Showing posts with label Battle of the Somme. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Battle of the Somme. Show all posts

Tuesday, 15 November 2016

Somme Casualty - Leicestershire lad who didn't want to go

Lance Corporal 24396 Whattoff Adcock
2nd Btn South Staffs Regt
Killed in Action 15 November 1916
Age - 27




                      

Whattoff Adcock was born in Syston, Leicestershire in 1889. His mother was Mary and his Father, David. David Adcock died tragically in 1895 leaving Mary and her four children without a father. Mary was a 'charwoman' and provided for her family, Adelaide, Ernest, Whattoff and David. Hosiery and Footwear industries were major employers in Leicestershire and Adelaide became a Griswold Hand whilst her three brothers went into the shoe trade. The family lived on Paddock Row in Syston and moved to School Street where they were living in 1911.

In July 1914 Whattoff married Katherine MacDonald, who was 'in service' in the village. His brother and sister were witnesses. When war was declared he didn't want to leave his wife of one month and remained in the shoe trade, unlike his brother, David, who was a volunteer and served with the Leicestershire Regiment - The Tigers.

After the cataclysmic battle that raged for four-and-a-half months in Picardy, Whattoff was compelled to enlist, which he did at Syston, but unlike his younger brother he served with the 2nd Battalion of the South Staffordshire Regiment.

After mobilising to France the Regiment were involved in an assault at the end of the battle we now know as The Battle of the Somme and Whattoff was missing in action. A report in the parish magazine in August 1917 read:


LANCE CORPORAL WHATTOFF ADCOCK (2nd South Staffords) Missing, 13th November 1916, now reported killed in action.

His final resting place is at Serre Road Cemetery No. 1. where his headstone reads that he died on the 15th November 1916. 

He is remembered on the war memorial in Syston village and on the Roll of Honour in the church.




Up the line


Standing in rows


A whistle blows. 
Loved ones weeping.

In the fields
Poppies grow,
Where friends and foe
Are sleeping.

In our hearts
We hold them dear
Who knew no fear.
Memoria keeping.

We will remember them.


©  Dr Karen Ette
15 November 2016

Saturday, 2 July 2016

Staffordshire Lad Killed on the Somme

Second Lieutenant Arthur Donald Chapman
Serving with the 1/5th Battalion of the North Staffordshire Regiment, Territorial Force.Killed in Action 1st July 1916   Age: 23


Arthur Donald Chapman was born in the July/August/September quarter of 1892. He was the son of Albert Chapman of Coalville, Leicestershire, a commercial traveller who was born in  1863 and his wife Clara, nee Shenton, born in 1862, in Leicester. In 1901 the family home was 12 Herrick Road, Loughborough.

Arthur had a brother, Albert Rowland, who had been born in1891 in Leicester. His five sisters, all born in Loughborough, Leicestershire, were Kathleen Mary, born 1894, Clara Doris, born 1896, Olive Marjorie, born 1899, Adeline Shenton, born 1900 and Phyllis, born August 1903.

Arthur Chapman was educated at the Loughborough Grammar School and in April 1911 the family had moved to 29 Burton Street, Loughborough, but he was employed as a boot and shoe trade student and was residing as a boarder at 218 and 220, Kettering Road, Northampton with Mr William Chamberlain, a surgeon, and his wife, Grace. 

Arthur was working in South Africa when he answered his country’s call and enlisted with the 1st 5th Battalion of the North Staffordshire Regiment, where he gained his commission and was popular with the members of the Battalion. On the 1st July 1916 the North Staffords took part in a diversionary attack at Gommecourt and Arthur was reported missing then killed in action, aged 23. His personal effects are recorded as £7 9s 10d plus £35 5s.

Second Lieutenant Arthur Chapman is remembered on the Thiepval Memorial to the missing in France, Pier and Face 14B and 14C, where his age is recorded as 24, although he had not quite reached his twenty-fourth birthday when he died.
© Dr Karen Ette
Sources:
Doyle, Michael, Their Name Liveth for Evermore: The Great War Roll of Honour for Leicestershire and Rutland (Billingborough, Michael Doyle, 2009)
The National Archives
The Loughborough Roll of Honour: http://www.loughborough-rollofhonour.com/page37.htm