalman, J. 6825, H.M.S. Liberty; killed in
action in the Heligoland Bight, 28 Aug. 1914.
=BUTLER, CHARLES=, Seaman, R.N.R., 3442C, H.M.S. Aboukir; lost in
action in North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BUTLER, FREDERICK=, A.B. (R.F.R., B. 1441), 198254, H.M.S. Good
Hope; lost in action off Coronel, on the coast of Chili, 1 Nov. 1914.
=BUTLER, HARRY WILLIAM=, A.B. (R.F.R., B. 1990), 199217, H.M.S.
Good Hope; lost in action off Coronel, on the coast of Chili, 1 Nov.
1914.
=BUTLER, JOHN=, Sergt., R.M.L.I., Ch./8249, H.M.S. Cressy; lost in
action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BUTLER, JOHN=, Private, No. 3545, 5th Battn. The Queen’s Royal
West Surrey Regt. (T.F.), eldest _s._ of Henry Butler, of Sutton
Scotney, near Winchester, Hants, by his wife, Abigail, 3rd dau. of John
Stocker, of Hampshire; _b._ Crookham, co. Berks, 24 April, 1885;
educ. West Clandon (Surrey) Council School; and had worked on Lord
Rendel’s estate at East Clandon for nine years; enlisted 16 Nov. 1914,
and died at the London South-Western Fever Hospital, Stockwell, 25
Feb. 1915, of measles and double pneumonia, contracted while on active
service. He _m._ at Edmonton, London, 25 April, 1907, Ellen (2,
Westfield Cottages, Great Bookham, Surrey), 3rd dau. of William Savage,
of Bones Cottage, West Clandon, and had four children: William John,
_b._ 17 May, 1910; Henry Louvain, _b._ 18 Dec. 1914; Edith
Annie, _b._ 22 July, 1908; and Dora Irene, _b._ 1 Aug. 1912.
[Illustration: =John Butler.=]
=BUTLER, JOHN=, Stoker, 1st Class (R.F.R., B. 4345), S.S. 101226,
H.M.S. Good Hope; lost in action off Coronel, on the coast of Chili, 1
Nov. 1914.
=BUTLER, WALTER=, Stoker, 1st Class, 311362, H.M.S. Pathfinder;
lost when that ship was sunk by a mine about 20 miles off the East
Coast, 5 Sept. 1914.
=BUTLER, WILLIAM LEWIS=, Private, No. 3187, 1/13th Battn.
(Princess Louise’s Kensington) The London Regt. (T.F.), _s._ of
William Butler, of Prior’s Lea, Barrow-in-Furness, Solicitor, by his
wife, Bertha, dau. of John Lewis; _b._ Barrow-in-Furness, 1 Dec.
1892; educ. Lancing College; volunteered on the outbreak of war, and
joined the Kensingtons in Sept. 1914; went to France, March, 1915,
and was killed in action, 19 April, 1915. He was buried in La Croix
Marechal Cemetery, Rue David, near Armentières.
=BUTTERWICK, ALEXANDER MIDDLETON=, Rifleman, No. 3636, 9th Battn.
(Queen Victoria’s Rifles) The London Regt. (T.F.), yr. _s._ of
the late Charles Matthias Butterwick, of Walthamstow, House and Estate
Agent, by his wife, Mary Ann, dau. of R. Adnams, formerly of Reading;
_b._ Walthamstow, co. Essex, 20 April, 1895. After his father’s
death, when a child, he was taken and brought up by his uncle, A. M.
Butterwick (Master Mariner, retired), who saw service in Burma, 1885–7,
now of Broxton, Kew, Surrey; educ. Richmond (Surrey) County School
and Gunnersbury High School, and on leaving there became an articled
pupil in the firm of Breadmore and Webb, F.A.I., Auctioneers and
Estate Agents, of Richmond. After the outbreak of war he volunteered
and enlisted in Queen Victoria’s Rifles in Nov. 1914; went to France,
March, 1915, and was killed in action in Flanders, 13 July, 1915;
_unm._ Buried in 13th Infantry Brigade Cemetery, Voormeezelle. At
the time of his death his name was down for a commission. He was a keen
athlete, and held prizes for drill and swimming, also certificates for
life saving and first-aid.
[Illustration: =Alexander M. Butterwick.=]
=BUTTON, JOHN SAMUEL=, Seaman, R.N.R., 1540D, H.M.S. Aboukir; lost
in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BYATT, HARRY VIVIAN BYATT=, Capt., R.A.M.C., elder _s._
of Henry Byatt, author, late of 36, Warwick Gardens, Kensington;
_b._ Kensington, 16 Dec. 1882; educ. Summer Fields, Summertown,
Oxford, 1891; obtained an entrance scholarship at Charterhouse
School, Godalming, 1896, and left there with the Charterhouse Science
Exhibition, 1901, entering Clare College, Cambridge, with a Science
Scholarship the same year. He left Cambridge with a second class in
the Natural Science Tripos, and proceeded to the London Hospital,
qualifying M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., 1907. He was gazetted Lieut. R.A.M.C.
the same year, and appointed to Netley Hospital. From there he
proceeded to Poona in 1909, was promoted Capt. 29 Jan. 1911, and after
five years’ service in India, joined the Expeditionary Force in France
in Oct., being attached to the 2nd Battn. Rifle Brigade. He attended to
the trenches between Laventie and Estaires, and died 11 March, 1915,
from wounds received at Neuve Chapelle while dressing the wound in
the head of Machine Gun Sergt. Marriage. He was buried at Estaires.
His Commanding Officer wrote: “Your son was hit while attending to a
wounded man and I never saw him again. He was taken to the 25th Field
Ambulance at Estaires and died there. He was shot by a rifle bullet
in the chest.” While at Clare College he was first secretary and then
captain of the Clare Rowing Club, and under his leadership Clare rowing
improved so greatly that the well-known footer college was placed in
the first division on the river for the first time for many years.
[Illustration: =Harry Vivian Byatt Byatt.=]
=BYE, FRANK EDWIN=, Private, R.M.L.I., Ch./17384, H.M.S. Hawke;
lost in action in the North Sea, 15 Oct. 1914.
=BYHAM, EDWARD ARTHUR GEORGE=, Private, R.M.L.I. (Ports.), 12937,
H.M.S. Good Hope; lost in action off Coronel, on the coast of Chili, 1
Nov. 1914.
=BYRNE, HERBERT HENRY=, Leading Seaman, 184370, H.M.S. Aboukir;
lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BYRNE, JAMES=, A.B. (R.F.R., B. 2235), 204649, H.M.S. Good Hope;
lost in action off Coronel, on the coast of Chili, 1 Nov. 1914.
=BYRNE, THOMAS=, Private, No. 5334, 2nd Battn. Royal Dublin
Fusiliers, _s._ of the late Thomas Byrne, Royal Irish Rifles,
by his wife, Anne (Castledermot, co. Kildare), dau. of James Grace;
_b._ Carlow, 14 Aug. 1895; educ. Castledermot; joined the Army in
Aug. 1911, and was killed in action at Ypres, 13 Jan. 1915; _unm._
=CADGER, WILLIAM LAW=, Leading Stoker (R.F.R., B. 4793), 293766
(Ports.), H.M.S. Hogue; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=CADMAN, ISAIAH=, Private, No. 10213, 3rd Battn. Cheshire Regt.,
_s._ of the late Samuel Cadman, of Bilston, co. Staffs, Collier,
by his wife, Ann (9, Taylor’s Buildings, Heywood, Lanes, Manchester),
dau. of Joseph Reynolds; _b._ Awsworth, co. Notts. ...; educ.
Bilston; enlisted 12 Aug. 1914; went to France, 18 Dec., and was killed
in action at Neuve Chapelle, 13 March, 1915; _unm._
=CAESAR, AUGUSTUS BENJAMIN=, Private, No. 1896, 1st Battn.
(Royal Fusiliers) The London Regt. (T.F.), yr. _s._ of the late
Julius Cæsar, of 49, Chippenham Road, Elgin Avenue, W., formerly of
Southampton, M.P.S., F.S.M.C., by his wife, Emma (49, Chippenham Road,
Elgin Avenue, W.), dau. of James Baker; _b._ at 49, Chippenham
Road aforesaid, 12 April, 1897; educ. at Vale College, Maida Vale, W.,
afterwards at the City of London Freeman’s School, where he obtained
the bronze medal for rifle shooting at Bisley; he was an optician and
microscopical demonstrator attached to the firm of H. F. Angus & Co.,
Wigmore Street, W.; joined the 1st City of London Regt., 17 Aug. 1914;
trained at Croydon; left for Malta, 19 Sept. 1914; returned to England,
Feb. 1915; went to France, 9 March, 1915, and was killed in action on
Sunday, 9 May, 1915, at the Battle of Aubers Ridge.
=CAFFYN, HAROLD HUNT=, Capt., 1st Battn., North Staffordshire
Regt., eldest _s._ of Stephen Mannington Caffyn, of 6, Cedar
Gardens, S.W., M.D., by his wife, Kathleen, Novelist (Iota) (Lacey
Green, Princes Risborough), dau. of William de Vere Hunt, of Waterloo
House, co. Tipperary; _b._ at Mount Sandria, South Australia,
10 Feb. 1882; educ. Rugby and Sandhurst; gazetted second Lieut.,
unattached, 8 Jan. 1901; posted to the 2nd North Staffordshires 9
March following and promoted Lieut., 16 Feb. 1904; served in the South
African War (Queen’s medal with 2 clasps) 1901–2, and afterwards in
India and retired in 1912. Subsequently he was for eighteen months
Private Secretary to Sir Wilfred Collett, Governor of British Honduras,
but after the outbreak of war volunteered and was gazetted Capt., 14
Nov. 1914. He rejoined his old regiment in Jan., went to France, 7
Jan., 1915, and was killed in action in front of the trenches near
Armentières, 21 March, 1915, while reconnoitring; _unm._
=CAHILL, HENRY THOMAS=, Chief Stoker (R.F.R., A. 1709), 152629,
H.M.S. Hawke; lost when that ship was torpedoed in the North Sea, 15
Oct. 1914; _m._
=CAINAN, DAVID WALTER=, Corpl., No. 9866, 2nd Battn. Rifle
Brigade, 4th _s._ of William Cainan, of 49, Albert Street,
Llanelly, South Wales, Marine Engineer, by his wife, Catherine, dau.
of William Perrott, of Llanelly; _b._ Llanelly, 9 April, 1886;
educ. Copper Works School; joined the Army 4 May, 1903, and after being
stationed at Malta for 12 months, he went to India, where he did 11
years’ service, returning to Europe with his regt. after the outbreak
of war. He was killed in action at Neuve Chapelle, between the 10–14
March, 1915; _unm._ He was an all-round athlete, having gained the
light-weight boxing championship of India, as well as a record for long
jump and high jump.
=CAIRD, JAMES ROBERT=, Capt., 2nd Battn. King’s Own Scottish
Borderers, _s._ of Major Lindsay Henryson Caird (late Border
Regt.), Assistant to Colonel in charge of Records, No. 2 District, by
his wife, the late Janet Laura, 5th dau. of the late Rowland Hunt,
of Boreatton Park, co. Salop, and Kibworth Hall, co. Leicester, and
grandson of the late Right Hon. Sir James Caird, of Cassencary,
Kirkcudbrightshire; _b._ Dalhousie, India, 4 Nov. 1892; educ.
Bedford and Carlisle Grammar Schools; was in the office of the
Australian Mercantile Land & Finance Co., Ltd., but when war broke out
at once applied for a commission, and being a member of the Inns of
Court O.T.C., was gazetted 2nd Lieut. 3rd Battn. K.O.S.B. 15 Aug. 1914.
He was promoted Lieut. 9 Nov. following, and went to the Front in Dec.,
being attached to the 2nd Highland L.I. until March, when he came home
on short leave. On his return to the Front he was posted to the 2nd
Battn. of his regt., and was killed in action while leading his platoon
over open ground in the advance upon St. Julien, near Ypres, 23 April,
1915; _unm._ He was promoted Capt. after his death to rank as from
2 Feb. 1915. Major Hilton, who was in command of the battn. during the
action and was himself seriously wounded, wrote: “Capt. Caird was a
gallant fellow, and we can ill afford to lose his kind.... I didn’t
get much detail of the manner of his death as I was also knocked over,
but I know enough to say that he died game and led his men well until
killed.” And Sergt. Hugh McMurchy, in a sworn statement, declared: “I
saw Lieut. Caird killed on 23 April in the advance at St. Julien. He
was advancing in front of me and was shot through the forehead, being
killed instantaneously.” Capt. Caird’s experience of active service
had brought him to the conviction that he preferred a military to a
civil career, and his application for a permanent commission had been
sent in before his death. His last letter to his father contained an
interesting account of the assault and capture of Hill 60, in which he
took part.
[Illustration: =James Robert Caird.=]
=CAIRNIE, GILBERT JAMES BRYAN=, Corporal, No. 12/50, A Coy.,
3rd Auckland Infantry, New Zealand Expeditionary Force, _s._
of James Bryan Cairnie, of Taranaki, New Zealand, retired Farmer;
_b._ Lymington, near Kilmarnock, co. Ayr, 5 June, 1881; educ.
Tarbolton, Ayr, and Higher Grade School, Deansgate, Manchester; went
to New Zealand and was Computing Draughtsman, Lands and Survey Office,
Auckland, N.Z.; volunteered for Imperial service on the outbreak of
war, and joined the N.Z.E.F. Aug. 1914; left for Egypt with the main
force, and from there went to the Dardanelles, where he was killed
in action during a night sortie, 5 June, 1915; _unm._ He was
mentioned in Despatches with his Coy. Sergt.-Major, for bringing in
a wounded man under heavy fire. He was for a long time reported as
missing, and Sapper L. J. Poff wrote: “The last that was seen of Jim as
far as I can ascertain was that he was by himself in a Turkish trench.
I hope he was taken prisoner rather than that he has been killed, for
he has proved himself as brave as a lion. I sought out the Sergt.-Major
of Jim’s company, who was with him in bringing in a wounded man, of
which I wrote some time ago. He tells me that they were both ‘Mentioned
in Despatches’ for it. The Sergt.-Major says that the sortie in which
Jim became missing was a purely voluntary one, but practically the
whole of his section went. They sallied out, did their work, and what
was left returned with the wounded. The dead they could not bring
in then. A few nights afterwards a party went out and gathered the
identity discs of those who were killed. They also procured those of
the men whose dead bodies were thrown out of the Turkish trenches,
accounting for all but six. Jim’s disc was not among them, so let us
hope he is a prisoner,” but later he was officially returned as killed
in action, 5 June, 1915.
[Illustration: =Gilbert J. B. Cairnie.=]
=CAIRNS, JOHN=, Sergt., No. 3515, 2nd Battn. Royal Inniskilling
Fusiliers, _s._ of the late Thomas Cairns, Gunner, Mid-Ulster
Artillery, by his wife, Phoebe (Ballygawley, co. Tyrone), dau. of
James Montgomery, of Feddan, Ballygawley, co. Tyrone; _b._
Ballygawley, co. Tyrone, 12 May, 1891; educ. National School there;
enlisted originally in 1909, was called up on mobilisation, Aug. 1914,
and was killed in action at Messines 31 Oct. following; _unm._
His brother, Private William Cairns, No. 17584, 9th Battn. Royal
Inniskilling Fusiliers, is now (1916) on Active Service.
[Illustration: =John Cairns.=]
=CALE, ALBERT=, P.O., 2nd Class (R.F.R., A. 2006), 143929
(Ports.), H.M.S. Hawke; lost when that ship was torpedoed in the North
Sea, 15 Oct. 1914; _m._
=CALLANDER, ARTHUR WILLIAM=, Private, No. 2332, 14th Battn.
(London Scottish) The London Regt. (T.F.), 6th _s._ of the late
Thomas Edward Callander, late of Richmond, Surrey, by his wife, Mary
Ann Henrietta, dau. of the late Edward Faggetter; _b._ Richmond,
Surrey, 21 June, 1886; educ. Commercial Travellers’ Schools, Pinner;
was manager of the costume department at Messrs. Green & Co., Oxford
Circus Mansions; volunteered after the outbreak of war in Aug. 1914,
and joined the London Scottish; went to France in March, and was killed
in action, 9 May, 1915; _unm._
[Illustration: =Arthur W. Callander.=]
=CALLEY, OLIVER JOHN=, Lieut., 2nd Battn. Wiltshire Regt.,
only _s._ of the Rev. John Henry Calley, Vicar of Figheldean,
Salisbury, by his wife, Elizabeth Isabella Maria, yst. dau. of Major
John Haverfield; _b._ Chiseldon, 4 July, 1892; educ. at The Old
Ride, Branksome, Bournemouth, and St. John’s School, Leatherhead;
gazetted 2nd Lieut. from the Territorial Force to the Wiltshire
Regiment, 4 Dec. 1912, joining at Tidworth in Jan. 1913, and being
transferred the following Sept. to the 2nd Battn. at Gibraltar. He was
promoted Lieut. 27 Oct. 1914; went to the Front the same month, and was
invalided home a few weeks later. He left for the Front again in Dec.,
and was killed in action, 12 March, 1915; _unm._ Buried, Spanbrock
Molen. His Colonel said of him that he deplored the loss of such a
valuable and trustworthy officer.
[Illustration: =Oliver J. Calley.=]
=CALROW, WILLIAM ROBERT LAUNCELOT=, 2nd Lieut., 1st Battn. Loyal
North Lancashire Regt., _s._ of Gerald Walton Calrow, of Boerne,
Kendall Co., Texas, U.S.A., by his wife, Mabel Selina Elizabeth, dau.
of the late Edmund King, formerly of Bury St. Edmunds and later of
Boerne, Texas, and gdson. of the late Robert Calrow, of Cuzgarth,
Adel, Leeds; _b._ San Antonio, Texas, U.S.A., 12 March, 1895;
educ. Seascale, The School House, Rugby, and Sandhurst; received
his commission 17 Sept. 1913, joined his regt. early in Nov. 1913,
and accompanied it to France, 12 Aug. 1914. He was in the retreat
from Mons, the Battles of the Marne and the Aisne, at which latter
he was killed by a high explosive shell, 7 Oct. 1914. He was buried
near Vendresse, on the Aisne, about 12 miles from Braye; _unm._
Letters from his superior officers testify to his great courage, his
capability, and the esteem in which he was held in the regt.
[Illustration: =William Robert Launcelot Calrow.=]
=CALVERLEY=, JAMES, Armourer, 342978, H.M.S. Aboukir; lost in
action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=CALVERLEY, LAWRENCE BASIL=, Ordinary Seaman, J. 13727, H.M.S.
Pathfinder; lost when that ship was sunk by a mine, about 20 miles off
the East Coast, 5 Sept. 1914.
=CALVERT, HERBERT EDWIN=, Private, No. 6994, 3rd Battn. Coldstream
Guards, _s._ of Edwin Calvert, ex-Police Constable; _b._
Lincoln, 13 Dec. 1888; enlisted Oct. 1906; served in Egypt Jan. 1908 to
April, 1911; was badly wounded in the leg at the Battle of the Aisne,
and died in hospital in Paris following the amputation of his leg, 24
Sept, 1914. Private Blanchard, who was severely wounded the same day,
writing from hospital at Woolwich, said: “I sincerely hope Calvert is
not dead. He was one of my best friends. He was the one that carried me
to safety.” Calvert _m._ Lincoln, 13 April, 1914, Alice Maud, dau.
of James Barnes, of Norwich, and had a posthumous son, Herbert Edwin,
_b._ 14 Dec. 1914.
=CALVERT, JOHN DUTTON=, Lieut., 4th Battn. Rifle Brigade, elder
_s._ of Edmund Percy Calvert, of The Manor House, Spexhall,
Halesworth, by his wife, Susan May, eldest dau. of the late Col. the
Hon. Charles Dutton, of Twigworth Lodge, Gloucester [5th _s._ of
James Henry Legge, 3rd Baron Sherborne]; _b._ Abbotswood, Romsey,
26 Feb. 1891; educ. Winton House, Winchester, Osborne, Dartmouth and
Sandhurst (1909); was gazetted to the Rifle Brigade 20 Sept. 1911,
joined the 4th Battn. in Cairo in Nov. 1911, and proceeded with it
a year later to India. He was promoted Lieut. 16 April, 1914, and
left Dagshai with his battn. the following Oct. for Winchester, and
from there went to Flanders 20 Dec. 1914. Lieut. Calvert was killed
in action near Ypres, 15 Feb. 1915, during a heavy bombardment.
He came out of his dug-out to help a wounded man, and was killed
instantaneously by a shrapnel shell. A few days previously he had
assisted to bring in a wounded rifleman under difficult conditions,
owing to the mud and wet, and that it was a fairly bright night, with
Germans sniping. He was buried at Dickebusch; _unm._
[Illustration: =John Dutton Calvert.=]
=CAMBRIDGE, GEORGE WILLIAM=, Private, No. 6235, 3rd Battn.
Coldstream Guards, _s._ of William James Cambridge, of 2, Brocks
Cottages, Fairfield South, Kingston-on-Thames, by his wife, Martha
Ellen, dau. of George Greenfield; _b._ Wandsworth, S.W., 12 Sept.
1886; educ. Swathfield Road School there; enlisted 20 June, 1905; was
wounded at Landrecies, 25 Aug. 1914, during the retreat from Mons, and
invalided home on the 31st, but returned to France on 22 Oct.; was
again wounded in action at Bethune, and died in the 4th Field Ambulance
Dressing Station, 7 Feb. 1915. He was buried in Bethune Cemetery. He
_m._ at Kingston-on-Thames, 22 Nov. 1909, Kiziah (34, Fairfield
Place, Kingston-on-Thames), dau. of Richard George Goldsmith, and had a
dau., Emily Martha Ethel, _b._ 2 May, 1910, _d._ 7 Feb. 1915.
[Illustration: =George William Cambridge.=]
=CAMERON, ALLAN GEORGE=, Capt., 1st Battn. Queen’s Own Cameron
(79th) Highlanders, 3rd _s._ of the late Donald Cameron, of
Lochiel, Twenty-fourth Chief of Clan Cameron, by his wife, Lady
Margaret, 2nd dau. of Walter Francis Montagu-Douglas Scott, 5th Duke
of Buccleuch; _b._ Achnacarry, 27 July, 1880; educ. Eton and
Sandhurst; gazetted 2nd Lieut. to the 2nd Battn. Cameron Highlanders,
4 Oct. 1899, and promoted Lieut. 30 April, 1901, and Capt. 14 May,
1910; served with them at Gibraltar, Malta, Crete and in South Africa,
where he was for a time in the Mounted Infantry, and was Adjutant of
Lovat’s Scouts Dec. 1907–Feb. 1911, on vacating which appointment he
was posted to the 1st Battn. On the outbreak of war he accompanied his
battn. to France on 12 Aug. 1914, and was killed in action near the
Aisne, 25 Sept. 1914; buried at Bourg-et-Comin. Capt. E. J. Brodie
(Adjutant 1st Camerons) wrote of him: “We were sent to relieve the
Black Watch north of Verneiulle on the 24th. On the 25th we were again
heavily shelled. Capt. Miers was in command of the regt., and at 7
a.m. he got wounded in the right arm, and decided to go to Verneiulle
to get it dressed. He sent a message to Allan Cameron, who was next
senior, to that effect. Before he could get away heavy shell fire again
started, so he delayed going. Allan Cameron, however, came straight
to Headquarters. Just as Allan Cameron got to the trench--or rather
cave--a huge high explosive shell burst on the top and blew it in. The
cave contained headquarters, signallers, stretcher-bearers, etc. Death
to all must have been instantaneous. It took us three nights to get the
bodies out, 31 in all. We could only work in the dark, as the place
was shelled by day. We buried the officers and the Sergt.-Major at
Bourg. Capt. Miers, Allan Cameron, Meiklejohn, Napier Cameron and Dr.
Crockett were the officers killed.” In 1902 Capt. Cameron won the Royal
Humane Society’s certificate for saving a boy’s life at Oban by jumping
over the esplanade into the sea and bringing him out. At the Scottish
Command Rifle Meeting in 1913 he won the Officers’ Aggregate for the
highest number of points and was third in the individual aggregate of
all ranks. He _m._ at Inverness Cathedral, 6 Oct. 1908, Hester
Vere (Aldourie, Inverness), dau. of Col. Edward Grant Fraser-Tytler, of
Aldourie, D.L., and had one son, Angus Ewen, _b._ 20 Jan. 1914.
[Illustration: =Allan George Cameron.=]
=CAMERON, ARCHIE=, Private, No. 12693, A Coy., 5th Battn. Canadian
Expeditionary Force, _s._ of Angus Cameron, of Virden, Manitoba,
Canada, Farmer and Liveryman [_b._ St. Catherine’s, Ontario,
emigrated to Manitoba in 1880]; _b._ Virden, 22 Aug. 1884; educ.
Public School and Collegiate Institute there, and was for five years a
trooper in the 12th Manitoba Dragoons; volunteered on the outbreak of
war and enlisted 14 Oct. 1914; left with the 1st Canadian Contingent in
Oct.; went to France in Feb., and died 25 May, 1915, of wounds received
in action at Festubert, the previous day: _unm._ He was buried in
the New Cemetery, Choques, France [No. 75, Row B.]. Private Cameron
was a good sportsman, a typical Western pioneer, and an enthusiastic
soldier and sincere Imperialist.
=CAMERON, ARTHUR IAN DOUGLAS=, 2nd Lieut., 2nd Battn. Seaforth
Highlanders, 2nd _s._ of the Rev. Angus Cameron, of St. Andrew’s,
Tain, by his wife, Elizabeth Anna, dau. of the late Benjamin Liddall,
of Press Castle, co. Berwick; _b._ St. John’s Rectory, Arpafeelie,
Ross-shire, 28 Sept. 1893; educ. Trinity College, Glenalmond, Norwich,
and Hanover; joined the Special Reserve of the Seaforth Highlanders,
13 July, 1913. On the outbreak of war was attached to the 2nd Battn.,
and died 25 April, 1915, from wounds received while in action at St.
Julien; _unm._ Col. R. S. Vandaleur, writing to Mr. Cameron,
said: “I saw and spoke to him not long before he fell, and he was
then leading his men gallantly into the firing line. You will have
heard how our brigade was ordered to attack early in the morning of
25 April; not knowing the ground or the exact position of the enemy
we suffered terribly. We and the Warwicks, supported by the Argyll
and Sutherland Highlanders, were attacking on the left of the road
leading to St. Julien, when we came under the fire of machine guns in
a farm immediately in front of us. Your son’s company was in support,
and the last I saw of him was when he was leading his platoon up on
the right of that farm,” and Capt. the Hon. Eric Campbell wrote: “He
was a very gallant officer, whose loss will be felt very much by us
all. His company commander, Major Campion, told me before I left the
Battn., that he had done extremely well the day he met his death on
25 April. We were carrying out an attack on St. Julien, north-east of
Ypres, about dawn. We came upon the enemy in trenches and occupying
houses sooner than we expected; they inflicted heavy losses on us. Your
son, after behaving with the utmost bravery, was hit, I should think,
about 6 a.m., and died some hours later. We buried him and four other
officers near a farm on the road between Ypres and St. Julien.” Two of
his brothers are now (1916) on active service.
[Illustration: =Arthur Ian D. Cameron.=]
=CAMERON, DONALD EWAN=, of Montreal, Quebec, Canada, Lieut.,
Princess Patricia’s Canadian L.I., yst. _s._ of the late Archibald
Cameron, Manager of the Merchants’ Bank of Canada, Toronto, by his
wife, Agnes Margaret, dau. of Major James Barwick, 79th Cameron
Highlanders, and grandson of Lieut.-Col. Duncan Cameron, C.B., 79th
Cameron Highlanders (who fought at Waterloo); _b._ Toronto, 18
Dec. 1870; educ. Trinity College School, Port Hope, and the Montreal
High School, and on leaving school entered the service of the Canadian
Bank of Commerce. In 1902 he formed the Lilley and Cameron Cartage
Co., and later the Terminal Warehouse & Cartage Co. of Montreal. In
1912 he became associated with the Dominion Securities Corporation. He
served in the Canadian Militia for many years--first in the Victoria
Rifles of Canada, then in all the ranks up to that of Major in the
Duke of York’s Royal Canadian Hussars, and went on the Reserve of
Officers. He joined the Princess Patricia’s Canadian L.I. upon the
organisation of the regt. for service in Aug. 1914; sailed with the
Canadian Contingent in Oct.; was encamped on Salisbury Plain and at
Winchester, and left for France on 20 Dec. 1914. The regt. was sent
up to the trenches in the neighbourhood of Ypres, and was constantly
engaged. He fell in the counter-attack upon the Germans at St. Eloi, 15
March, 1915, and was buried in the Princess Patricia’s Canadian L.I.
cemetery at Voormezeele; _unm._ His brother, Col. Kenneth Cameron,
of Montreal, was the officer in charge of the Surgical Division of
No. 1 Canadian General Hospital at Netheravon on Salisbury Plain, and
Etaples, France, and later officer commanding No. 2 Canadian General
Hospital at Le Tréport, France.
[Illustration: =Donald Ewan Cameron.=]
=CAMERON, EVAN STUART=, Corpl., No. 25931 (Royal Montreal Regt.),
14th Battn. Canadian Expeditionary Force, eldest surviving _s._
of Sir Edward John Cameron, K.C.M.G., Governor and Commander-in-Chief
of Gambia, by his wife, Eva Selwyn, dau. of the late Robert Mackintosh
Isaacs, LL.D., of New South Wales; _b._ Turks Island, West Indies,
21 Sept. 1893; educ. Blundell’s School, Tiverton (1905–12), where he
was head for two years, and on leaving there in Sept. 1912, went to
Montreal to join the Royal Bank of Canada. He enlisted in the Canadian
Contingent on the outbreak of war, Aug. 1914, and was killed in action
near St. Julien, 24 April, 1915; unm. Major Beatty. A.D.C. to General
Alderson, Commanding 1st Canadian Contingent, wrote: “He was dearly
loved by all his comrades, and he had earned the respect and admiration
of all, and had behaved with the greatest gallantry all through that
dreadful time from 5 p.m. on Thursday, 22 April, up to the time of his
death.” His Capt. said: “He handled his men wonderfully, and would
have been given a commission had he survived the battle,” and the head
master of Blundells: “As I look back upon his school career I feel that
we have lost one of the most sterling of the old pupils whom I remember
in my long experience of 40 years.” He was a good cricketer, and was
capt. of the cricket eleven and football fifteen for two years at
Blundells and won the average bat four years in succession. He played
against the Australian XI in 1913 and made the first century of the
season for the McGill Cricket Club in July, 1914. He also played at
Lords in 1912 in a Public Schools XI.
[Illustration: =Evan Stuart Cameron.=]
=CAMERON, JOSEPH=, stoker, P.O., 292522, H.M.S. Hawke; lost when
that ship was torpedoed in the North Sea, 15 Oct. 1914.
=CAMERON, MORTON AUGUSTUS=, Private, No. 22557, 15th Battn. (48th
Highlanders of Canada), Canadian Expeditionary Force, only _s._
of Augustus Morton Cameron, of St. Stephen’s, New Brunswick, Canada,
Labourer, by his wife, Isabella Mary, dau. of Caleb Hennessey;
_b._ St. Stephen’s afsd. 27 Nov. 1896; educ. Mark Street
School there; volunteered on the outbreak of war and enlisted in
the 71st New Brunswick Regt. at St. Stephen’s, 8 Aug. 1914. After 3
weeks at Fredericton, N.B., he was sent to Valcartier, where he was
transferred to the 12th Battn., and left for England with the first
Canadian contingent. They landed at Plymouth on 14 Oct. and trained
on Salisbury Plain during the winter of 1914–15. On 23 April. 1915,
he was transferred to the 15th Battn., and went over to France with a
draft for that Battn. and joined it in the trenches at Ypres. He went
through the fighting at Ploegsteert Wood and Festubert, and was killed
in action at Messines, 10 Nov. 1915; _unm._ He was buried in the
Military Cemetery near Ration Hill. His captain wrote that he had been
sent out with a party to repair the front trench, and that a piece of
shell hit him on the head killing him almost instantaneously.
[Illustration: =Morton Augustus Cameron.=]
=CAMERON, PEDRO=, Corporal, No. 1685, 2nd Coy., 1/4th Battn.
Seaforth Highlanders (T.F.), eldest _s._ of George Cameron y
Mackenzie, of Street Delicias 213, Valparaiso, Chili, by his wife,
(--), dau. of (--) Zanartie; _b._ Tocopilla, Chili; educ.
Valparaiso Liceum; came home in 1907 to finish his education with his
uncle, afterwards serving his apprenticeship at Kirkintilloch, near
Glasgow. On the outbreak of war enlisted in the 4th Battn. Seaforth
Highlanders (T.F.), Nov. 1914, proceeded with his regt. to the Front,
and was killed in action in France, in an attack on Hill 60, 9 May,
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