The Roll of Honour, Volume 1 : A biographical record of all members of His…
1915. At the Battle of St. Julien the 10th Battn. was assigned the
943 words | Chapter 7
post of honour, and led the memorable charge on the night of 22–23
April, which is said by Sir John French “to have saved the situation.”
In the action Lieut. Ball was mortally wounded, and he died in No. 7
Stationary Hospital at Boulogne on the 29th of that month; _unm._
His body was taken back to Canada for burial.
[Illustration: =Albert Ransome Ball.=]
=BALL, JAMES=, Sergt., 11659 (Plym.), H.M.S. Hawke; lost in action
in the North Sea, 15 Oct. 1914; _m._
=BALL, SOLOMON=, Stoker, H.M.S. Good Hope; lost in the action off
Coronel, on the coast of Chili, 1 Nov. 1914.
=BALL, WILLIAM ORMSBY WYNDHAM=, M.B., Lieut., R.A.M.C., _s._
of the late Henry Wyndham Ball, of the Registry of Deeds Office,
Dublin; _b._ Dublin, 27 Sept. 1889; educ. St. Andrew’s College and
Dublin University; obtained his colours on the Hockey XI. two years
in succession, and represented Ireland in six international hockey
matches. Gazetted Lieut. R.A.M.C., 24 Jan. 1913, and on the outbreak
of war was attached to the 2nd Battn. S. Staffords, and proceeded to
the Front with them 13 Aug. He was killed by a shell at Sonpir on the
Aisne, 26 Sept. 1914, when attending the wounded there, being buried at
Sonpir Farm; _unm._
[Illustration: =William Ormsby Wyndham Ball.=]
=BALL, WILLIE=, A.B. (R.F.R., B. 10509), 226180, H.M.S. Hogue;
lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=BALLAM, GEORGE=, Stoker, 1st Class, K. 6060, H.M.S. Good Hope;
lost in the action off Coronel, on the coast of Chili, 1 Nov. 1914.
=BALLANTYNE, DANIEL=, Private, No. 4264, 2nd Battn. Royal Scots,
_s._ of the late Daniel Alexander Ballantyne, of 38, India Place,
Edinburgh, Watchmaker, by his wife, Jane, 3rd dau. of Angus Kennedy;
_b._ Stockbridge, Edinburgh, 18 March, 1878; educ. Hamilton Place
School, Edinburgh; enlisted in the Royal Scots, 1 Oct. 1896, and spent
six years in India and eight years in the Reserve. He joined the
National Reserve, and transferred about 1912 to the Kames Gunpowder
Works (Messrs. Curtis’s & Harvey, Ltd.), and raised branches of the
National Reserve in Kames, Tighnabruaich and Millhouse. On the outbreak
of war in Aug. 1914, he got up rifle competitions in aid of the local
Red Cross Society, and received the thanks of the Society for the sum
of money he thereby raised. He re-enlisted in his old regt. in Sept.,
and while at Glencorse did good recruiting work. He went to the Western
Front in Jan. 1915, and died 27 April of wounds received in action at
Hill 60, and was buried at La Clytte Reninghelst, Belgium. He had been
in the trenches on Thursday, the 26th, until midnight, when he left to
have a cup of tea, and while partaking of it a bullet entered his left
shoulder passing across the back and injuring his spine. He was taken
down to the hospital, but only lived a few hours. His letters from the
trenches were published in “The Buteman and West Coast Chronicle.” In
the last one written on the 21st, just five days before his death,
he said: “You were asking how we could be so cheery in the trenches.
Well, it’s like this. There is no use in being sad, and the cheerier
you are the better, for one never knows when it may be his turn to stop
laughing for a long, long time. We do not think on half the things
those at home bother about, and consider our duty our ordinary course
of work, as it certainly is; and there you are! Some may not come back,
but we get accustomed to that thought, and think nothing of it. It may
be our turn next, but we know that if it does come we have tried to the
best of our ability to do our duty to our people at home and King and
country.” Ballantyne _m._ at Edinburgh, 16 Oct. 1906, Mary Jane
(187, Gala Park Road, Galashiels), dau. of the late James Donaldson,
and had a son and five daus.: Daniel, _b._ 23 Oct. 1911; Jane
Kennedy, _b._ 29 March, 1908; Alice Weddell, _b._ 24 April,
1909; Mary Alexandrina, _b._ 17 July, 1910; and Margaret Inglis,
_b._ 19 Jan. 1913.
[Illustration: =Daniel Ballantyne.=]
=BALLANTYNE, THOMAS=, Private, No. 7114, 1st Battn. Northumberland
Fusiliers, _s._ of Thomas Ballantyne; _b._ Dunston-on-Tyne,
28 Feb. 1886; educ. St. Dominic’s Schools, Newcastle-on-Tyne; joined
the 5th Battn. Northumberland Fusiliers, 22 June, 1905, and re-enlisted
2 Aug. 1908. On the outbreak of war he was drafted to the 1st Battn. at
the Front, and was killed in action at Neuve Chapelle, 1 March, 1915.
He _m._ at Newcastle-on-Tyne, 6 June, 1906, Margaret Nathans (44,
Byron Terrace, Shieldfield, Newcastle), dau. of C. H. Dagg, and had
issue two sons and two daus.: Thomas Hubert, _b._ 28 Jan. 1907;
Edward, _b._ 3 Nov. 1912; Sarah Elizabeth, _b._ 16 Aug. 1910;
and Margaret Alina, _b._ 12 Dec. 1914. Private Ballantyne held
several certificates for service.
[Illustration: =Thomas Ballantyne.=]
=BALLARD, CHARLES FREDERICK=, Commander, R.N., yr. _s._ of
the late Lieut.-Col. John Fane Ballard, Duke of Cornwall’s L.I., by his
wife, Mary (The Grove, Kingston Blount, Oxford), dau. of Arthur Henry
Clerke Brown, of Kingston Blount, Oxford; _b._ Rock, Washington,
co. Sussex, 23 March, 1879; educ. Herbert Bull’s, Westgate-on-Sea,
and Littlejohn’s, Blackheath. Joined the Britannia in 1892, passing
in eighth; became Midshipman, Jan. 1895; Sub-Lieut., July, 1898;
Lieut., Nov. 1900, and Commander, June, 1913. Served in China, 1900, as
Sub-Lieut. on the Aurora, and was present at the taking of Tientsin,
being mentioned in Despatches and specially promoted. He was appointed
to the Formidable in Aug. 1913, and was lost in that vessel 1 Jan.
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