• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Stockwell War Memorial

Stockwell War Memorial

Friends of Stockwell War Memorial & Gardens

  • Home
  • Order the book (free download)
  • About
  • The men of Stockwell
  • History of the Memorial
  • Centenary Exhibition
  • Contact
  • Newsletter
  • Friends Group

SWM

William Berks Hudson

11 August 2015 by SWM

W. B. Hudson
Service no. 4015
Rifleman, London Regiment (City of London Rifles), “A” Coy. 6th Battalion
Born in South Lambeth; enlisted in London; lived in Stockwell
Killed in action age 27 on 8 October 1916
CWGC: “Son of John Robert and Matilda Hudson, of 24 Chantrey Road, Stockwell, London.”
Remembered at Warlencourt British Cemetery, Pas de Calais, France

Information from the 1911 census

Ledger clerk William Berks Hudson, 22, lived with his widowed mother and his aunt at 24 Chantrey Road, Brixton. Matilda Hudson, 50, and her single sister Elizabeth Anne Berks, both worked as a draper’s assistants. They were born in Newcastle, Staffordshire. William was an only child.

Filed Under: H names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1916, age 27, France, KIA, only child

Samuel Charles Howden

11 August 2015 by SWM

S. C. Howden
Service no. G/23011
Private, Royal Sussex Regiment, 7th Battalion
Died age 19 on 5 April 1918
Son of Samuel Charles and Emily Howden, of 44, Grenville Place, Brighton.
Remembered at Bouzincourt Ridge Cemetery, Albert, France

Information from the censuses

In 1911, 12-year-old Samuel Charles Howden, whose father was also called Samuel Charles, lived at 155 Pullens Buildings, Amelia Street, off Walworth Road. Samuel Charles senior, 36, born in south Hackney, was a motor cab driver. His mother, Emily, 32, was from Walworth. There were 4 children, all born in West Newington, apart from Mabel, who was born in Walworth:
Samuel Charles Howden, 12
Henry Hubert Howden, 9
Mabel Emily Howden, 6
Wilfred William, 4 months
Samuel and Emily had had 5 children, 4 of them surviving in 1911.
In 1901 the Howden family lived at 160 Manor Place, Newington. Alice R. Hughes, 17, Emily’s sister, lived with them and worked as a clothes sorter.

Filed Under: H names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1918, age 19, Died, France

G. C. Horsley

11 August 2015 by SWM

Not identified.

Filed Under: H names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: No information

William Thomas Hornsby

11 August 2015 by SWM

W. T. Hornsby
Service no. 202656
Corporal, London Regiment (Royal Fusiliers), 2nd/1st Battalion
Born in Clapham; enlisted in Paddington; lived in Lambeth
Died 16 June 1917
Remembered at Arras Memorial, Pas de Calais, France

Hornsby was born in Clapham on 19 February 1894, the son of John Hornsby, a painter and decorator, and Lydia. In 1911 he was living at 19 Clarence Street, South Lambeth with his parents, three siblings and two boarders, and working as a dining car attendant for the London & South West Railway. He enlisted in Paddington, west London. 

Filed Under: H names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1917, France

F. W. Hopkins

11 August 2015 by SWM

F. W. Hopkins
Service no. 55321
Private, Welsh Regiment, 2nd Battalion
Formerly 31166, the King’s Own Shropshire Light Infantry
Died of wounds 22 September 1918, aged about 36
Buried at Brie Cemetery, Somme, France (grave I C 9)

Remembered at Stockwell War Memorial and on a wooden memorial plaque at Westminster Abbey, London, where he worked as a plumber (information from L. Hopkins, great-grandson)

Research contributed by Marietta Crichton Stuart

Hopkins’ Medal Index card names him as Frederick Hopkins and shows that he was eligible for the Victory and British Medals.

Soldiers Died in the Great War records him as Private Frederick William Hopkins, born in Lambeth, residence Walworth, Middx (sic), Enlisted Kensington, Middx (sic), Private, Welsh Regiment, 2nd Battalion, number 55321, died of wounds, theatre of war Western European Theatre, comments formerly 31166, Shropshire LI.

The CWGC entry gives no family details.

Frederick William Hopkins was born between April and June 1882 in Lambeth. He was the son of William and Mary Ann Hopkins nee Rayner. The family was living at 4 China Walk in North Lambeth and William worked as a wine cellarman. They had three daughters: Mabel, Alice and Florence. William died in 1888.

On the 1891 census, Mary Hopkins is a widow, working as a charwoman and living with her son Frederick and three daughters at 15 Union Street in North Lambeth.

Between October and December 1901 when he was 20, Frederick married Nellie Eliza L. Walker.

Nellie Walker was born in December 1881, the daughter of William and Louisa Walker (nee Dixon) who had married at St Philip’s Lambeth. Her father was a Nottingham born iron turner. When Nellie was baptised on 5 March 1882 in the parish of Emmanuel, Surrey, the family’s address was given as 120 Vauxhall Terrace and her father’s occupation was an engineer.

On the 1891 census Nellie was living with her parents at 55 Stockwell Green and her four brothers: William 5, Robert 4, Horace 2 and Alfred 2 months and one sister, Louisa aged 5. Four of the children were Lambeth-born and two were born in Southwark.

On the 1901 census Nellie Walker was living in 33 Villa Road and working as a general servant (domestic). This was the home of Marion Butler, 58, a boarding-house keeper, with three boarders, Henrietta Mark (living on own means), Alfred A C ?Suggate, a widower who was a civil engineer, and John Baddley, a ?drapery warehouseman (employer).

Nellie and Frederick Hopkins were married October-December 1901 and their first child, Dorothy Amelia, was born on 2 November that year. When Dorothy was baptised at St Mary’s the Less, Princes Road on 19 February the following year, the family was living at 63 Fitzalan Street in Kennington and Frederick was working as a plumber.

Their son Frederick William (Junior) was born in 1904 and a second daughter, Nellie Ethel, in 1908. All three Hopkins children were born in Lambeth.

On the 1911 census the family was living at 31 Upper Kennington Lane. Frederick was now 29 and working as a plumber/journeyman in the building trade. Nellie was 28, Dorothy 9, Frederick 7 and Nellie 2.

Frederick’s army records do not appear to have survived for either the Shropshire Light Infantry or the Welsh Regiment. His entry on Soldiers died says he enlisted in Kensington. The 2nd Battalion Welsh regiment was a regular battalion, and  it is possible that Frederick was in one of the territorial battalions of the 2nd.

As he was ineligible for either a 1914 or 1915 star medal, the assumption is that Frederick entered a theatre of war in 1916. In September 1918 the 2nd Welsh were part of the 1st Division who fought in the Battle of Epehy during what was later known as the Advance to Victory. By 19 September the Division had been unable to capture either the fortified village of Fresnoy le Petit or the mass of trenches known as the Quadrilateral and the Corps Commander decided to bombard these two strong positions before renewing the attack on 24 September. It is possible that it was during this fighting that Frederick was wounded. He may have been taken to one of the casualty clearing stations near Brie and subsequently died of his wounds. He was then buried in Brie Cemetery.

Fifty years later, his widow, Nellie E. Hopkins, died in Lambeth during the winter of 1967. She was 85.

Filed Under: H names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1918, age 36, DOW, France

Joseph Honer

11 August 2015 by SWM

J. F. Honer
Service no. 471573
Rifleman, London Regiment (The Rangers), 12th Battalion
Enlisted in London; lived in South Lambeth
Killed in action on 1 July 1916, aged about 18
Remembered at Gommecourt British Cemetery No 2, Hebuterne, Pas de Calais, France

 

 

Filed Under: H names, Somme first day, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1 July 1916, 1916, age 18, France, KIA

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 57
  • Page 58
  • Page 59
  • Page 60
  • Page 61
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 100
  • Go to Next Page »

Footer

The Men of Stockwell

  • All the men
  • Died on 1 July 1916
  • Brothers
  • Listed on St Mark’s War Memorial
  • Listed on St Andrew’s War Memorial
  • Listed on St John’s War Memorial

SEARCH THE SITE

Other local memorials

  • St Mark’s, Kennington
  • St Andrew’s, Landor Road
  • St Michael’s Church shrine
  • Wynne Road sorting office
  • Brixton Town Hall
  • St John’s Church
  • Michael Church, Myatts Fields
  • St Mark’s War Shrine
  • St Anne’s War Crucifix
  • Clapham War Memorials

About this site

This site lists 574 men named on Stockwell War Memorial in London SW9.

If you would like to contribute information or images to the site, please email stockwellmemorialfriends@gmail.com

Copyright © 2025 · Genesis Sample On Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

  • All the men
  • Died on 1 July 1916
  • Brothers
  • Listed on St Mark’s War Memorial
  • Listed on St Andrew’s War Memorial
  • Listed on St John’s War Memorial