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Iraq

Bernard Allen Miller Dunning

10 August 2015 by SWM

B. A. M. Dunning
Service no. 558257
Driver, Royal Engineers, Army Signal Company
Died of dystentery age 39 on 6 December 1918
Son of Mrs Julia Dunning; husband of Rosina Harriet Dunning, of 17, Somerleyton Road, Brixton, London. Born in Dorset.
Remembered at Baghdad (North Gate) War Cemetery, Iraq

British Army WWI Service Records 1914-1920

Bernard Dunning joined the war effort early – he attested on 5 December 1914 from the Territorials. In civilian life he was a tram conductor; he became a driver in the Army Signal Company in the Royal Engineers.

Dunning’s medical notes state that he was 5 feet 7 inches tall with a 35 inch chest, which he could expand by 2 inches. His physical development was “fair”.

Dunning survived the war, but fell very soon afterwards. He served in France, in the British Expeditionary Force, between 12 February to 7 November 1916, and had periods in England. During  this period he was admitted to hospital suffering from haemorroids, which were operated on.

Later he was deployed in the Middle East, where he was admitted to hospital on 23 August 1918 – again suffering from haemorroids –  and discharged 22 September 1918. On 10 November he was admitted to the 31st British Stationary Hospital field hospital and by 24 November he was described as “dangerously ill” with dysentery. On 6 December he died.

Dunning left a widow, Rosina Harriet Dunning, and a 12-year-old son, Herbert William.

Information from the 1911 census

Bernard Allen Miller Dunning, 31, and Rosina Harriet Dunning, 27, lived with their son at 56 Edithna Street, Stockwell. Bernard was born in Lulworth, Dorset, and worked as a tram driver for the LCC (London County Council). Rosina Harriet Dunning was born in Blackfriars. Their son Herbert William, born in Eastbourne, Sussex, was 5. Two boarders lived with the family: Henry Miles, 25 and single, worked as an estate agent; Alice Lily Murphy, 25, was a dressmaker.

Ten years previously (1901 census), Bernard was single and living in Eastbourne, where he worked as a door porter at the Grand Hotel. His father (1891 census) was a groom and general outdoor servant.

Filed Under: D names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1918, age 39, illness, Iraq

Giles Vellacott Daunt

10 August 2015 by SWM

Photo of Giles Daunt
Giles Daunt. Photo by kind permission of Will Daunt

G. V. Daunt
Second Lieutenant, South Lancashire Regiment, 10th Battalion, attd. 6th Battalion
Killed in action in Mesopotamia on 9 April 1916, aged 19
Brother of Conrad O’Neill Daunt
Remembered at Basra Cemetery, Iraq
Awarded the Victory, British and Star medals

On 20 August 1914 Giles Vellacott Daunt, aged 18 and working as a clerk, joined the Royal Fusiliers as a Signaller. He was almost immediately offered a commission in the South Lancashires (with whom his brother Conrad also served). Quite apart from his middle-class background – he was a son of the physician and surgeon Francis Eldon Horsford Daunt – he must have looked the part. Six feet tall, over 11 stone and with a 41-inch chest, blue eyes and fair hair.

In February 1916 Daunt embarked on the H.M.S. Ionic, headed for Port Said, Egypt and then Basra, Iraq. He was reported missing in action on 9 April 1916. His death was later confirmed. A memorandum of 6 August states that his body was buried at Sanniyat.

Filed Under: D names, Featured, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1916, age 19, Brothers, Iraq, KIA

Augustus Charles Cook

10 August 2015 by SWM

A. C. Cook
Service no. G/1381
Private, Queen’s Own (Royal West Kent Regiment), 2nd Battalion
Died age 41 on 10 July 1917
Son of Matthew John Cook, of Clapham, London, husband of Mary Ann Cook, of 11 Devonshire Square, Bromley, Kent.
Born in Clapham, enlisted in Bromley, lived in Bromley
Remembered at Basra War Cemetery, Iraq

Information from the 1911 census

In 1911 Augustus Charles Cook, then 34, lived with his wife, Mary Ann Cook, 29, and their five children in four rooms at 11 Devonshire Square, Bromley. He was born in Clapham and his father, Matthew John Cook, lived there. He enlisted in Bromley.

Filed Under: C names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1917, age 41, Died, Iraq

Henry William Chambers

10 August 2015 by SWM

H. W. Chambers
Private no. 7216
Serjeant, Dorsetshire Regiment, 2nd Battalion
Died of wounds age 34 on 26 December 1915
Son of Alfred and Eliza Chambers, of 21 Binfield Road, Clapham Road
Remembered at Kut War Cemetery, Iraq

Filed Under: C names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1915, age 34, DOW, Iraq

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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