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Stockwell War Memorial

William Herbert Smale

18 August 2015 by SWM

W. H. Smale
Service no. 6810
Private, East Surrey Regiment, “C” Coy., 1st Battalion
Died age 30 on 29 July 1916
Son of Martha Tucker (formerly Smale) of 3 Kenchester Street, South Lambeth, London, and the late William James Smale.
Remembered at Thiepval Memorial, France

Brother of Joseph Charles Smale

Filed Under: S names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1916, age 30, Brothers, France

Joseph Charles Smale

18 August 2015 by SWM

J. C. Smale
Service no. G/2820
Private, Queen’s Own (Royal West Kent Regiment), “C” Coy., 8th Batallion
Died of wounds age 24 on 22 January 1916
CWGC: “Son of Martha Tucker (formerly Smale), and the late William James Smale, of 3 Kenchester Street, South Lambeth, London.”
Remembered at Boulogne Eastern Cemetery, France

Brother of William Herbert Smale

Information from the censuses

In 1911 Joseph Smale, 19, was a laundry foreman. He lived with his mother Martha Tucker, 48, stepfather George Tucker, 50, and siblings at 3 Kenchester Street, South Lambeth (roughly, behind the Tate Library). George Tucker, from Clapham, worked in a laundry. He had been married to Martha for six years – they had a son, Frederick Tucker, 6. Four of Martha’s other children lived in the household: William Smale, 25, a soapmaker; Lilian Smale, 23, a packer in a laundry; Thomas Smale, 21, a manager in a cigarette factory; Joseph; Edward Smale, 15, a electrician’s mate; Sidney Smale, 10. All the Smale children were born in Lambeth. In 1901 the Smales lived at 7 Wilkinson Street. Joseph’s father William James Smale, 49, gave his ocupation as “warehouseman – baskets”. Ten years previously the Smales were living at 18 Walberswick Street, South Lambeth Road.

Filed Under: S names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1916, age 24, Brothers, DOW, France

Percy Hendrick Sloots

18 August 2015 by SWM

P. H. Sloots
Service no. 25582
Lance Corporal, East Surrey Regiment, 12th Battalion
Died age 24 on 31 October 1918
Husband of Lilian E. E. Sloots (nee Mann – they married in March 1918) of 31 Gateley Road, Stockwell, London.
Remembered at Kezelberg Military Cemetery, Belgium

Information from the censuses

In 1911 Percy Hendrick Sloots was 15 and working as a telegraph messenger for the Post Office. He lived with his father, Dutch-born hairdresser George Sloots, 42, and mother Jane E. Sloots, 46, from Pimlico, and two younger brothers, Albert E. Sloots, 14, another telegraph messenger, and Reginald C. Slooots, 12, in four rooms at 86 Stockwell Road. The boys were all born in Stockwell. One other sibling had died. A boarder, Hugh Vollbrecht, a hairdresser’s assistant from Norwich lived with the family. In 1901 the family lived at 70 Stockwell Road. The Sloots had lived at that address since at least 1891 as George and Jane Sloots appear there on the census for that year.

Filed Under: S names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1918, age 24, Belgium, Died

Edward Arthur Slade

18 August 2015 by SWM

E. A. Slade
Service no. G/17166 (This service number, given on the Commonwealth War Graves Commission website for E.A. Slade, is not quoted on any other document known to date)
Private, The Queen’s (Royal West Surrey Regiment), Depot
Secondary Unit, Regiment transf. to (Cpl. 62899) 105th Coy. Labour Corps
Died 30 October 1917, aged about 24
Remembered Solferino Farm Cemetery, Belgium

This identification was made by Chris Burge, who writes:

Edward Arthur Slade was born in 1883 in Battersea, one of William and Leah Frances Slade’s three children. By 1901 the family were living in Kennington and Edward Slade worked as a carpenter. Edward was married on 7 September 1901 to Jessie Florence Merryweather at All Saints, South Lambeth, giving their address as 124 Crimsworth Road, an area dominated by the Nine Elms Locomotive Works.

By the time of the 1911 census, Edward and Jessie had three children, Edward aged 8, Jessie aged 7 and Florrie aged 5. Their son, Stanley Sidney Slade, was born in 1912. Edward now earned his living as a house painter and Jessie worked as an LCC school cleaner. The family of five occupied three rooms at 12 Union Street, Clapham. Two other people lived in two rooms at the same address.

Edward Arthur Slade was probably conscripted in 1916, first joining a training battalion of the Royal Fusiliers. Edward was sent to France as private (corporal?) 53436, Royal Fusiliers at an unknown date.

The Labour Corps was created at the beginning of 1917 with men from the Royal Fusiliers 36th(Labour) Battalion becoming the 105 Company and given service numbers between 62401 and 63000. It is very likely the Edward Slade was wounded or injured while serving in the infantry before he was transferred to the Labour Corps some time in 1917. Edward Arthur Slade lost his life in unknown circumstances on 30 October 1917.

His widow Jessie received a £6 10s war gratuity in 1919 and a widow’s pension for herself and her four children: Jessie Florence Slade, Edward Arthur Slade, Jessie Minnie Slade and Stanley Sidney Slade.

Jessie was remarried in 1919 to Charles E. Forbes and continued to live at 12 Union Street until 1924. Edward’s son, Stanley was living in Larkhall Lane in the 1930s and was a resident of Sutton when he passed away in 2000, aged 87.

Filed Under: S names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1917, age 24, Belgium, Died

Ernest Thomas Skudder

18 August 2015 by SWM

E. T. Skudder
Service no. 651614
Rifleman, London Regiment (First Surrey Rifles), 21st Battalion
Enlisted at Camberwell; lived in Clapham
Wounded accidentally on 18 February 1918, aged 20.
Remembered at Rocquigny-Equancourt Road British Cemetery, Manancourt, France

National Roll of the Great War 1914-1918
SKUDDER, E. T., Rifleman, 21st London Regiment (1st Surrey Rifles).
He volunteered in June 1915, and on completing his training was sent in the following year to the Western Front, where he played an important part in several battles, including those of Hill 60, Ypres, II, Loos and Vimy Ridge. He was unhappily killed in action at Cambrai, during the Allied Advance in October 1918*, and was entitled to the General Service and Victory Medals.
“Honour to the immortal dead, who gave their youth that the world might grow old in peace.”
10, Clarence Street, Clapham, S.W.4.

* CWGC and Soldiers Died in the Great War give 18 February as Skudder’s date of death.

British Army WWI Service Records 1914-1920

On 18 February 1918, at Cambrai, France, Ernest Thomas Skudder, a 20-year-old Rifleman in the 21st London Regiment, was with his platoon at the front. They were taking part in an exercise to test a new type of grenade, the No. 84, Mark II. Unfortunately Skudder remained standing after the order was given to get down, and he died of multiple and severe wounds, to the neck, left shoulder, arm. “Hand spattered,” noted [an officer] in the file.

As was usual in such cases, the Army held a Court of Enquiry in the Field. The notes from this have been lost so we do not know the conclusions it came to. However, superior officers felt that questions remained. “Was a qualified officer in charge of the ‘throwing,’ in accordance with instructions contained in Para I, Chapter IX, SS 182 – Part II, please?” they asked. What happened, exactly, to Rifleman A. Silverton, who was apparently caught up in the explosion, where did he get his much less severe injuries? Captain F. C. Barker and his collegues Second Lieutenants G. N. C. Woodruff and A. W. Humphreys wanted answers.

When soldiers received injuries that were not severe enough to permanently damage them but sufficient to send them home to “Blighty” to recover, the Army was immediately suspicious. Were these injuries SIWs (self-inflicted wounds)? The officers were evidently suspicious about Silverton. In addition, if there was someone to blame for the loss of Skudder, they wanted to know about it.

At the beginning of the second enquiry they were interested in Silverton. What was the extent of his wounds? He was wounded in the back of the leg and on the thigh, according to the testimony of Serjeant W. Ellis. Silverton was sent to the Aid Post, which is where Corporal Myers, another witness, found him. Myers had gone there to enquiry about Skudder, who had taken the full force of the bomb.

The party had been testing the throwing of grenades, with an instructor and assistant instructor. The thrower stood up with the instructor, and aimed over the top of the trench at the rifle butts, which were about 100 yards away. However, 15 yards to the right of this group stood Skudder with the rest of his party behind him. He was not in the line of fire, but, according to one witness, Rifleman W. Richardson, he was the only one not to obey the order to get down. Lance Corporal Gray, whom the officers suspected had failed in his duties, claimed he did not notice anyone not lying down, the reason being that he had got into the trench and was facing in the opposite direction to Skudder and his party.
It is unclear from what is left in the file exactly what happened next. The bomb exploded and killed Skudder. From the diagram it looks as if the bomb landed in the trench near Skudder. However, the conclusion of the Enquiry includes one tantalising line: “If Skudder had obeyed the order given by Sgt. W. Ellis he would not have been wounded. He went forward with the intention of throwing the bomb clear of the trench.” Did the bomb land in the trench and did Skudder attempt to pick it up and throw it out of harm’s way?

In the event, the enquiry found no wilful negligence. They blamed Gray but decided to take no action as there was no intention to harm Skudder. As for Silverton, there was not enough evidence to decide how he was injured.
Skudder death, after serving 2 years and 259 days, bereaved his parents, Emma Elizabeth and Alfred Thomas, and sister Edith Emma. Just a few months later, in July, his mother died of flu and pleuropneumonia. She was 58. The Army sent on Skudder’s effects: an identity disc, letters, a small pocket notebook, a cigarette case, a Christmas card, a “wounded stripe” (he had received a gunshot wound to his thigh in June 1917), a canvas wallet and a linen bag.

In life, Skudder stood 5 feet 6¼ inches tall. He measured 36½ inches around the chest. His physical development was deemed “good.” Skudder’s war was, at least on paper and disregarding the accident that ended it, not especially eventful. We know from the National Roll that he took part in several of the war’s most bitter battles, including Hill 60, the Second Battle of Ypres, Loos and Vimy Ridge. During this time he had only one black mark against his name, and that was before he was posted to France – for being absent from Retreat until Tattoo on 21 November 1915, for which he was punished with three hours’ pack drill and the loss of two days’ pay. He was in England for five months in 1916, during which he was hospitalised for 28 days with “debility following influenza.”

We cannot know what, if anything, the Army told Skudder’s parents about his accidental death.

Information from the 1911 census

In 1911 Ernest Thomas Skudder, then 13, was living at  26 Clarence Street, Studley Road, Stockwell with his parents and sister. His father, Alfred Thomas Skudder, 53, was a brewer’s drayman from Greenwich; his mother, Elizabeth Emma Skudder, 50, was born in Clapham. Edith Emma Skudder, his sister, aged 11, was born in Lambeth like her brother. The family had 5 rooms.

Filed Under: S names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1918, Accident, age 20, France

Louis Henry Sims

18 August 2015 by SWM

L. H. Sims
Service no. R/25464
Rifleman, King’s Royal Rifle Corps, 9th Battalion
Born in Lambeth; enlisted in Lambeth; lived in Wandsworth
Killed in action on 21 August 1917, aged about 30
Remembered at Tyne Cot Memorial, Belgium

Information from the censuses

Louis Henry Sims was an only child. In 1911, aged 24, he was working as a printer’s labourer. His parents, Henry William Sims, 51, a copper and steel plate printer born in Lambeth, and Henrietta Sims, 50, from Richmond, had had two children, but one died. The family lived at 31 Ely Place, Stockwell, in 6 rooms, which they shared with 3 boarders, all born in Lambeth: Emma Chaproniere, 76, a pensioner; Louie Chaproniere, 33, a sewing machinist; and Ivy Henrietta Chaproniere, 5. Ten years previously, the Sims family lived at 37 Ely Place. Henry was born in Lambeth.


On 14 November he married Daisy Elizabeth Amos at St Stephen’s, South Lambeth. 

Filed Under: S names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1917, age 30, Belgium, KIA

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

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  • 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