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Kingsley Brown | |||
Rank: | Private | Number: | 4408 |
Ship/Rgn/Sqn No: | 20th Bn | ||
Name of Rgt or Ship: | Royal Fusiliers (City of London Rgt)* | ||
Died: | 20/07/1916 | Age: | 21 |
How Died: | Killed in Action | ||
Country of burial: | France | ||
Cemetery or Memorial: | Thiepval Memorial | ||
Town Memorial: | Altrincham | ||
Extra Information: | |||
Born during the March quarter 1895 in the Bolton R.D. - ref: 8c/484, the youngest son of James & Elizabeth Brown (nee Isherwood). 1901 Census - 791 Chorley Old Road, Bolton. Son - aged: 6 - born: Bolton, Lancashire. Head of household - James Brown - Married - aged: 40 - occ: Drapers Manager - born: Oldham, Lancashire. Also - Elizabeth Brown - Wife - aged: 40 - born: Bolton. Plus 2 elder siblings, including his eldest brother - William Isherwood Brown who was also killed during WW1. 1911 Census - 45 George Street, Altrincham. Son - aged: 16 - occ: Shippers Apprentice - born: Turton, Lancashire. Head of household - James Brown - Married - aged: 51 - occ: Drapers Shopkeeper - born: Liverpool. Lancashire. Also - Elizabeth Brown - Wife - aged: 50 - born: Turton, Lancashire. Plus his eldest brother - William Isherwood Brown who was also killed during WW1. His father became a Local Councillor. Educated at the Bolton Church Institute and the Bradbury High School, Altrincham. Employed by the firm of John Walkden & Co. Shippers of Lagos, West Africa and Manchester. Attended St. George's Church. Enlisted in August 1914, trained at Epsom, Mansfield & Salisbury Plain. Drafted to the front in Novemebr 1915 in the Manchester Section of the Public Schools & Universities Battalion. MIC - Drafted to France on the 14th November 1915. Awarded the BWM - 15 Star - Victory. The 06/10/1914 edition of the local newspaper carried an article on him with the heading "WITH KITCHENER'S ARMY - HAPPY & CONTENTED SOLDIERS". The letter from him to his father Cllr. James Brown, stated that he was at Epsom and that there were 240 men plus officers based there. Their day started out with Reveille at 05.45 hrs so that the men can meet up on the village green at 06.30 hrs. After an hour of Swedish Drill in either the fields or on the roads, they return to their billets for breakfast and parade at 10.00 hrs. The mornings were spent marching through lovely scenery to Woodcote Park about 2 miles away. After an hours platoon drill, they marched in 4s back to Epsom. In the afternoon they stayed in the parade ground for company drill and finally assemble at between 16.00 hrs to 17.00 hrs and dismissed for the day. Lights out was 20.00 hrs and they were not permitted to travel beyond five miles from the Camp, with certain building, etc being out of bounds. He wrote home about his chum Private Andrew Dunlop Hughes who was killed on the 22/06/1916 at Givenchy. He was killed a short distance from where his brother, William Isherwood Brown had been killed a few months earlier. I am grateful to Gary Fisher for the following batallion circumstances at the time of Kingsley Brown's death:- In July 1916, the 20th Battalion, Royal Fusiliers were on the Somme, serving in the 33rd Division, 19th Brigade. The War Diary says that they were in High Wood with the 19th July Brigade making an attack on the 20th at 3.25 am in support of the 1st Cameronians and 5th Scottish Rifles with the 2nd Royal Welsh Fusiliers in Reserve. His death was reported in the 01/08/1916 edition of the Altrincham Guardian. Listed in the Guardian Year Book - Roll of Honour for 1917 and commemorated in the Altrincham & District Roll of Honour and the Timperley Sports Club Memorial. |
Memorials found on: | |||
St. George's (Altrincham) | |||
St. Margaret's (Dunham Massey) | |||
Altrincham & District Roll of Honour | |||
Timperley Sports Club | |||
Bradbury Central School | |||