Hi I am trying to track down details for John Davis who I believed served with the 3rd Gloucester Regiment. Any information would be welcome, thanks. If you could help me in any way I would be most appreciative. I found it interesting that my great grandmother was listed only on the 1911 census as a "boarder" and listed as Roman Catholic while the rest of the family was Presbyterian. Please send me an email if you want me to undertake paid research. Volunteers, 1904 - 1906, and as acting squadron sergeant major with the Worcestershire Yeomanry, 1906 - 1915. Any leads would be greatly appreciated. I have the attestation records and discharge docs, as well as medal index, for my Great Grandad - 3rd Battn Royal Berks 1894, moved to 2nd Battn 1900 and deployed to Africa, then reenlisted ASC 1915 and served in WW1.I've tried to piece together all the contents, but some of the abbreviations mean nothing to me. The only information my grandmother (since deceased) knew about her mother was that her father died when she was young. Yes please, Mike. Rachel, thanks for commenting. Then home in 1902 & then joined up with the Royal munster fusliers 1st garrison & died in Italy in 1918 aged 43ys of age. His wife was Johanna Blanch.I know his wife and children were born in Waterford, Ireland and this is where he married. Paul. Is there anywhere else I can search to learn more about him and hopefully his father and mother's names? Barry - probably not, unless he has a service record in WO 363 which details this OR there is a record in MH 106 (at the National Archives) OR there is a report in a local newspaper. Absolutely brilliant. Hi PaulI'm trying to find some information about my Great Grandfather Albert Napier Wallace, born 1886 (thereabouts) in Gillingham, Kent. He signed up in February 1913 in Aberdeen. The Worcestershire Regiment was a line infantry regiment in the British Army, . Hi PaulTrying to found out more about this soldier:Service No: 10284Age: 26Regiment/Service: Irish Guards, 2nd Bn.Son of Thomas Wardlow, of 758, Harrison Avenue, Harrison, New Jersey, U.S.A.Anything you can do for me? and "9th Company" on 'Burnt Records'.Interesting that you have P/2919 listed also! British regimental number research. You can request this yourself and photograph the pages but iy you don;t have the time or inclination for this, please drop me a line: [email protected] or [email protected]. The addition of two more regular battalions in 1900 had a marked effect on recruitment rates and between June 1901 and May 1911, the regiment added over 6000 men to its books; an annual recruitment rate of 613 men per annum for the last ten years and one which saw recruiting in the regiment surpassed only by The Kings Royal Rifle Corps and Middlesex Regiment. If it was post 1913 it would be in WO 363 or WO 364. Raymond, please email me the photo and I'll take a look: [email protected], Hi, i'm sorry but on the research page I cannot see how to contact you by email, could you please tell me where the email link is?Thank YouPaul Wilson. He was killed in action I believe on the 18th Oct 1916. Number 1457 I believe. Monday 4th August 2014 marks 100 years since the start of the World War One. Julia, I'm confused as to how he can be stated to be in France on his marriage certificate (unless he married in France). It reads that he joined Th R.F.A.T. Pricing . Free shipping for many products! Any direction on this would be gratefully received. Appointed to the 36th Regt. Here's hoping I've not been too much of a painNick LabandTrench Laband Twitter, All understood, Nick, no problem about jumping in. Follow the link I give. See the research tab. The barracks date back to 1874 when building started. Hi, I am trying to get information on my Great grandfather. I know he died at battle of loos 25th Sept 1915, I also have his medal record, but that's it. Keep up the good work. Fred Harwood603. He returned to active service after that. Number Block. Register. Born 1907 in Dunfermline to Janet Hunter, same mother as Alexander despite the 20yr age gap. Hi PaulI started researching my family and I have very little information to work with. Two were with the Middlesex Regiment [one private one (non) commissioned officer, one reciord says Seargent one says Corporal] are commemorated on Thiepval (where my daughter is currently working as an intern for CWGC) and one at Bauomont Hamel.1. It has the following information:this is fred's address and his photoM.2./156830.Pte. First World War research. He was discharged after contracting Malaria. If you would like me to explore research options please follow the instructions on this page. If you want me to undertake paid research, please follow the instructions on the RESEARCH tab. Poole. I'm obviously very new to twitter and not getting on very well with the character restrictions.I saw the photograph on my home feed and was interested enough to join the discussion.At this stage I'm not even sure if that is an acceptable approach, i.e. Hi PaulI'm doing some research on my great grandfather and his possible military service in WW1.All I have is his name - Thomas Willis Elliott, born in 1898 in County Durham. The information was presented to me in a way that was easy to read and understand. The Regiment was officially formed in 1881 when the 29th and 36th Regiments of Foot were merged as part of the Childers Reforms, but it can trace its history back a further 200 years. If you have access to Ancestry.co.uk try searching for Service Records and Pension Records for Army numbers either side of 24272 with Oxford* in the Regiment box. My hunch its the same man. From there Sarah Ann met a James Ardis and they had six children all of which are on the 1901 and 1911 census. Support Connect is a company which makes funded support available to Apprentices and other learners. My grandfather and great uncle served in the 4th Battalion and although I've got their service numbers, and much more, I couldn't nail down an enlistment year for my grandfather. Hi PaulI am trying to find out if Lawrence Connolly RDF #22151, born Navan Co Meath, who died in France on 16th August 1916, is my Grand Uncle Lawrence Connolly born in Co Meath on 26th August 1873. All Ive been able to find is a copy of his medal card (which doesnt have much info on it), and Im assuming some sort of dispatch note that has him and two other soldiers listed as dangerously ill from Malaria. [1] Worcestershire Regiment 5651 Private [2] Devonshire Regiment 1528 Private [3] Worcestershire Regiment 242012 Private [4] Royal Engineers 499942 Private [5] Royal Engineers WR10499 Private : Link: 30182: Manley, William J: Worcestershire Regiment: 260295: Private [1] Worcestershire Regiment 260295 Private [2] Labour Corps 510297 Private . In the records it states his residence as Beggars Bush Barracks. Which part of the country he was from? Overview. The Worcestershire Rifles (Worcs Rifles) was a volunteer, part-time unit of the British Army based in the county of Worcestershire which had a long, yet split history in two units before merging into the larger Worcestershire Regiment.Following active service in both World Wars, during which its strength was doubled into three battalions, the unit was reduced to a company, and later expanded . The detail you have 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011. A source, date, and location would be appreciated. Only my grandfather Thomas and 1 brother (Christopher) survived. Great grand father returned mission complete with no lives lost . the-gloucestershire-regiment-regimental-special-british-soldier-in-the-20th-century-s 1/2 Downloaded from aharon.ijm.org on March 2, 2023 by guest . No further details known. It was towards the end of this service that Britain went to war meaning that he would have been recalled to the colours. It is possible that he may have changed his name to James Walker as his birth father was a George Walker and he used that name in 1971 when he eventually married my grandmother (4 children later lol). From there I'm not sure what transpired. 1951-1952 Malaya Worcestershire Regiment (29th/36th of Foot) Global rank 823 835; Daily visitors-Daily pageviews-Pageviews per user: 0: Rating; Status: Online: Latest check: . This comment has been removed by the author. Many thanks Karen, Karen, not as far as I know, although there will be a medal card, medal rolls, soldiers' effects entry, Soldiers Died in The Great War entry, census returns etc that will all help you piece together more information, plus information on CWGC etc. back to the numbering: 6383 joined on 3rd June 1901 6656 joined on 13th January 1902 7445 joined on 2nd January 1903 8196 joined on 29th January 1904 9259 joined on 27th May 1905 I'm trying to research my great grandfather, and struggling. British Army 917 Private The Royal Warwickshire Regiment 15th (Service) Battalion (2nd Birmingham) . Re Albert Napier Wallace. Search for these on Ancestry and search for service records on Ancestry and Findmypast. Hi Paul,We are trying to locate my Great Grandfathers grave which would be in Belgium as he was killed in action in the 1st World War. www.r-s-bedachungen-gun.de. If you can find us any information it would be greatly appreciated. I have a photo of an ancestor in what appears to be dress uniform. His regimental number is 14630 and he was a private in the 2nd battalion for the worcestershire regiment. Hello Paul,Great site thank you!My Grandfather was P/2917 L/Cpl HEBDEN, Christopher. Is there any further information about his war record? PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE COMMENTING. PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE COMMENTING. I have records of both his King & Queens medals from the Second Boer War. Hello, i am trying to find out my Fathers service number in order for me to gain his service records. 1914-1920 WW 1 If you have a specific query please drop me a line at the address above and I'll tell you whether I can help or not. Do you know any of the names of the soldiers in your photo of the royal artillery please?I would also be interested in finding out more about my great grandfathers service in Ww1 if you are able to help. Cherry on the cake would be if you could perhaps find any war diary entries to show his movements in Africa and/or France.Cheers, Keith. It was then the custom for Regiments to be named after their Colonels, and this new Regiment was named Farringtons Regiment of Foot. Dave Were, it would be possible to work that out. These were gleaned from his post WW1 medal papers, his marriage certificate and his childrens baptism records, however as I can find no service records for WW1 I suspect they were unfortunately destroyed. Battalions served on the Western Front, in Gallipoli, Macedonia, Mesopotamia, Italy; one battalion ended the war in North Persia. . In all probability, yes, although there is much that can be gleaned from the regimental numbers so all is not completely lost. Or is it possible he lied abt his age? Mar 2020 - Present3 years 1 month. If you want me to undertake paid research, please follow the instructions on the RESEARCH tab. Is there a way to clarify this please? to form the Worcestershire Regiment. I cannot find any of his army records from 1916 onwards. Regimental number series. - 14606Rank - privateRegiment - South StaffordshireI'm afraid that's all I have. full report costs from 50. In 1881 the 29th and 36th of Foot Regiments were amalgamated and remaned the Worcestershire Regiment. Hello Paul,My name is Scott, and I live in Australia. Three years later it was completed and handed over to the Regiment. Follow the link for more information. The Regiment was on a number of subsequent occasions commanded by officers from the same source. It served in France and Belgium in the . Through old letters their appears in WWI DEAL ? Hi i am trying to find out about my grandfather who enlisted under age. The regiment maintained its additional two battalions after the war with South Africa had ended and thus went to war with Germany in 1914 with four regular battalions. Similar Traffic Stats. Re 10284 Wardlow, you should contact the Irish Guards direct as they still hold records. Military research. We are more interested in his earlier number 18681 for Royal Field Artillery. But his father was galway born. Military research. Data-as-a-Service Data Management Data Enrichment API & Webhooks. Ok, thanks Chris. His regiment # was 27224 and his rank was Lance Corporal. if you have a medal named with a number and regiment that do not match as per the list below.) and in 2020 its numbers will have fallen to 82,000, a poor reward, one would have thought, for all past endeavours. Do you have his regimental number on any of the cards? Find a stables in Worcestershire on Gumtree, the #1 site for Stuff for Sale classifieds ads in the UK. His name was John Killen and was a Lance Corporal: Depot Highland Light Infantry. This is a great piece of work and must rank as one of the finest of the Great War regimental histories, many would say the finest, and I wouldn't argue. Any ideas on how to find out more about him and his brothers. For the reunion photos by year click on the date below: The first is my grandfather the second is my wife's. Thanks, Please drop me a line at the email address above, including your grandfather's regimental numbers, and I'll let you know what I can provide.Paul, Hi Paul, I am researching a 4039 3rd Dragoon Man James Simpson Reid, and with this regimental number it appears that he joined just before the Boer War. Hi Paul,I am currently researching my great grandfather Private John Horrigan for a history project at my school. the British Army for the last 40 years and I know where to look and what to There is a militia record for a 7687 Pte Ernest Walker on FMP who transferred to the regular army. I bought the card many years ago and sold it in 2011. They were both named Charles Flynn. My data would ascertain when he enlisted.Consider setting up a one page website - or blog - where you can publish information about him and which will be picked up by search engines and could, in due course, lead people to contact you with information.Good luckPaul. WW2. Thanks,Christine, Re CONLIFFE / Cheshire Regt. Middlesex Regiment Details on London War Memorial Websitehttp://www.londonwarmemorial.co.uk/view_profile.php?id=42653&limit=50&offset=0&sort=&a=Westbourne%20Park&f=First%20Name&s=Last%20Name&r=Rank&u=Unit&b=&d=Date%20Of%20Death#sthash.aku6Qree.k0hVc5ls.dpbsCensus indicates year of birth as 1883 which ties in with listed age at death of 33.2. Doesn't even have to be a relative. Email [email protected], I'd be grateful for any information that would help me understand the role that my maternal grandfather played in WW1. rank visitors / pageviews; 823833: atob.com. Please drop me a line: [email protected], HI PaulJust a quick question about my Great Granddad's service numbers, he was in the R.F.A and had two number's. I'm sorry, I can find nobody with that name/number combination for the DLI. I have his WW1 medals and can find his medal card (WO 372/7/36548) however i can find no other details of his service. I will definitely be recommending you to others who need help with their research.Kind regards,Ben, Hi PaulMy grandfather Edwin Whiting has records showingG/17901 East Kent Regiment 8th Battalion 65417 Royal Fusiliers 29th Battalion602625 London Regiment 18th Reserve BattalionWounded 14.11.17 (Wounded List 5416, 20.11.17)I just want to know about the movement between regiments and which one he was in when wounded.Any initial help gratefully received. Between 1891 and 1901 the regiment recruited close to 3,400 men, improving its recruitment rate for the decade to an average of 345 men per annum, and finishing in twenty-sixth place. The regiment fought in many conflicts, including both the First and Is there any way of someone identifying the uniform. Looking for Stephen Collins Connaught rangers and transfers to royal Irish he sign up 14-10-1914 and was discharged 31-3-1920 I think his number is 4504 any more info on him please. He was a coalminer and signed up after the war had begun, served in an infantry regiment and was demobbed in 1919.Is that enough to search? respond to your enquiry by return, giving you a cost for the service if I think He discharged, my dad thinks, in 1945. Download Worcestershire Regiment in the Great War Vol 2 book PDF by Capt H. FitzM. The reason i ask i have just obtained my great grandfathers WW1 medals and would like some information and any pictures if possible. ", Worcestershire He served in RFA for 5 years 207 days. Best Regards, Tony. Please ping me at [email protected], Dave. His name was Henry Albert Ellner and he enlisted into B Coy of the wiltshire Regiment on 30 December 1898, Regimental number 5202. I have no details other than a photo of him with two other soldiers. - Trying to track him between the census of 1901 when he was living with his mum as a child, and the 1911 census when he wasn't there but was possibly in India.How he came about to be renumbered?He was killed in action, i think possible Pleogsteert wood. I was wondering if there was a way to get further info on the facts of the medal. Sunday, 31st October 1914 was a fine sunny day. There does not appear to be a surving record for this man, Chris. 8th (Service) Battalion.I have found quite a lot of information already - but trying to fill in some gaps. hi Paul I'm trying to find some information about my Grandfather Thomas Kavanagh and his brothers who fought in WW1. Numbers were allocated to VSC recruits as follows: 1st VSC: numbers within the range 6693 to 6855 2nd VSC: numbers within the range 6808 to 6878 . I would guess he probably enlisted in 1908 and had been in India for maybe a year when the census was taken. If you have access to The Times online you'll find them there. Google Irish Guards Archive. BRITISH ARMY WORCESTERSHIRE & SHERWOOD FORESTERS STAYBRITE COLLAR BADGE PAIR | Collectables, Badges & Patches, Collectable Badges | eBay! The Regiment was formed in 1694 under Colonel Thomas Farrington (Farringtons Regiment). The only thing we know is he left as a Lance corporal.Lance corporal Frederick lascelles brown. ).Best regards,Scott. Re Stanley Riccalton, I regret the only details I have regarding this man are the posts you can see from October 2016. Service records for all of the sample numbers and dates below survive in the series, at the National Archives (and also online at. WW2 Stories of veterans My father said he served with the Fife and Forfar Yeomanry but I can't seem to find much about him. I am confused that he has only got a 4 digit number. You'll appreciate that John Davis is a very common name, hence the need for as much information as you can muster.Paul, Dear Paul,I am trying to investigate the history of my grandfather Lt. Llewelyn Roberts, who was in the 11th Battalion of the South Wales Borderers, which I understand were formed at Brecon on 5 December 1914,by the Welsh National Executive Committee, (David Lloyd George) and disbanded in France on 27 February 1918. New Book which tells the story of Norton Barracks from 1874 to 1982 and of the soldiers who served there. His year Of Birth was 1898 and he was aged 19 on his date of death, which was 12 Oct 1917 . But I have reason to believe that John was born in Bristol. A German soldier, Horst Kallmeyer, found the diary and started to use it himself. His grandson was in contact with you on 12 October 2016 at 20:01. Their battle honours include Northern Ireland, Iraq and Afghanistan. CraigRecords for the Volunteer Force do not survive as a complete collection although you do find some papers scattered within WO 363 / WO 364 and WO 97. Free shipping for many products! It later became Known as the 29th Regiment of Foot. To join them or review events. Hi Paul,Forgive me if I'm being daft and misreading the info on this blog, but my great grandfather's two regimental numbers from the medal card don't seem to fit in with the ones listed. Allan Matthew Hauxwell, I know he served in the Durham Light Infantry, his service number is listed as 7440. Five officers serving with the Battalion were awarded the Distinguished Service Order and a further seven awarded the Military Cross. He was sent back to England to recover. His name was Wilfred Oakes and his Army Number was 4128704. to open the space at the rear of the Town Hall to the public has been vetoed by the City Council, a body which is by no means progressive. Hi Paul,I'm trying to find out information on my great great grandfather. That information simply does not survive. The regiment started numbering from 1 from 1st July July 1881. and that his number was 4134. Revenue <$5M. William Hunter. So far I have discovered that he was kicked in the abdomen by men off duty and was hospitalised off and on until he was discharged in March 1915.However in December 1916 when he marries Elsie Jane Adams in Aberdeen it clearly states on the marriage certificate that he was currently stationed in France and is a gunner for B Battallion in the Machine Gun Corps. From his medal record it says 3/Bedf.r. . I love the photos, That's why I'm researching, writing a blog about Alfred Reynolds L/5345, creating a web site, researching the 4th Battalion the Leicestershire Regiment etc. He possibly worked in a coal mine before enlisting - maybe 1904? Nikki, this man has some surviving papers which you can access from here: https://britisharmyancestors.co.uk/search-result/?q=a*+n*+wallace+east+kentNote that these are on Findmypast and so you will need to pay Findmypast to actually view these. Hello,I am trying to source any additional info on Edward Broderick ( also recorded as Edward George) He was a member of 2nd Batt Connaught Rangers Private 5259. Between 1st July 1881 and 24th August 1891, the regiment recruited just 2991 men, an annual average of 294 men per annum. Simon, it was my pleasure to help you, thanks for posting this comment. Entdecke Das Worcestershire-Regiment (berhmte Regimenter) in groer Auswahl Vergleichen Angebote und Preise Online kaufen bei eBay Kostenlose Lieferung fr viele Artikel! Please drop me a line and include known or approximate years of birth or dates of service. I find it exhilarating and numerous other emotions when you find out something. There are no remarks and no info on which theatre of war he went. All of this information will be helpful when you are searching. I also have a record of his belonging returned to his sister following his death in 1904. Have a look here: https://www.gov.uk/guidance/requests-for-personal-data-and-service-records. tracing your British military ancestor, drop me a line. These are not online but you can access them at The National Archives or hire a researcher to do that for you.Paul, Hello im wondering if you can help me?Ive recently found out that my Great Great Grandfather William Butt served in the Worcestershire Regiment 1st Volunteer Battalion. Unfortunately through the Generations records on him have been fragmented/lost with his Rels in Australia and other Countries. Appendices provide the Roll of Honour; Honours and Awards including Mention in Despatches, with date of Gazette (for Companion' of the British Empire read Commander'); details of Badges, Colours and Distinctions of the regiment; and the music for regimental marches. India & has king & queens clap medals. Re A Jacobs, it would be a case of checking through medal rolls, service records and possibly army lists in the hope of finding a match on that name. The Worcestershire Regiment raised two more regular battalions, the 3rd and 4th Battalions, in 1900. 13th Bn. Prior to the start of the Great War, 2nd Lieutenant GD Slaughter of the 2nd Battalion was one of the first members of the British Army to attend, and qualify from, a Vickers Gun course run He would have served with the 1st Battalion CR in South Africa, but was subsequently posted to the 2nd Battalion as indicated on the KSA roll). CLICK HERE, 1808-1811 Peninsular it seems likely that he followed his brother Maurice Lloyd into the 121st royal field artillery (38th welsh) in the later part of world war one. the-gloucestershire-regiment-regimental-special-british-soldier-in-the-20th-century-s 2/10 Downloaded from old.ijm.org on March 3, 2023 by guest M.T.A.I.C.Floriana MaltaThe photo is of him beside a truckI am trying to figure out where he is from. Did men who transferred into the regular forces keep their old no or get a new one. No service record but would be possible to work out his likely service from 1904 until 1916. Best Regards Andy. It seems that the number of visitors and pageviews on this site is too low to be displayed, sorry. On the 10th July 1944 the attack on Hill 112 started and went on for nearly two weeks. David HortonThank you for your comment and your compliments. The genealogist has also indexed these. Territorial Army, Royal Engineers (Light Aeroplane Squadron Searchlight Company). The Worcestershire Regiment lost some 10,000 men during the conflict. Thomas Rampton (SR/3564 on Thiepval), 13th Bn Middlesex Regiment, date of death 31-08-16. Uncle's is 11621 and from his discharge certificate I get his enlistment date of 02/10/1910 (ten yrs 111 days service - discharge date of 21/01/1921 - maths being correct?) The plans illustrate the engagements recorded in the book, and are designed to depict the part played by the several battalions in their battles and to enable the visitor to the battlefields to recognise the ground on which each fight took place, as much as to make clear the general course of those actions. hello Paul, i am trying to find records for my great great grandfather Pryse Lloyd, he was born on 13th of august 1881 in Llananno, Radnorshire. Allan EHe probably signed up in 1898 for 12 years which would have meant that he would have left the army in 1910. 1911 Census for James and on rechecking I found that in fact was wrongly named James when fact he was Joseph, with the number 8057. We now have the information we were seeking and also have the location of his resting place in Aire and plan to visit next year on what will be his and the nations centenary. 1st Battalion, Worcestershire Regiment. Military research. He married Sarah Ann O'Neill Aug 6, 1885 at St. Andrews in Dublin Ireland. Haskett-Smith and Sergt. He was in RFA and his number was 18681. I also have his big green Worcerestershire Regiment in the Great War book. Or do you just want to see what others are saying? you might want to consider refining your search to see a more manageable number of items. This man has surviving papers which you can download provided you pay Findmypast: https://britisharmyancestors.co.uk/search-result/?q=chapman+323023, Hello Paul,I would just like to say thank you for your time in finding out what happened to my great-great-grandfather. Shown as 20/05/1916 30 Div . My advice to you would be to make the most of Findmypast's free weekend of military records this weekend and scour what's online. If you need help 17th (Service) Battalion 25 May 1918: the 1st Provisional Garrison Guard Bn of the Labour Corps joined 176th Brigade in 59th (2nd North Midland) Division. He survived the war and had a 4th child, my grandfather who sadly died on the Derrycunihy on 24 June 1944. Illustrations are by well-known artists depicting battle scenes including each VC-winning action - apart from Leefe's zeppelin. It was my pleasure to assist you, Neil, and thank you for taking the time to post your thanks on this blog. Thank you so muchMargaret, Hello,my relative was in the war in 1939 from what it says online. Family folkore says he signed up underage, so may well have been born post 1897.The London War Memorial online site gives quite a bit of information about the circumstances in which they each died.Perhaps you can let us know whether you can help us find out mnore (and if so, what sort of information and cost estimate) or point us in the right direction to uncover military records etc. people will follow you if they feel you have something to say - or if they feel they want to say soemthing to you.Paul, Thanks for the understanding and of course I will continue to engage. !Christopher Hebden had previous service in Scarborough Police and Monmouthshire Constabulary plus years of experience with horses, prior to joining up.Please let me know if you'd like more details - including sight of photos. Website. many who fought for our country but who was dear to those left behind. Hello Paul.I have found some records for ,y grandfather. You need top contact the MoD. I have been told that he got medals too, but still unable to find anything.Surely if he was discharged unfit medically then why would Nr have been reinstated a year later? he was in the duke of cornwalls. If I don't think I can add anything I will tell you, but if I a number of regiments containing large centres of population formed additional regular battalions. We know that he became a POW and was held in Germany, is there anyway of knowing precisely which camp or camps he was held at? Hello Andy, there would undoubtedly be more information that could be researched and added here. Thanks in advance, Vanessa. Re CSM Laughton, I am afraid I do not know the answer to that, Pieter. I don't really no much else about his life before he married my great grandmother.Regards Tracy Brook, Tracy, you will need to contact the MoD. Attention is paid to minor actions such as trench raids, which usually find no place in compressed official histories; they are recorded in this history. Records include details of Service, Medals, Gallantry Awards, Assignments as well as details of rank. Enlisted 29/12/1915. All I no is he was born in Scotland but ran away from home on numerous occasions to join the army in England. The 3rd Gloucester Regiment was the Special Reserve battalion and so he must have been living in (or within spitting distance of) the county to have served with that particular battalion.
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