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Haron J. Baronian | |||
Rank: | Private | Number: | 33006 |
Ship/Rgn/Sqn No: | 08th Bn | ||
Name of Rgt or Ship: | Cheshire Rgt | ||
Died: | 11/04/17 | Age: | 21 |
How Died: | Killed in Action | ||
Country of burial: | France | ||
Cemetery or Memorial: | Basra Memorial, Iraq | ||
Town Memorial: | Not Listed | ||
Extra Information: | |||
Born in 1896, possibly under the name of Heron Irdichan ??? during the June quarter 1896 in the Chorlton R.D. - ref: 8a/719, the son of Zarch & Shushan Baronian. 1901 Census - 70 Palatine Road, Didsbury, Manchester. Son - aged: 5 - born: Bury, Lancashire. Head of household - Spiiyian Baronian - Married - aged: 36 - occ: Merchant - born: Turkey (British Subject). Also - Shusban Baronian - Wife - aged: 25 - born: Turkey (British Subject). Plus 2 bothers and 2 domestic servants. 1911 Census - Brae Coltage, Leigh Road, Knutsford, Cheshire. Son - aged: 15 - Scholar - born: Manchester. Head of household - Zarch Baronian - Married - aged: 46 - occ: Merchant - born: Turkey (Naturalised British Subject since 1893). Also - Shusban Baronian - Wife - aged: 25 - born: Turkey (Naturalised British Subject since 1893).. Plus 5 siblings and 4 domestic servants. Attended Wadham House School, Arthog Road, Hale and Manchester University. MIC - confirms his name and number and that he was awarded the BWM & the VM only. No other details listed. From:- http://www.roll-of-honour.com/Cheshire/HaleWadhamHouseSchool.html BARONIAN Haron J - Private 33006, 8th Battalion, Cheshire Regiment. Killed in action in Mesopotamia 11th April 1917. Aged 21. Born West Didsbury, enlisted Knutsford. Son of Zarch and Shushan Baronian, of Brae Cottage, Legh Rd., Knutsford, Cheshire. Cadet of Manchester University O.T.C. No known grave. Commemorated on BASRA MEMORIAL, Iraq. Panel 14 and 62. Extract from de Ruvigny's ROLL OF HONOUR 1914-1918, Part 3, page 16: BARONIAN, HARON, Private, No. 33006, 8th (Service) Battn. The Cheshire Regt., 2nd s. of Z. S. I. Baronian, of Brae Cottage, Knutsford, co. Chester, Export Merchant to China, by his wife, Shushan, dau, of C. Haronian; b. West Didsbury, 14 March, 1896; educ. Bowdon College and afterwards was a student at Manchester Victoria University, for Chinese, and Manchester School of Technology; joined the University O.T.C. on the outbreak of the European War, and, finding he could not obtain a commission, enlisted in the Cheshire Regt. 10 Dec. 1915; trained at Birkenhead served with the Expeditionary Force in Mesopotamla from 30 June, 1916; was wounded 1 Feb. 1917, and admitted to hospital at Basra: rejoined his regiment on recovery, and was killed in action between Dell-Abbas and Deltawa 11 AprIl following. Buried there. His intimate friend, Sergt. Arthur King, wrote: “On 10 April we received the news that the Turks, in large force, were attempting to outflank us. At dusk the same day, we countered this movement by having a ten-hours’ forced march towards this strong column of Turks. We were dog-tired to begin with but this march was the last straw. However, we staggered on somehow, and at dawn breakfast was served. This was the last time I saw Baron alive. We had breakfast together, and laughed and joked over the incidents of the march. When the fall-ln was ordered, we had to separate. Then we marched into the attack, passing our batteries en route. Soon we got under shell fire, which became terribly hot as we advanced, so the order was given to extend, advancing in several waves. I got to know afterwards that I was in the wave immediately behind Haron, about ten yards between us. The advance continued steadily, in spite of the heavy shelling, and soon we came under extremely heavy rifle fire. There was a low ridge, a few feet high, in front of us so a company was rushed up to hold it at all costs, because it was of tremendous strategic importance. They only just got there in time, for the Turks were advancing on it in large numbers, and were only a short distance away. Haron’s wave and mine continued to advance until we were within 100 yards of the ridge. Here Haron and his comrades were sent back for ammunition, and we were ordered to lie down. The ground was hard mud, baked by the strong sun, and was much too hard for us to dig in, so we had to lie there and wait orders. The Turkish artillery and rifle fire kept up its intensity, and we had a very warm time indeed. One bullet tore its way between my equipment and my heart and another took the edge off one of my pouches, but I was not touched. The sun was extremely hot, and I remember lying there hour after hour, wondering when and where I should be hit. There were thousands of locusts creeping over us and biting our hands and faces, but it was courting death to move. In the afternoon the rifle fire died down and the shelling was intermittent. As the wounded came past us, we asked them the usual questions — Who had been hit, and how many casualties, etc. I was very anxious about Haron, and wondered how he got on. Then one of the wounded said, ‘Have you seen Baronian?’ I said, 'No. Has he been hit?’ He said, ‘No, poor chap, he’s been killed,’ and he pointed to a dead man lying about ten yards away. At first I couldn’t realize it, I was too dazed, but I rushed forward and bent down over him. Yes, it was poor Haron, lying just as if he had gone to sleep His eyes were closed, and there was no sign of his being hit. Only a tell-tale little bullet hole in his tunic showed where he had been shot through the stomach.” The Head Master of Bowdon College also wrote: “He was one of our best, and upheld a very high standard during his ascendancy as Prefect, captain of games, and hard-working member of the sixth form. I remember so well how he struggled and tussled with logic during his last year. He had no liking for the subject, and was yoked to another boy who had a taste for such matters. He certainly fulfilled my dictum: 'If you know it is your duty, take a pleasure in it.’ He held, in a remarkable degree, the warm affection of masters and boys,” and Professor Parker, of Manchester University: Haron, who came with his brother Stephen when quite a boy to study Chinese with me for four years or more, from the very first impressed me by his delicacy in points of behaviour, and by his loyal attitude towards his elder brother. When he joined the O.T.C. he was naturally disappointed to find that there were difficulties in the way of obtaining a commission; but, as the war progressed and he heard that one of his class-mates with me had been killed, he announced to me that he had decided to enlist at the first possible moment. He came to dine at my house when in training at Birkenhead; cheerful under conditions of life so different from his comfortable Knutsford home, he was eagerly looking forward to ‘the front’ somewhere. That was the last I saw of him, though he several times wrote to me from Mesopotamia, always full of service and duty.” Unm. His father was a member of the Manchester Reform Club, 81 King Street, Manchester. |
Memorials found on: | |||
Wadham House School (Hale) | |||
Manchester University | |||
Manchester Technical College | |||
Manchester Reform Club | |||
Similar Names |