The Roll of Honour, Volume 1 : A biographical record of all members of His…
1914. He _m._ at Shorncliffe, 1904, Louisa, dau. of Henry Kent;
4759 words | Chapter 78
_s.p._ His brother, Private William Fortes, No. 7651, was with him
in this engagement and is still (1916) on active service.
=FORTUNE, JAMES=, Private, No. 6844, 3rd Battn. Coldstream
Guards, 4th _s._ of the late Henry Fortune, of Foxham, co. Wilts,
Platelayer on the Great Western Railway, by his wife, Hannah (Little
Alne, Wooten Wowen, Birmingham), dau. of the late George Lovelock;
_b._ Foxham, 5 Dec. 1887; educ. there; enlisted July, 1906, and
served seven years with the colours, including two in Egypt, when
he passed into the Reserve and obtained employment at Farnborough.
On mobilisation he rejoined, went to the Front 12 Aug. 1914, served
through the retreat from Mons and the subsequent engagements, on the
Aisne and the Marne, and was killed instantaneously at Rentel, by a
bullet while on sentry duty 27 Oct. 1914; _unm._ While living at
Farnborough he was connected with the Gospel Mission and was an earnest
worker and devoted Sunday School teacher.
[Illustration: =James Fortune.=]
=FOSTER, ARCHIBALD COURTENAY HAYES=, Lieut., Hampshire Regt.,
attd. 4th King’s African Rifles, 4th _s._ of the late Montagu H.
Foster, of Stubbington House, Fareham, co. Hants, by his wife, Mary
Henrietta Foster (The Lodge, Stubbington, Fareham), dau. of the Rev.
Richard Foster Carter; _b._ Stubbington House afsd., 19 May, 1886;
educ. Stubbington House and Cheltenham; gazetted 2nd Lieut. Hampshire
Regt. 24 Jan. 1906; promoted Lieut. 19 Oct. 1907, and seconded for
service with the King’s West African Rifles, 8 Oct. 1913; took part
in the Jubaland campaign, 1914, and was killed in action at Marabu,
British East Africa, 19 Sept. 1914; _unm._ It appears from the
official report of this action that on the night of 6 Sept. orders were
given for Lieut. Foster and A Coy. King’s African Rifles to start at
dawn and regain touch with the enemy, Lieuts. Phillips and Hardingham,
with 80 King’s African Rifles, to support him. No sign of the enemy was
seen on the 7th or 8th. On the 19th the three section A Coy. 4th King’s
African Rifles (Lieut. Foster, King’s African Rifles), with one maxim,
one section Somali Mounted Infantry (Capt. Isaacson, East African
Rifles, and Lieut. Miles, East African Mounted Rifles), “were occupying
Campa Ya Marabu. The Somalis and mules were occupying a thorn boma
‘A.’ and the King’s African Rifles a similar boma ‘B.’ It was arranged
between Capt. Isaacson and Lieut. Foster that, in case of attack, the
mules were to be taken out of the boma ‘A’ and crossed over to the
north bank of River Mol Turesh at point ‘D’ through bushes at point
‘E.’ A picquet, composed of Somalis, was posted at point ‘G.’ At 5.30
a.m. the enemy advancing up the river came into touch with the picquet
at ‘G.’ Capt. Isaacson immediately ordered the mules across the river
and then proceeded towards the picquet, shortly afterwards meeting a
wounded Somali retiring on the boma, who reported the enemy to be in
strength. The enemy, estimated at three or four white officers and
rank and file, had now opened out on either side of the track at point
‘G’ and kept up a heavy fire; seven of the mules were hit in crossing
the river. Lieut. Foster, on being informed that the enemy’s strength
was only about 100, ordered his company to advance to bushes ‘E’--one
section King’s African Rifles, one section Somalis, two sections King’s
African Rifles on the right, with Capt. Isaacson and Lieut. Miles.
The enemy kept up a very heavy fire to our front and left. As our men
reached point ‘E’ Lieut. Foster was hit, but continued to urge on his
men in a very gallant manner.... The whole action lasted about two
hours, and from reports received later from the Masai the enemy appear
to have retired in disorder.... This little action was fought with
spirit and determination. Lieut. Foster died a gallant death, and the
British officers and rank and file of the Somali section and A Coy. 4th
King’s African Rifles gave him courageous support.”
[Illustration: =Archibald C. H. Foster.=]
=FOSTER, ARTHUR CEDRIC=, 2nd Lieut., 1st Battn. Grenadier Guards,
yr. _s._ of Capt. Arthur Wellesley Foster, of Brockhampton
Court, co. Hereford, M.A., J.P., D.L., T.D., late Master of the
South Herefordshire Foxhounds (now serving as Brigade Instructor
of Musketry, attd. to the Staffordshire Infantry Brigade), by his
wife, Alice Madeline, dau. of the late Eben Dyer Jordan, of Boston,
U.S.A.; _b._ Caton Green, co. Lancaster, 26 April, 1891; educ.
at Remenham, Eton, and Exeter College, Oxford; entered the Diplomatic
Service in Feb. 1914, and was for some time Hon. Attaché to the British
Legation at Stockholm. When the European War broke out he was home on
leave, and obtaining his release from the Foreign Office, volunteered
and joined the Public Schools Battn., 18 Sept. 1914, from which he
was gazetted 2nd Lieut. to the Grenadier Guards, 24 Oct. following.
He went to France, 12 Jan. 1915; was wounded in action at Neuve
Chapelle, 11 March, 1915, and died in Merville Hospital the following
day; _unm._ He was buried in Merville Churchyard. He was a good
all-round athlete, and at Eton won both the Junior and Senior Long
Jump, the latter in 1909, when he created a record of 20 ft. 1 in.
He also played frequently for the Hereford County Cricket Club. His
brother, Lieut. Cuthbert Foster, R.M.A., is (1916) on active service.
[Illustration: =Arthur Cedric Foster.=]
=FOSTER, DAVID=, Stoker, 1st Class (R.F.R., Ch. B. 9343), S.S.
106620, H.M.S. Cressy; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=FOSTER, FREDERICK=, Petty Officer, 1st Class, R.N.V.R. (Sussex),
298, H.M.S. Hawke, _s._ of John Foster, of 4, Nelson Road,
Hastings; lost when that ship was torpedoed in the North Sea, 15 Oct.
1914.
=FOSTER, HERBERT KNOLLYS=, 2nd Lieut., 1st Battn. Gloucester
Regt., only _s._ of the Rev. Herbert Charles Foster, T.D., Vicar
of Groombridge, co. Sussex, and Hon. Canon of Gloucester Cathedral,
by his wife, Susan Edith, dau. of Rev. Prebendary Robert Shuttleworth
Sutton, of Winkenhurst, Hellingly, formerly Rector of Rye, Sussex;
_b._ All Saints’ Vicarage, Gloucester, 18 Oct. 1895; educ.
Glyngarth Preparatory School, Cheltenham, Marlborough College, and
Sandhurst; obtained his commission in the 1st Battn. Gloucester Regt. 8
Aug. 1914; went to France, 20 Sept. 1914, and was killed in action at
Gheluvelt, near Ypres, Flanders, 29 Oct. 1914; _unm._
[Illustration: =Herbert Knollys Foster.=]
=FOSTER, JOHN=, Stoker, 1st Class (R.F.R., B. 8497), S.S. 104740,
H.M.S. Aboukir; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=FOSTER, JOHN THOMAS=, L.-Corpl., No. 12374, 10th (Service) Battn.
Durham Light Infantry, eldest _s._ of Robert Foster, of 28, Wear
Street, Southwick-on-Wear, Shipwright, by his wife, Dorothy Ann, dau.
of John Rames; _b._ Southwick, co. Durham, 15 July, 1886; educ.
National School there; was employed in a shipyard at Sunderland;
enlisted 10 Aug. 1914; trained in Surrey, went to the Front in May and
was killed in action in France, 31 July, 1915, and buried at Sanctuary
Wood, near the dressing station; _unm._
[Illustration: =John Thomas Foster.=]
=FOSTER, LAURENCE TALBOT LISLE=, Lieut., 16th (Service) Battn.
Durham Light Infantry, 4th _s._ of the Rev. Albert John Foster,
Vicar of Wootton and Rural Dean of Haynes, by his wife, Edith
Margaret, dau. of the Rev. T. A. Voules, Rector of Beercrocombe,
Somerset: _b._ Wootton Vicarage, co. Bedford, 15 Feb. 1885; educ.
Eastbourne College (Scholar); was a Forest Manager in the Bombay and
Burma Trading Corporation; gazetted Lieut. 16th Durham L.I., 21 Nov.
1914; left England for the Dardanelles, 12 May, 1915, was attd. to the
5th Manchesters, and was killed in action at Anafarta 7 Aug. 1915;
_unm._ His Colonel wrote: “As an officer he was splendid, always
steadily doing his duty and quite fearless. He led his men with the
utmost bravery, and was killed, as he would have liked to have been, at
the head of his men, and without suffering. He is a great loss to the
Battn. and you have every right to be proud of him, as we are.”
[Illustration: =Laurence T. L. Foster.=]
=FOSTER, ROBERT=, Private, No. 8/137, Otago Infantry Battn. New
Zealand Expeditionary Force, yst. _s._ of the late Edward Foster,
of Lowburn Ferry, by his wife, Christine (Lowburn Ferry, via Cromwell,
Central Otago, New Zealand), dau. of George Dalziell, of Shetland;
_b._ Lowburn aforesaid, 10 Aug. 1894; educ. Lowburn Public School,
and was engaged in farming. He volunteered for Imperial service six
days after the declaration of war, joined the Otago Infantry Battn.,
11 Aug. 1914, and left New Zealand with the main body. He took part
in the landing at the Dardanelles on 25 April, and remained in the
trenches until 4 Aug. 1915, on which day he was killed in action. His
second brother, William, died on active service (see following notice),
and his eldest and now only surviving brother is now (1916) on active
service with the New Zealand Expeditionary Force.
[Illustration: =Robert Foster.=]
=FOSTER, WILLIAM=, Trooper, No. 9/698, Otago Mounted Rifles, New
Zealand Expeditionary Force, 2nd _s._ of the late Edward Foster,
of Lowburn Ferry, by his wife, Christina (Lowburn Ferry, via Cromwell,
Central Otago, New Zealand), dau. of George Dalziell, of Shetland (see
preceding notice); _b._ Dunedin, 25 May, 1888; educ. Lowburn
Public School; volunteered for Imperial service after the outbreak
of war, and joined the Otago Mounted Rifles, 10 Oct. 1914; left New
Zealand with the second reinforcements and landed at Anzac on his 27th
birthday. He served in the trenches for three months, when he was
removed to Malta suffering from pneumonia, and afterwards contracted
enteric fever and died at St. Andrew’s Hospital there, after four
months’ illness, 16 Nov. 1915; _unm._ He was well known as a
footballer, and before the declaration of war was for some years one
of the representatives for Vincent County in the interprovincial Rugby
matches.
[Illustration: =William Foster.=]
=FOTHERINGHAM, ALEXANDER BOYNE=, Leading Seaman, No. 2/2693, Anson
Battn. R.N., yr. _s._ of John Fotheringham, of 34, Dudley Avenue,
Leith, Baker, by his wife, Mary Ann, dau. of Alexander Boyne; _b._
Leith, 26 April, 1894; educ. Bonnington Academy, Leith, and George
Heriot’s School, Edinburgh; and was employed as goods clerk in the
Leith Walk branch of the Caledonian Railway until the outbreak of war.
He had joined the R.N.V.R. in July, 1913, and after the outbreak of war
was called up and attached to the Anson Battn. Royal Naval Division;
served at Antwerp Sept. 1914, and afterwards at the Dardanelles, took
part in the landing at Cape Helles, 26 April, and was killed in action
there, 6 May, following; _unm._
[Illustration: =A. B. Fotheringham.=]
=FOUCAR, CLEMENT AUGUSTE=, Rifleman No. 1931, 9th Battn. (Queen
Victoria Rifles) The London Regt. (T.F), 4th _s._ of the late
Ferdinand Louis Foucar, of Rangoon and Moulmein, Burma, Teak Merchant
[of a Huguenot family, who came from Proisy in Picardy, after the
Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, 1685], by his wife, Martha, dau.
of the late (--) Grasemann; _b._ Rangoon, 11 Sept. 1892; educ.
privately and at Doncaster Grammar School, etc.; joined the Queen
Victoria Rifles after the declaration of war, in Aug. 1914, and was
killed in action on Hill 60, near Ypres, 21 April, 1915; _unm._
[Illustration: =Clement Auguste Foucar.=]
=FOULKES, HERBERT=, Stoker, P.O. (R.F.R., Ch. B. 10294), 299552,
H.M.S. Cressy; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=FOUND, JOHN=, Mechanician, Po./279973 H.M.S. Good Hope; lost in
action off Coronel on the coast of Chili, 1 Nov. 1914.
=FOURNIER, EMILE=, Private, No. 26321, 14th Battn. (65th Regt.),
3rd Brigade, Canadian Expeditionary Force, _s._ of Adelard
Fournier, of Hull, P.Q., Canada; _b._ Hull, aforesaid, 1 Feb.
1896; educ. Hull Brothers’ College, and with the Capucin Fathers at
Ottawa; enlisted early in Aug. 1914, immediately after the declaration
of war; left Canada with the first contingent in Oct.; went to France
in Feb., and died in hospital at Rouen, 10 May, 1915, of wounds in
the right leg received in action at Langemarck, 27 April; _unm._
His commanding officer, Capt. D. E. Serres, wrote that “he was one of
his best men,” adding, “I praise you to have in your family such a
courageous and brave child.”
=FOWLER, CHRISTOPHER RICHARD=, Private, No. 1465, 1st Battn.
H.A.C., 2nd _s._ of Arthur Christopher Fowler, of 12, Grange
Park, Ealing, W., Printer and Bookbinder, by his wife Laura Jennie,
dau. of Richard Clarke Pauling, C.E.; _b._ London, 27 Feb. 1893;
educ. Xavierian College, Mayfield, Sussex, and St. Edmund’s College,
Old Hall, Ware, co. Herts; was apprenticed to his father as a Printer
and Bookbinder through the Stationers’ Company; on the outbreak of
war enlisted in the H.A.C.; served in France and Flanders, and was
killed in action in Flanders, 13 March, 1915; buried at Lochre, nine
miles from Ypres; _unm._ His Capt., Ernest Boyle, wrote: “An
attack was made upon the German position, and our company held a
trench immediately in front. We were subject to very heavy firing
from German machine guns and your son was unhappily hit in the head.
He was unconscious from the first and cannot have even been aware
that he was hit, so he suffered no pain at all. He survived his wound
some hours. As he still lived, as soon as it was dark he was taken
away to the hospital, where he died, so I do not know whether he ever
recovered consciousness, but I do not think he did. Two others of his
company gave their lives for their country the same day ... Personally
I had not known your son very long, as I have only recently joined his
company, but I soon came to know him and greatly admired him. He was
the heart and soul of the football teams, and I had a long talk with
him on the morning of his death about future matches. He was so keen
in all he did, so determined, so plucky and so willing, showing all
those characteristics which endear a man at the front to his comrades
and to his officers”; a Sergt., Geoffrey Ernst: “At the time we were
supporting an attack by keeping up a heavy rifle fire on the German
trenches, and unfortunately they turned a machine gun on us, which, I
am afraid, was the cause of all our trouble. At the time, too, he was
blazing away with his rifle most cheerily.” Private Brown also wrote
to his own father: “During the last time up I have lost my great pal,
Dicky Fowler.... We have had a very hot time, and this last time up we
had twelve good days of it. Dick was hit on the Friday (12th inst.) in
the afternoon and died early on Saturday morning. Glad to say the old
boy lived long enough to be brought back to this village, as now he is
buried in the churchyard. He was a grand fellow and such a ‘White man.’
We were always together, whether in the firing line or back here;
naturally I feel his loss, but it must be cruel for his people and his
girl. He hadn’t missed a single trench, and both he and I were proud of
our record, but he could not have died a finer death, as his shoulder
was hard against the parapet. This was how it happened. We were
assisting in a charge by some well-known regulars (great pals of ours)
by firing straight in front of us to keep the Huns opposite down below
their parapet, and avoid them firing on our chaps, who were making the
charge on our right. We were to fire straight and then sweep along to
the left as our boys came along, but the blighters swept a machine gun
along the top of our parapet and poor Dick got one right through the
head. When I got to him he was unconscious and he never regained his
senses. Of course I was with him until night, and then he was carried
back on the stretcher. The bullet went right through his head and it
was a marvel he lived so long, but he was a fine healthy chap and any
amount of natural pluck.” Private Fowler was a keen sportsman and
played cricket and football for the Neasden Sports Clubs.
[Illustration: =Christopher R. Fowler.=]
=FOWLER, GEORGE=, Transport Sergt., No. 128, 1/5th Battn. The
Royal Scots (T.F.), 2nd _s._ of Colour-Sergt. George Fowler,
of 55, Lochend Road West, Edinburgh (who served with the 5th Royal
Scots for 35 years), by his wife, Elizabeth, dau. of Malcolm Kirk,
of Musselburgh, Painter; _b._ Edinburgh, 25 Aug. 1887; educ.
Regent Street Public School there; was a Clerk in Midlothian County
Council; joined the 5th Royal Scots, then the Queen’s Edinburgh Rifle
Volunteers, 16 Feb. 1905; volunteered for active service on the
outbreak of war in Aug. 1914, left England for the Dardanelles on 21
March, 1915, and was shot by a sniper on 21 May, 1915, and died there
the next day; _unm._ Buried at B. Line, W. Beach. Sergt. Fowler
was the Battn. representative at the King’s Coronation in London, and
was secretary of the Sports Committee (1912–13), the two years that the
Battn. sports were held.
[Illustration: =George Fowler.=]
=FOWLER, THEODORE HUMPHREY=, Corpl., No. 2446, Honourable
Artillery Coy., _s._ of Oliver Humphrey Fowler, of Cirencester,
M.D.; _b._ Cirencester, co. Gloucester, 25 Sept. 1879; educ.
Lancing College; volunteered after the outbreak of war and enlisted
in the Honourable Artillery Coy., 3 Oct. 1914; served with the
Expeditionary Force in France, etc.; was wounded at Kemmel, and died in
the County of London War Hospital, Epsom, 17 Aug. 1915; _unm._ His
brother, Capt. R. C. Fowler, Northants Regt., is now (1916) on active
service.
=FOWLER, WILLIAM=, Stoker, R.N.R., T. 2294, H.M.S. Hawke; lost
when that ship was torpedoed in the North Sea, 15 Oct. 1914; _m._
=FOWLER WILLIAM HENRY=, Private, No. 21600, 7th Battn. Canadian
Expeditionary Force, 2nd _s._ of John Busteed Fowler, of 8,
Sidneyville, Bellevue Park, Cork, Member of Cork Stock Exchange, and
Insurance Agent, by his wife, Annie Louisa, dau. of William Henry
Hill, B.E.; _b._ Summount, Cork, 7 Aug. 1893; educ. Cork Grammar
School and University College Cork; went to Canada in Feb. 1912, and
settled at Calgary, Alberta; was an official of the Bank of Commerce,
volunteered on the outbreak of War, and enlisted, 11 Aug. 1914; left
with the 1st Contingent in Oct. 1914; trained on Salisbury Plain during
the winter of 1914–15; went to France, March, 1915, and was killed in
action near Ypres, 27 April, 1915; _unm._ A comrade wrote: “I was
right there when it happened, and we buried him. We had not time to do
very much, for the bullets were flying all round us, but we wrapped him
in his blanket, and we put a cross up.” His two brothers both enlisted
when war was declared and served with the Canadian Expeditionary
Force in France. Private Richard T. Fowler, Princess Patricia’s Light
Infantry, was invalided home in Nov. 1915, and Private John G. Fowler,
5th Battn., was wounded at Festubert in May, 1915. Another brother,
Frank R. Fowler, is now temporary 2nd Lieut. 3rd Leinsters.
[Illustration: =William Henry Fowler.=]
=FOWLING, BERTIE EVELYN=, Shipwright, 1st Class, 342885, H.M.S.
Good Hope; lost in action off Coronel, on the coast of Chili, 1 Nov.
1914.
=FOWLOW, RICHARD=, Corpl., No. 886, D Coy., 1st Newfoundland
Regt., eldest _s._ of Thomas Jenkins Fowlow, of Trinity East,
Newfoundland, Owner and Master of 50-ton Fishing Schooner, by his wife,
Elizabeth, dau. of John P. Fowlow; _b._ Trinity East aforesaid, 18
Jan. 1893; educ. High School there; was a Clerk in a Dry Goods Store;
joined H Coy. of the Trinity East Church Lads Brigade, 4 Oct. 1912,
was appointed L.-Corpl. the same year and promoted Corpl. in 1913;
volunteered for foreign service after the outbreak of war, and joined
the Newfoundland Expeditionary Force, Jan. 1915; left for England with
the second contingent, 20 March, 1915; went to the Dardanelles, and
died at Malta, 23 Nov. 1915, of typhoid contracted while on active
service there; _unm._ Buried in Pieta, Malta (Row 8A, No. 6).
[Illustration: =Richard Fowlow.=]
=FOX, HARRY=, Stoker, P.O., 301863, H.M.S. Cressy; lost in action
in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=FOX, HARRY EDWIN=, Leading Telegraphist, J. 6260, H.M.S. Cressy;
lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1913.
=FOX, JOHN=, Private, No. 12768, 4th (Service) Battn. South Wales
Borderers, yst. _s._ of the late Arthur Fox, of Bradford, Yorks,
Police Constable, by his wife, Ada S. (27, Layard Street, Splott,
Cardiff), dau. of Maurice Devine, Army Pensioner; _b._ Bradford,
5 Aug. 1897; was employed as a boy at the Cardiff Cinema Theatre,
which he left in May with an excellent character; enlisted Aug. 1914;
served with the Mediterranean Expeditionary Force at the Dardanelles,
from 4 July to 12 Aug. 1915, on which date he was killed in action
there; _unm._ His brother, Private M. A. Fox, was killed in action
in France (see following notice), and the only surviving brother,
L.-Corpl. William Kenneth Fox, is serving with the A.S.C.
=FOX, MAURICE ARTHUR=, Private, No. 4634, 1st Battn. Royal
Welsh Fusiliers, _s._ of Arthur Fox, of Bradford, Yorks, Police
constable (see preceding notice), _b._ Bradford, 6 Jan. 18..;
served three years with the Colours and then joined the Reserve;
mobilised 5 Aug. 1914; went to France, 4 Oct. 1914, and was killed in
action on the 20th of that month; _unm._
=FOX, WALTER HENRY=, Lieut., 4th Battn. South Staffordshire Regt.,
attd. 2nd Battn. Bedfordshire Regt., elder _s._ of George Martin
Fox, of Walsall, M.D., by his wife, Emily, dau. of Henry Vaughan, J.P.;
_b._ Walsall, co. Stafford, 30 Nov 1895; educ. St. Ninian’s,
Moffat, and Bromsgrave School, where he was in the O.T.C., and in
the Cricket XI and Football XV; gazetted 2nd Lieut. to the South
Staffordshires, 15 Aug. 1914, and promoted Lieut. ... April, 1915; went
to France, 29 May, and there was attached to the 2nd Bedfords, and was
killed in action at Givenchy, 16 June, 1915; _unm._ His Capt.
wrote: “I feel that in losing him, I lose a very good subaltern and a
very good and cheery comrade.” He was an enthusiastic golfer, and won
numerous prizes.
[Illustration: =Walter Henry Fox.=]
=FOX, WILFRID ARMSTRONG=, 2nd Lieut., 1/4th Battn. Lincolnshire
Regt. (T.F.), 2nd _s._ of the late George Fox, of Horncastle, by
his wife, Mary H., dau. of Henry Nicholson; _b._ Horncastle, co.
Lincoln, 12 Oct. 1892; educ. Clevedon House, Woodhall Spa; Aldenham
School, and Keble College, Oxford, where he had just finished his
second year when the war broke out; joined the 4th Lincolns, 4 Aug.
1914, serving as a Private until he received his commission in Oct.
to rank as from 20 Aug. 1914; went to France, 1 May, 1915, and was
killed in action at Zillebeke, 29 July, 1915; _unm._ Buried in
Dranoute Churchyard. Lieut.-Col. Barrell, commanding 4th Lincolns,
wrote: “During the time he was with us he endeared himself to everyone
of us, and he had the makings of a very good officer”; and a Horncastle
soldier: “The unfortunate death of Lieut. Fox occurred in these
trenches. It would have been a job to find a more capable man in the
battalion. His cheery manner was just the thing that’s wanted out here,
and although he was not in our company and had not been with us very
long, his loss was felt acutely by the whole of the battalion, who all
appreciated his readiness to help in any concert or sport that was
arranged to pass the evenings while we were resting. Most of us knew
him as a Private, and all agree that he was a jolly good Private and an
ideal officer.”
=FOX, WILLIAM=, Stoker, P.O., 172400, H.M.S. Good Hope; lost in
action off Coronal, on the coast of Chili, 1 Nov. 1914.
=FOX, WILLIAM ALFRED=, Stoker, 1st Class (R.F.R., B. 7020), S.S.
101584, H.M.S. Hogue; lost in action in the North Sea, 22 Sept. 1914.
=FOXELL, FREDERICK JAMES=, Ship’s Corpl., 1st Class, 209944,
H.M.S. Good Hope; lost in action off Coronel, on the coast of Chili, 1
Nov. 1914.
=FOXTON, JAMES=, Stoker, R.N.R., A. 3049, H.M.S. Hawke; lost when
that ship was torpedoed in the North Sea, 15 Oct. 1914; _m._
=FOYER, WILLIAM=, Petty Officer, 176217, H.M.S. Hawke; lost when
that ship was torpedoed in the North Sea, 15 Oct. 1914; _m._
=FRAMPTON, JOHN THOMAS=, A.B. (R.F.R., B. 3007), S.S. 350, H.M.S.
Good Hope; lost in action off Coronel, on the coast of Chili, 1 Nov.
1914.
=FRAMPTON, JOSEPH HENRY=, Leading Stoker (R.F.R, B. 4207), 292170,
H.M.S. Good Hope; lost in action off Coronel, on the coast of Chili, 1
Nov. 1914.
=FRAMPTON, WALTER JOHN=, Sergt., No. 648, 16th Battn., 4th
Brigade, Australian Imperial Force, eldest _s._ of the late Walter
Frampton, of the Civil Service, by his wife, Fanny (3, Lennox Mansions,
Southsea, Hants), dau. of Edward Kirk Horn, of Adelaide, South
Australia, and grandson of the Rev. Canon John Frampton, of the Priory,
Tetbury, Gloucestershire; _b._ Adelaide, South Australia, 20 Dec.
1867; educ. St. Edward’s School, Oxford; enlisted as Pay-Corpl. in the
Australian Expeditionary Force after the outbreak of war, about 14 Oct.
1914; left with his Battn. for Egypt in Jan.; took part in the landing
at the Dardanelles on 25 April; was seriously wounded at Gaba Tepe on
the 27th, and died in the 17th Royal General Hospital, Alexandria, 3
May, 1915. Buried in Chatby Military Cemetery, Alexandria: _unm._
Sergt. Frampton was most highly spoken of for his bravery by his
commanding officers, who said that, but for his death, he would shortly
have received his commission. A tablet to his memory was placed in the
chapel of St. Edward’s School, Oxford.
[Illustration: =Walter John Frampton.=]
=FRANCIS, ARTHUR=, Private, No. 8146, 1st Battn. Dorsetshire
Regt., _s._ of Job Francis, of 95, Abercynon Road, Abercynon, co.
Glamorgan; _b._ Ashton Gate, Bristol, 4 Feb. 1895; educ. Board
School there; enlisted 1 Sept. 1914; and died from the effects of gas
poisoning at Hill 60, 4 May, 1915; _unm._
[Illustration: =Arthur Francis.=]
=FRANCIS, BASIL HUGH=, 2nd Lieut., 3rd Battn. The Royal Scots,
_s._ of Capt. Harold Hugh Francis, late Royal Scots; _b._
Firth House, Rosslyn, 8 Oct. 1895; educ. Rugby and University College,
Oxford (admitted March, 1914), and on the outbreak of war was gazetted
to his father’s old regiment, 14 Aug. He was killed in action near La
Bassée, 4 Feb. 1915; buried Château de Gerve, near Bethune.
=FRANCIS, GILBERT BRYAN=, Private, No. 10/2138, Wellington
Infantry, New Zealand Expeditionary Force, only _s._ of the Rev.
David Francis, B.A., Vicar of Llandygwydd, Cardigan, R.D., by his
wife, Amy, 3rd dau. of J. M. Bryan, of Northampton, M.D., F.R.C.S.;
_b._ Llandygwydd Vicarage, 17 Oct. 1886; educ. Llandovery College;
went to New Zealand, 4 Dec. 1912; enlisted, 15 Feb. 1915; left New
Zealand with reinforcements, 12 June, 1915, and died of enteric fever
at St. George’s Military Hospital, Malta, 13 Nov. 1915. Buried in Pieta
Cemetery, Malta; _unm._
[Illustration: =Gilbert Bryan Francis.=]
=FRANCIS, HENRY WILLIAM=, Private. No. 11133, 4th Battn. 1st
Brigade, Canadian Expeditionary Force, elder _s._ of Henry
Francis, of Georgetown, Ontario, Canada, by his wife, Barbara Wells,
dau. of William James Saunders; _b._ Poplar, London, E., 6 Feb.
1897; educ. Hermit Road Council School, London, and Georgetown, Canada;
started work at the age of 13 at the Barber Paper and Coating Mills;
Georgetown, Ontario; volunteered 6 Aug. 1914, two days after the
declaration of war; left. Canada with the first contingent; went to
France, 6 Feb. 1915, took part in the various engagements, including
the repulse of the German gas attack at Langemarck, until 17 June,
1915, when he was shot through the temple by a sniper, while taking a
message down the trench. His Commanding Officer wrote: “As a soldier
there was none braver and none who played the game more manfully than
did Henry.”
[Illustration: =Henry William Francis.=]
=FRANCIS, JAMES THOMAS=, Private, R.M.L.I., Ch./11729, H.M.S.
Hawke; lost when that ship was torpedoed in the North Sea, 15 Oct. 1914.
=FRANCIS, JOHN=, Capt., 1/5th Battn. Royal Warwickshire Regt.
(T.F.), only child of John Horace Francis, of 7, Westbourne Road,
Edgbaston, member of the firm of Deakin & Francis, Birmingham, and
his wife, Ethel, yr. dau. of the late John William Botsford, of
Manchester; _b._ Edgbaston, 30 June, 1887; educ. Uppingham and
Gottingen, Germany; and was Director and Secretary of Deakin & Francis,
Manufacturing Jewellers. He joined the 5th (Territorial) Battn. of
the Warwicks on its organisation in 1907, and became Lieut., 30 Oct.
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