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Stockwell War Memorial

Stockwell War Memorial

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age 22

Henry James Dighton

10 August 2015 by SWM

H. J. Dighton
Service no. 8159
Private, Lincolnshire Regiment, 2nd/5th Battalion
Died aged about 22 on 29 April 1918
Son of Clara Dighton, of 68 Crimsworth Road, South Lambeth, London.
Remembered at Arneke British Cemetery, Nord, France

Information from the 1911 census

Henry (or Harry) Dighton was 15 and working as a grocer’s assistant in 1911. He lived with his family in 4 rooms at 35 a Crimsworth Road, off Brixton Road. His father, James Dighton, 46, who was born in Pimlico, worked as a caterer’s porter. His mother, Clara Dighton (née Baxter), 47, was born in Paddington. They had 6 surviving children (of 8):
William Dighton, 21, a railway van shifter, born in Hammersmith, west London
Isabelle Dighton, 20, a laundry ironer, born in Kensington
Dorothy Dighton, 18, a layer-on for a printer, born in Lee
Harry (Henry) Dighton, 15, a grocer’s assistant, born in Forest Hill
Albert Dighton, 10, born in Lambeth
Stanley Dighton, 7, born in Lambeth

Filed Under: D names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1918, age 22, Died, France

Arthur Stephen Crumpler

10 August 2015 by SWM

A. S. Crumpler
Service no. SS/112057
Leading Stoker, Royal Navy, H.M.S. Cornwallis
Died on 9 January 1917, aged 22
Remembered at Chatham Naval Memorial, Kent
Crumpler was one of 15 men who died when the Cornwallis was torpedoed by the German U-boat (U-32) off Malta. He had previously survived the sinking of the Cressy, which went down in the North Sea in less than 30 minutes on 22 September 1914, after an atttack by the U-boat U-9.

Information from the 1911 census

In civilian life, Crumpler was a plumber’s mate working in the building trade. One of five children, he was born in Charminster, Dorset. In 1911, he lived with his family in five rooms at 41 Dorset Road, Stockwell. Crumpler’s widowed mother, Mary Ann, was a newsagent and tobacconist, from Martinstown, Dorset.

Filed Under: C names, Chatham Naval Memorial, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1917, age 22, Died, naval

Edward George Cox

10 August 2015 by SWM

Chris Burge writes:

E.G. Cox
Rifleman, London Regiment (London Irish Rifles), ‘B’ Coy.
Service no. 590198
Died in hospital in the UK on 18 February 1919, aged 22
Remembered at West Norwood Cemetery and Crematorium

Edward George Cox was born on 10 May 1896 and baptised at Holy Trinity (demolished in 1953), Vauxhall Bridge Road in Pimlico on the north side of the Thames, on 7 June 1896 when his parents Edward Charles and Harriet Cox were living at 32 Ponsonby Terrace in Pimlico. Edward’s father worked as a moulder in a brass foundry. Four years later, when Edward’s sister Mabel Johanna was born the family lived at 30 Garden Street [where?]. At the time of the 1901 census, the Cox family were living in two rooms at 54 Romney Buildings in Erasmus Street, just behind the Tate Gallery (now Tate Britain). 

At the age of five, in 1902, Edward George Cox attended the newly-opened Millbank School, across the street from the Romney Buildings. The school, and Edward’s early home, were part of the Millbank Estate, an ambitious housing scheme built between 1897 and 1902 by the London County Council. Two years later, when their third child, Ivy Georgina, was born, the Cox family had moved again, to 11 Hunter Buildings on the recently built London County Council Borough Road Estate.  

By 1911, Edward and family were living in more suburban surroundings at 5 Hill Street, Peckham, near the corner with Bird in Bush Road and close to the Surrey Canal. The Cox household then consisted of: Edward Charles, 40, and Harriett, 44; Edward George, 14; Mabel Johanna, 10; and Ivy Georgina, seven. In 16 years of marriage, Edward’s mother had borne four children, of whom three had survived. Edward had followed his father and now worked in a brass foundry. The Cox family lived in four rooms, the fifth room being occupied by Dora Saunders, a 74-year-old widow in a receipt of her old-age pension. 

Edward George Cox was already a member of the part-time Territorial Force at the outbreak of war. His original service number 1349 corresponds to those joining the London Irish Rifles towards the end of 1913, qualifying him as a recipient of the Territorial Force War Medal. (Note: The CWGC information refers to the wrong TF medal. The criteria for the Territorial Force War Medal is explained here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territorial_War_Medal.)The medal roll of the 18th (County of London) Battalion (London Irish Rifles) was annotated with the dates and theatres Edward George Cox served in, and this corresponds with soldiers in the 2nd Battalion who served in France, Salonika, Egypt and Palestine 

Captain Ernest May wrote the story of the 2/18th London Regiment (2nd Battalion), London Irish Rifles during the Great War, a work started in 1926 but not completed and published until 1972. It explains how the battalion was disbanded in Palestine around June and July 1918 and the men drafted to other battalions in their Brigade. But the medal roll entry for Edward George Cox shows him leaving the theatre months earlier, on 6 March. Although wounding or sickness are possible explanations, there are no surviving records to say why or when Edward George Cox returned to the UK. The Army Registers of Soldiers’ Effects merely records that Edward George Cox ‘died in hospital’ on 18 February 1919. His death was registered in the district of Weymouth and he was buried on 25 February 1919 at West Norwood Cemetery.

The Cox family were living at 48 Stockwell Park Crescent when Edward’s father passed away in 1934, aged 64. Edward’s mother Harriet moved to Sutton to live with her married daughter Ivy. Harriet Cox died in Sutton in 1942, aged 75. 

Filed Under: C names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1919, age 22, Chris Burge, Home, illness

Walter William Cook

10 August 2015 by SWM

Walter W. Cook
Service no. G/43050
Private, Middlesex Regiment, 4th Battalion
Died age 22 on 28 April 1917
Son of the late Edwin Charles and Jane Cook.
Remembered at Arras Memorial, France

Filed Under: C names, St Andrew's War Memorial, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1917, age 22, Died, France

Joseph Robert Clarke

10 August 2015 by SWM

J. R. Clarke
Service no. 15257
Private, Royal Fusiliers, 11th Battalion
Died age 22 on 1 November 1918
Son of Mrs A. Clarke, of 20 Beech Street, Dorset Road, Clapham, London
Remembered at Tourgeville Military Cemetery, Calvados, France

Filed Under: C names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1918, age 22, Died, France

Alfred Charles Clarke

10 August 2015 by SWM

A. C. Clarke
Service no. 453028
Rifleman, London Regiment (Finsbury Rifles), 2nd/11th Battalion
Died age 22 on 6 November 1917
Son of William and Eliza Clarke, of 18 Wilkinson Street, Albert Square, Clapham
Remembered at Tyne Cot Memorial, Belgium

Information from the 1911 census

In 1911 the Clarke family occupied 8 rooms at 18 Wilkinson Street, London SW8. William Clarke, 52, a plaster model maker at a terracotta works (possibly this was Doulton’s on Albert Embankment) from Burbage in Leicestershire, and Eliza Clarke, 50, from Whitwick, Leicestershire, had 9 children, all of whom survived. The household was full on the night of the census:
Gertrude Eliza Clarke, 22, born in Hathern, Leicestershire
Elisa Maryann Clarke, 18, a book folder, born in West Bromwich
Alfred Charles Clarke, 15, a grocer’s assistant, born in Lambeth
Albert Thomas Clarke, 11, born in Lambeth
Maud Beetrace [sic] Clarke, 10, born in Lambeth
Doris Lilian Clarke, 5, born in Lambeth
Annie Clarke, 26, visiting from America (married to one of Alfred Charles’ brothers)
Getrude Annie Clarke, 2, Annie’s daughter, born in America
Philip Lindsey Clark, 22, single, a sculptor, born in Brixton, a boarder
Emma Paul, 49, a single lady from Loughborough, was visiting as was Hannah Duplex, 78, a widow from Loughborough.

Filed Under: C names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1917, age 22, Belgium, Died

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The Men of Stockwell

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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