This time two years ago, with the first fireworks bursting outside my flat in India, I was struggling to publish my Chailey 1914-1918 commemoration site. I'd set myself the goal to get it published in 2005 and I made it with a few hours to spare. Publishing my research on-line was the best thing I ever did. Although I had a lot of information, there were - and still are - huge gaps which I hoped that visitors to my site would help fill. They have and they continue to do so.
So again, thank you to everybody who has helped me over the past 24 months. Just today, as a result of information receive from a distant relative, I have been able to update the page for Frederick Sweetman, a Wivelsfield man who joined the Royal Sussex Regiment Special Reserve in September 1914, served overseas twice and was then discharged on a pension of ten shillings a week in 1916. Frederick was a widower when war was declared yet, with two young daughters to support, that didn't stop him from volunteering to serve his King and Country.
Tonight I shall raise a glass to the men and women of Chailey and indeed to all our country's servicemen and women (past and present) whose sacrifices allow us to enjoy the freedoms we so happily take for granted.
Happy New Year to you all.
Commemorating and remembering the lives of the men and women of Chailey, Sussex during the Great War 1914-1918 and remembering too the sick and wounded soldiers nursed by Sussex 54 VAD. This is their story.
Monday, December 31, 2007
Frederick Ernest Sweetman
I've updated the page for Frederick Ernest Sweetman thanks to additional information contained in his surviving service record (and a prompt from a distant relative). Frederick's service record indicates that he was a regular soldier and I think it likely that he was also a Boer War veteran, although if he was, the papers aren't with his WW1 papers in the WO 364 series. Frederick was also the brother-in-law of George Kenward, another Chailey man who served his King and Country.
Saturday, December 29, 2007
Ernest Arthur Malins
I've added a photograph of Ernest Arthur Malins (standing left), along with his brother Sidney Howard Williams Malins. Both men wear the cap badge of the Royal West Kent Regiment. The photograph was taken in England with the men's parents.
Ernest was a patient at Hickwells in Chailey and would later be killed on the Somme in July 1916. Sidney would survive the war, attaining the rank of warrant officer class 2 with the Northumberland Fusiliers.
Ernest was a patient at Hickwells in Chailey and would later be killed on the Somme in July 1916. Sidney would survive the war, attaining the rank of warrant officer class 2 with the Northumberland Fusiliers.
Friday, December 28, 2007
Ivan Duffield corrected
Thanks to Eleanor Manvell, I've corrected Ivan Duffield's record. I had recorded this man as having been born in Slinfold, Sussex when in fact the man recorded in Reverend Jellicoe's monthly parish returns had been born at Ringmer.
Thomas Jesse Woodhams
I knew from a previous contact that Thomas Woodhams emigrated to the US some time before 1915. Now, thanks to Dennis Savage in Australia, I've been able to pinpoint that date (as well as the name of the ship on which he sailed) and I've consequently updated Thomas's page with this information. He served with the RFA during the First World War.
259027 Pte Roland Gilbert, Labour Corps
The undated photo above, sent to me by Mike Gilbert, features his grandfather Roland Gilbert (seated third from left) when he was serving in the Royal Sussex Regiment. The reverse of the card, sent to his three children, simply reads, love to you all, Daddy.
In March 1915, Chailey Parish Magazine had noted that Roland Gilbert was serving his King and Country. In October 1915 it reported, Gilbert, Private R, 10th RoyalSussex , France .
It is clear from the entry in Chailey Parish Magazine that, despite being
the breadwinner for four children, Roland Gilbert voluntarily enlisted in the
army. He would have been 35 years old by then. Mike Gilbert
remembers his father saying that he had to leave school in 1915 to help in the
market garden as his father had joined the army. Fortunately, as mentioned above, Roland survived the war and came home to
Chailey to continue bringing up his family.
My thanks to Mike Gilbert for the wonderful photos of his grandfather, father and aunts.
In March 1915, Chailey Parish Magazine had noted that Roland Gilbert was serving his King and Country. In October 1915 it reported, Gilbert, Private R, 10th Royal
Ten months later in August 1916 the parish magazine noted that Private
Gilbert has been wounded and was in England . His final entry in the parish magazine
appears in September 1917 which simply states, Gilbert, Private R, 10th Royal Sussex . Wounded.
It seems likely that Roland Gilbert was 4469 Private Roland Gilbert. His medal index card has two numbers and two regiments for him, the second being 259027, a
Labour Corps number. It would seem to
fit the information contained in the parish magazine that Private Gilbert was
wounded with the 10th Royal Sussex Regiment, returned to England to
recuperate and then transferred to the Labour Corps.
Roland Gilbert was born in Burwash ,
Sussex in 1880,
his birth registered in the Ticehurst district in March of that year. He
was the son of William and Ann Gilbert and appears on the 1881 census for
Burwash as a one year old infant. The family was living at Toll Gate
Cottage and comprised William Gilbert (aged 23), an agricultural Labourer,
his wife Ann (aged 27), Roland and the couple's one month old daughter (un-named
on the census return). All four family members are noted as having been
born in Burwash. They also shared the house with another family: Harry
Kemp (aged 71) and his two daughters: Sarah Kemp (aged 40) and Hannah Kemp
(aged 38 and bed-ridden).
I have been unable to locate the family on the census returns for 1891
and 1901 but thanks to Roland's grandson, Mike Gilbert, who contacted me as a
result of finding this website, Iam able to fill in further details post 1901.
In 1902 Roland married Mabel Day, their marriage registered in the Brighton district in the December quarter of that
year. Four children followed quickly: Percy Gilbert (born in 1903),
Dorothy Gilbert (born in 1904), Ella Gilbert (born in 1905) and Kathleen
Gilbert (born in 1907). The family lived in Lower
Station Road , Chailey, next door to Mabel's
parents William and Emma who let rooms and had a small market garden.
Mike Gilbert thinks that the properties were called The Pines and Fernside (one
of these now re-named Wray Lodge). This ties in with Kelly's Directory
for 1915 which notes William as being the owner of Pines Apartments.
Logic suggests therefore that Roland and his family lived at Fernside.
In 1909, Mabel Gilbert died at the young age of 30 and her sister became
a surrogate mother to the four young Gilbert children.
My thanks to Mike Gilbert for the wonderful photos of his grandfather, father and aunts.
Wednesday, December 26, 2007
Much to add
Although I've not updated this page for a while, there is a lot to add to the site, both as a result of contact from relatives and also thanks to service records A-C (the burnt documents) now available on-line.
The reason for not updating the site is as a result of work commitments, other WW1 projects, family matters and my site hosts experiencing a security threat which has led to them changing all the passwords. Once I fathom out how to re-instate everything, normal service will be resumed.
The reason for not updating the site is as a result of work commitments, other WW1 projects, family matters and my site hosts experiencing a security threat which has led to them changing all the passwords. Once I fathom out how to re-instate everything, normal service will be resumed.
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