The Roll of Honour, Volume 1 : A biographical record of all members of His…
1914. He went to France and subsequently to Belgium, and was in the
1394 words | Chapter 44
retreat from Antwerp in Oct. 1914, his motor car being the last British
car but one to leave that city. On the return of the Naval Brigade
he was stationed at the Crystal Palace training the Naval Reserves,
and while on Active Service there in Feb. 1915, contracted epidemic
cerebro-spinal meningitis, from which he died at The Little Manor,
Hertingfordbury, 2 Sept. following. He _m._ at St. James’, Spanish
Place, W., 28 April, 1908, Ione (Penarwel, Llanbedrog, Pwllheli, North
Wales), dau. of Major Oscar William de Satgé de Thoren, 45th and 38th
Regt., and granddau. of Oscar Joseph de Satgé, 13th Baron de Thoren,
of the Château de Thoren, Pyr. Or., France, and had three children:
Ralph Dominic de Satgé, _b._ 18 Feb. 1909; Aymar Sinclair Joseph
de Satgé, _b._ 6 July, 1912; and Eveline Mary Alice de Satgé,
_b._ 26 May, and died 10 June, 1910.
[Illustration: =Gerald Edward C. Clayton.=]
=CLAYTON, ROBERT WILLIAM=, Private, R.M.L.I., Ch./13470, H.M.S.
Pathfinder; lost when that ship was sunk by a mine, about 20 miles off
the East Coast, 5 Sept. 1914.
=CLAYTON, THOMAS=, Stoker, 1st Class (R.F.R., B. 4542), S.S.
103649, I.C. 127, H.M.S. Good Hope; lost in action off Coronel, on the
coast of Chili, 1 Nov. 1914.
=CLEAVER, SIDNEY=, Private, No. 7722, 1st Battn. Gloucester Regt.,
_s._ of Samuel Cleaver, by his wife, Mary; _b._ Bristol, 1884
or 1886; educ. Northgate Wesleyan School, Gloucester; enlisted 23 Aug.
1904; served for three years with the Colours, then passed into the
Reserve; was employed prior to the outbreak of the war in the Celynen
Colliery; mobilised 5 Aug. 1914; went to France, 12 Aug. and was killed
in action at the Battle of the Aisne, 26 Sept. 1914. He _m._ at
Gloucester, 30 Nov. 1909, Francis Sarah Ann (33, Swan Road, Kingsholme,
Gloucester), dau. of Emanuel Charles Symonds, and had three daus.:
Gwendoline Frances, _b._ 28 Dec. 1909; Mary Elizabeth, _b._
13 Sept. 1911; and Iris May, _b._ 14 April, 1914. His Capt.
wrote: “He was a plucky young soldier, always ready for anything--a
man I could thoroughly trust. Only ten minutes before his death he had
volunteered to go out with his platoon commander to reconnoitre some
of the enemy trenches, a task requiring pluck, which was carried quite
satisfactorily.”
=CLELAND, MATTHEW=, Stoker, 1st Class (R.F.R., B. 8945), S.S.
105660, H.M.S Aboukir; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=CLEMENS, ARCHIBALD=, A.B. (R.F.R., B. 10709), 208488, H.M.S.
Hogue; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=CLEMENTS, BERT RICHARD=, L.-Corpl., No. 14488, 2nd Battn.
Grenadier Guards, only surviving _s._ of William Clements, late
of the King’s Royal Rifles (who served in the Afghan campaign and died
31 May, 1908), by his wife, Elizabeth (30, Brook Street, Barry Dock,
Cardiff), dau. of William Western; _b._ Barry Dock, near Cardiff,
20 April, 1892; educ. Council Schools, Barry Dock; was for two years a
telegraph boy at the Barry Dock Post Office; enlisted in the R.G.A.,
but being an only son was claimed out by his mother; then enlisted
in the Grenadier Guards at Cardiff Barracks, 2 Jan. 1909; saw three
years’ service with the Colours, and afterwards joined the Cardiff
City Police Force. On the outbreak of war he was called up, 5 Aug.
1914, went through the retreat from Mons and the Battle of the Aisne,
and was killed in action at Ypres by shrapnel, 7 Nov. 1914; buried at
Zillebeke, near Ypres; _unm._
[Illustration: =Bert Richard Clements.=]
=CLEMENTS, BERTRAM SARGENT=, Leading Seaman, 168315, H.M.S. Hogue;
lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=CLEMENTS, JACK=, Private, R.M.L.I., Ch./12014, H.M.S. Hawke; lost
when that ship was torpedoed in the North Sea, 15 Oct. 1914.
=CLEMENTS, THOMAS HAROLD=, Trooper, No. 2803, 2nd Life Guards,
_s._ of the late Robert Henry Clements, by his wife, Harriett (St.
Mary’s Street, Monmouth), dau. of Richard Smith; _b._ Monmouth,
17 Oct. 1892; educ. Grammar School there (1907–1911), winning several
scholarships. He joined the Army, 17 Oct. 1911, and went to the Front,
15 Aug. 1914. On the night of 12 May, 1915, he was in the trenches
at Potijze, and was under very heavy shell fire for three hours. The
trenches were blown in, and while returning to the support trenches,
he was struck by shrapnel and killed instantly. He was buried at
Potijze, 1 mile north-east of Ypres; _unm._ Trooper Clements was
an excellent athlete, and one of the finest forwards of the school
Rugby football team, his work in the open and at the line-outs being
particularly good, besides being a fearless tackler. He also played
several times for the Monmouth Rugby Club. While at the school he
secured prizes at the sports, and in last year won the mile in 5 mins.
28 secs., and secured second place in the open hurdles. In 1910 he
rowed in the school crew and also was a member of the crew in 1911
which defeated Hereford Cathedral School at Hereford by three lengths,
this being the first victory for the Monmouth crew for some years. The
triumphant crew led from the start. When Trooper Clements joined the
Guards he interested himself in the regimental athletics and was a
member of their team which was defeated in the final Army Cup, 1912–13
season. He was for many years a member of the parish church choir and
also a server.
[Illustration: =Thomas Harold Clements.=]
=CLEMSON, GEORGE ERNEST=, 1st Class Stoker, R.F.R.B., 8133,
Ch/S.S. 103962, 4th _s._ of the late Thomas Thornhill Clemson,
Cowman, by his wife, Ellen Matilda (Syneham, near Chipping Norton,
Oxford) (College Farm, Milton-under-Wychwood, Oxon), dau. of
Charles Stone; _b._ Idbury, 26 Aug. 1883; educ. Chilson, near
Charlbury; joined the Navy, and at the time of the outbreak of war
was a Reservist. He was lost in the North Sea when H.M.S. Cressy was
torpedoed, 22 Sept. 1914; _unm._
[Illustration: =George Ernest Clemson.=]
=CLERK, SMOLLETT DAVID MACGREGOR=, Private, No. 1388, B Coy.,
1/4th Battn. (Queen’s Edinburgh Rifles) Royal Scots, (T.F.), elder
_s._ of Claude Louis Clerk, employed in the Eastern Extension
Telegraph Co., Singapore, by his wife, Lily (158, Braid Road,
Edinburgh), dau. of the late David Aitken, of Gourock, Scotland,
Advocate, Solicitor and Notary Public, Straits Settlements; _b._
Singapore, 25 April, 1895; educ. George Watson’s College, Edinburgh,
and in 1911 entered the National Bank of Scotland. On the outbreak of
war, he enlisted in the Queen’s Edinburgh Rifles, Royal Scots, left
with the 1/4th Battn. for the Dardanelles, and was killed in action at
Gallipoli, 28 June, 1915; _unm._
[Illustration: =Smollett D. M. Clerk.=]
=CLERY, CARLETON LUMLEY ST. CLAIR=, 2nd Lieut., Indian Army,
attached 4th Battn. King’s Liverpool Regt., elder _s._ of Col.
Carleton Buckley Laming Clery, 104th Wellesley’s Rifles, Indian Army,
C.B., by his wife, Jessie Violet, dau. of C. P. Fielon, and nephew of
Lumley Clery, of Riverdene, Broxbourne; _b._ Burmah, 5 Dec. 1895;
educ. Malvern College, and the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, when
he passed into the Indian Army. On the outbreak of war he was attached
to the 4th Battn. of the Liverpool Regt., 15 Aug. 1914; went to the
Front, 5 March, 1915, and had only been there a week when he was killed
in action, being struck by a shell at Richebourg St. Vaast, Flanders,
12 March, 1915; _unm._
[Illustration: =Carleton L. St. C. Clery.=]
=CLEVERLEY, ALBERT ERNEST=, Stoker, 1st Class, K. 15596, H.M.S.
Good Hope; lost in the action off Coronel, on the coast of Chili, 1
Nov. 1914.
=CLIFF, ARTHUR JAMES=, Carpenter’s Crew, M. 4114, H.M.S. Good
Hope; lost in the action off Coronel, on the coast of Chili, 1 Nov.
1914.
=CLIFF, HERBERT THEODORE=, Major, 3rd Battn. West Yorkshire Regt.,
yst. _s._ of William Dewhirst Cliff, of Meanwood Towers, Leeds,
by his wife, Elizabeth, dau. of James Wade; _b._ Highfield House,
Wortley, Leeds; educ. Cothill (Abingdon) and Repton College; joined the
Militia in 1901, and was promoted Capt. Aug. 1901; when the Militia
was disbanded he joined the Special Reserve of Officers, receiving
his majority 19 May, 1913. He served in the South African war, and
was specially selected for accelerated promotion, and remained as
Musketry Inspector till the post was done away with; and also in the
Mediterranean, receiving a medal. On the outbreak of the European war
he rejoined, and left with his regt. for the Front at the end of Sept.
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