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John Davies | |||
Rank: | Lc/Cpl | Number: | 240178* |
Ship/Rgn/Sqn No: | 05th Bn [1] ('A' Coy) | ||
Name of Rgt or Ship: | Cheshire Rgt (Earl of Chester's Bn) | ||
Died: | 14/02/1919 | Age: | 26 |
How Died: | Died | ||
Country of burial: | Netherlands | Grave Photo: | Yes |
Cemetery or Memorial: | The Hague General Cemetery | ||
Town Memorial: | Stretford | ||
Extra Information: | |||
Born in the Stockport R.D. 1892 or 1893, the eldest son of Thomas William & Mary Ann Davies (nee Wood). 1901 Census - Lumb Lane, Hazel Grove and Bramhall, Stockport. Son - aged: 8 born: Cheadle Hulme. Head of household - Thomas W. Davies - Married - aged: 38 - occ: Gey Cloth Warehouseman - born: Stretford. Also - Mary A. Davies - Wife - aged: 35 - occ: Laundress - born: Manchester. Plus 2 younger siblings and a great aunt. Attended Victoria Park School and was commemorated on their War memorial - NOW LOST. Also commemorated on the Stretford Independent Methodist War Memorial. 1911 Census - 70 Mitford Street, Stretford. Son - aged: 18 - occ: Insurance Clerk - born: Cheadle Hulme. Head of household - Thomas William Davies - Married - aged: 48 - occ: Park Gardener - born: Stretford. Also - Mary Ann Davies - Wife - aged: 45 - born: Manchester. Plus 4 younger siblings. SDGW states that he was killed on the 31st December 1918 ??? Previously 1583 - Cheshire Rgt. Listed as Lance Corporal John Davis on the Stretford Cenotaph. Listed on the Barton Methodists Chapel Memorial and the Vistoria Park School Memorial. CWGC - Son of Thomas William and Mary Ann Davies, of 70, Mitford St., Stretford, Manchester. He kept a diary - see below. A member of 'A' Company - Left Cambridge - ordered to parade at 0300 hrs on the Sunday morning - entrained and arrived at Southampton dockside - about 15.00 hrs, ordered to fall in and board the "Oxonian" - set sail at 18.30 hrs - concerned that they may come across the "Unterseeboats - Landed at Le Havre on the 15th February 1915 - after disembarking, they marched up to Nos. 6 and 7 Remount Camps, where they stayed until Wednesday afternoon - entrained for the north and spent 22½ hours on a "train" (if that's what it could be called, he said) - detrained at about 19.00 hrs at Bailleul on the French/Belgian border - housed for the night in the Grapperie-du-Vine - 14.00 hrs on Friday moved off again for Neuve Eglise and billeted in barns, etc. Went down to the trenches half a dozen times on fatigues as carrying parties, along a road made from split logs which was very wet and slippery - the Engineers called it the "Corduroy Path" - bullets were flying about and one knocked his cap off - selected to go on a grenade throwing and trench motar warfare course from 09.30 hrs to 16.00 hrs on 28th February 1915, in the charge of Sergeant Norbury [Frank Norbury killed on the 6th March 1915] - 29th Feb and 1st March - more grenade instruction - went into trench No.5 for two days at 19.00 hrs on the 2nd March - into trench No.2 on the 5th March, when poor Frank Norbury was killed accidentally by a shot from his own rifle - stayed in the trenches until the 9th March - rifle instruction in the morning of the 11th March and in the afternoon had to clear out into the fields on account of the shelling of the village, returning at 17.00 hrs - grenade instruction on 12th March - into trenches again from the 13th to the 16th March, only a few casualties - more grenade instruction on 18th March - into trenches again from the 19th to the 21st March - no casualties - more grenade instruction on the 22nd March, until heavy bombardment forced them to abandon the village and go through the fields to Manoutre. Left Neuve Eglise, for Kemmel and stayed the night in the "School de St. Germain" - forbidden to go out of billets in the day-time and no fires at night as they were within sight of the enemy - left Kemmel for Locre on the 24th March where they were billeted - on fatigues, trenches only 25 yards apart - went into No. 10 trench on 27th for four days - unmercifully shelled on the 29th March which continued all night and until noon the next day - mounted a four day guard at Kemmel Chateau and on the 4th April marched back to Locre - moved to Dickebusch and into wooden huts for two days on the 5th April - moved out of Dickebusch on the 7th April to Ypres, via Onderuia - arrived at Ypres at 17.30 hrs, then had a two hour march to the support trenches arriving at 21.00 hrs - still in the support trenches on the 10th April where they had 6 killed and 4 wounded, including his cousin, Len Heaton. On the 15th April Colonel Groves sent for him and promoted him to Lance Corporal - detailed to pring Bank Dug-outs on the 16th April where he was detailed to act as guide to a Scottish Regt - moved from dug-outs to the trenches on the 17th April, the night when "Hill 60" was attacked and described as a "night of hell" - at 19.00 hrs the German trenches were blown up [underground mine] - the night was lit up like day and the Germans counter-attacked and heavy losses were inflicted on the Cheshire's [10 were killed that night] - he never expected to emerge alive that night - fatigues, filling sandbags on the 18th April - Germans attacked on the 19th April, but were beaten back - went into the fields near Ypres on the banks of the Yser Canal - Germans bagan a bombardment with 17 inch "Jack Johnson's" [large shrapnel shells] - cleared out of the town of Ypres and went into the fields where they slept under a hedge, it rained all night and they were soaked - about 1000 civilians were killed or wounded - went to sleep at the Bleach Works - lucky not to have been killed on the 22nd when hearing a shell coming over, he dived to the ground, the shell just missed him and buried itself into the roadway - heavy bombardment on the 23rd April and the Colonel's horse was killed - still out in the fields on the 24th, the bombardment is awful and half the town is ablaze. The next entry into his diary was made a week after the event - shot in right ankle at midnight and taken to dressing station, remained there for about two hours before being taken to the Brigade HQ and put down at the side of the road for another two hours before being taken by motor ambulance to Poperinge, arriving there at 06.00 hrs on the 26th April - stayed there until 20.00 hrs when he was removed owing to the bombardment of the hospital - arrived at Hazebrouek on the 27th April - taken by hospital train to No. 13 General Hospital (the old Casino) at Boulogne on the 28th April and on the 29th put on the hospital ship "Carisbrooke Castle" - arrived at Southampton at about 21.00 hrs andf put on a hospital train for Manchester - arrived at the 2nd Western General Hospital, Whitworth Street, Manchester at about 06.00 hrs on the 30th April - transferred to Rochdale on the 2nd May. M.I. "Duty Nobly Done". |
Memorials found on: | |||
Independent Methodist (Stretford) | |||
Victoria Park School | |||
Stretford Borough Memorial Book | |||