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KIA

Arthur Ernest Homewood

11 August 2015 by SWM

Arthur Ernest Homewood, who worked as a footman before he joined the army. Photo courtesy of Paul Wood.
Arthur Ernest Homewood in uniform, from an album created by Arthur’s niece. He served as a batman. Photo courtesy of Jo Kercher.
The inscription on Arthur Homewood’s gravestone reads ‘A loving brother, a devoted son. He loved and was loved by everyone.’ Photo courtesy of Paul Wood.

A. E. Homewood
Service no. 59585
Private, Northamptonshire Regiment, “B” Coy. 6th Battalion
Enlisted in Lambeth; lived in Lambeth
Killed in action, age 20, on 4 November 1918
CWGC: “Son of Eliza Ann Homewood, of South Lambeth, London, and the late John Homewood.”

Arthur was killed only seven days before the Armistice.

Remembered at Preux-au-Bois Communal Cemetery, Nord, FranceInformation from the 1911 censusArthur Ernest Homewood, 13, who was at school and also working as a grocer’s errand boy, lived with his widowed mother at 18 Radnor Terrace, South Lambeth (now disappeared). The family occupied 4 rooms. Eliza Ann Homewood, 53, earned her living as a charwoman in private houses. She was born in Bermondsey. Her sons were:
John Edward Homewood, 22, a warehouseman in a government office
Thomas George Homewood, 16, a messenger for the “Army & Navy Auxiliary and Co-operative Stores”
Arthur Ernest Homewood, 13
All were born in South Lambeth.

Paul Wood writes:

Arthur was my great-uncle (his brother William was my grandfather, who survived the war from 1914 through to 1918). When William went to the enlisting office he told them he was a footman and the officer in charge said he was taking him with him to France. He went the following day without basic training and served as a batman to a Captain Bird. William was from South Bermondsey also.

Filed Under: Featured, H names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1918, age 20, France, KIA

John Orlando Holman

11 August 2015 by SWM

J. O. Holman
Service no. R/35467
Rifleman, King’s Royal Rifle Corps, 17th Battalion
CWGC: “Son of Sarah Jane Holman, of 45, Jeffreys Road, Clapham, London.”
Killed in action on 3 June 1917, aged about 21
Remembered at Vlamertinghe Military Cemetery, Ypres, Belgium

Brother of Alfred Harold Holman.

Filed Under: H names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1917, age 21, Brothers, KIA

Alfred Edward Hogg

11 August 2015 by SWM

Alfred Edward Hogg. With kind permission of Adrian Hogg.

A. E. Hogg
Service no. S/12345
Private, Seaforth Highlanders, 1st Battalion
Killed in action age 29 on 5 November 1917
CWGC: “Son of Edward Hogg, of 56 Sidney Road, Stockwell, London, and the late Jessie Mary Hogg (nee Skepelhorn).”
Remembered at Basra Memorial, Iraq

Information from the 1911 census

Edward (aka Alfred Edward) Hogg, 55, a mercantile clerk born in Bermondsey, and his wife Jessie Mary Hogg, 48, born in Blackfriars, lived at 56 Sidney Road, Stockwell with 8 of their 9 children (Alfred Edward Hogg was missing from the household).  Two children had died by 1911.)
Ethel Josephine Hogg, 27, a shirt machinist, born in Stockwell
Edith hogg, 26, a shirt machinist, born in Stockwell
WInifred Jessie Hogg, 24, a clerk, born in Stockwell
Alice Mary Hogg, 21, a typist, born in Stockwell
Ernest Leonard Hogg, 16, a “boy clerk”, born in Southwark
Elsie Kathleen Hogg, 13, born in Southwark
Amy Lillian Hogg, 11, born in Southwark
Eric Douglas Hogg, 6, born in Southwark

Information from Roots Web

Jessie Skepelhorn was born in 1863 at at 127 Blackfriars Road, Southwark, Surrey, married Alfred Edward Hogg, a wharf clerk, born in Bermondsey, at St Saviour, Southwark, and died in Lambeth in 1915, aged 52. Alfred and Jessie had eight children, listed in the 1901 census at which point the family was living at 81 St George Road, Southwark:
Ethel Josephine Hogg, born 1884 at Clapham. In the 1901 census she is described as a shirt-maker.
Edith Nellie Hogg, born 1885 at Clapham, also described as a shirt-maker.
Winifred Jessie Hogg, born 1886 at Clapham
Alfred Hogg, born in 1888 at Clapham
Alice Mary Hogg, born in 1889 at Clapham
Ernest Cecil, born 1892 in Southwark
Elsie Kathleen Hogg, born 1897 in Southwark
Amy Lilian Hogg, born 1899 at Southwark
In 1901 Cecil H. Skepelhorn, Jessie’s brother lodged with the family. He was a 19-year-old general labourer, born in 1881, married in 1907, which was also the year of his death. The Skepelhorn family originated in Overton, Wiltshire.

In 1891 the family was living at 17 Market Place in Stockwell.

Filed Under: Featured, H names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1917, age 29, Iraq, KIA

Ernest Austin Hoare

10 August 2015 by SWM

Ernest Austin Hoare
Ernest Austin Hoare

E. A. Hoare
Service no. 106556
Corporal, Royal Engineers, 186th Special Coy
Killed in action aged 18 on 21 December 1915
Son of John A. and Martha Hoare, of 12 Lansdowne Rd., Clapham, London.
Remembered at Cambrin Churchyard Extension, France

At the time he signed up on 7 August 1915, Ernest Austin Hoare was living with his family at 12 Lansdowne Gardens, Stockwell. He described his “Trade or calling” as “Chemist”.

He was one of six children of John, a police constable, and Martha Hoare, the others being brothers Arthur, 24, Stanley, 17, and Leslie, 15; and sisters, May, 26, and Madge, 20.

Hoare went to St Olave’s School (until 1968 located in Southwark and now in Orpington, Kent) between 1909 and 1912.

After six months at the Albany Engineering Works, Hoare became assistant to Dr. Fyleman, an analytical chemist, of Victoria Street. He was so interested in this work that in September 1913 he decided to join The Borough Polytechnic Institute. When war broke out, his employer became works chemist at Osram’s lamp factory (this may have been the large complex at Wembley, north London)and Hoare went with him. In July 1915 he gained a scholarship at the Imperial College of Science and after gaining a promise that this would be held over for him on his return, joined the Royal Engineers.

There is not much service history for Hoare in the National Archives. However, one interesting document, bearing Hoare’s name, outlines the Army’s appeal for chemists:

Form 121/1/1 (A. G. 2B)
Men with training in Chemistry are required for service with the Royal Engineers overseas.

The particulars of service are as follows:

(1) Term of service will be for General Service for the duration of the War;
(2) Age 19 to 45 years;
(3) Ordinary standards of height and chest measurement will be waived provided the candidate is organically sound and fit for service in the field. The eyesight test may be passed with the aid of glasses;
(4) Men selected will be enlisted in the Royal Engineers and at once promoted Corporal;
(5) Pay will be 2/6 a day with 6d Engineer Pay, with the usual Separation and Dependants allowances under Army conditions. (Further promotion to the rank of Serjeant will be given to selected men in the field.)
If you are willing to enlist under these conditions you are requested to take this circular to the nearest Recruiting Officer, who is hereby directed to medically examine you, and, if you are passed fit, give you Army Form B. 178 (Medical History Sheet) and a railway warrant to London.
On arrival you should present yourself to the Chief Recruiting Staff Officer, Central Recruiting Officer, Great Scotland Yard, Whitehall, who will carry out your enlistment and despatch you to Chatham to be clothed and equipped.

After a month as a “pioneer” Hoare was promoted to Corporal. He embarked for France with the British Expeditionary Force on 16 August. He survived only until 21 December.

On 17 January 1917 Hoare’s father received a letter from the Records Office at Chatham:

Sir
Special information has been received with regard to the burial of your son the late Corporal E. A. Hoare R. E.

He was interred in Cambrin Churchyard on the 23rd of December last.

The village of Cambrin was only 800 yards (730 metres) from the front line trenches and the Extension, where Hoare is buried, was used for front line burials until February 1917. Hoare is in Grave ref J1.

Information from the 1911 census

In 1911 the Hoare family lived at 228 South Lambeth Road. John Hoare, 45, a police constable from Chatham, Kent, and Martha Hoare, 45, from Troston, Norfolk, had 4 children (all born in Sidcup, Kent, apart from Stanley and Leslie, who were born in South Lambeth):
May Hoare, 17, a sorter for the G.P.O. (General Post Office)
Jack Hoare, 16, an apprentice car body maker
Ernest Hoare, 13
Madge Hoare, 12
Stanley Hoare, 8
Leslie Hoare, 7
In addition, there were 2 boarders: Anne Watts Bray, 69, from Plymouth, and Ada Inwood, 33, a single dressmaker from Croydon.

Information from the 1901 census

In 1901, the Hoare family was living at 2 Cromer Villas in South Lambeth.

St Olave’s School

The picture of Hoare is taken from a presentation by Peter J. Leonard available on the St Olave’s School website at www.saintolaves.net. When you enter the site, click on ‘Welcome’ then on ‘Chaplaincy’ and scroll to the bottom. There is a thread on St Olaves at the Great War Forum.

Hoare attended the school between 1909 and 1912.

Filed Under: Featured, H names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1915, age 18, France, KIA

Albert Charles Hillyer

10 August 2015 by SWM

A. C. Hillyer
Service no. 44401
Rifleman, Royal Irish Rifles, 15th Battalion, formerly 8507, London Regiment
Killed in action on 6 August 1917
Remembered at Wieltje Farm Cemetery, near Ypres, Belgium

Tentative identification.

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

Charles F. P. Hillier

10 August 2015 by SWM

C. F. P. Hillier
Service no. L/7574
Private, Royal Fusiliers, 4th Battalion
Born in Cork, Ireland; enlisted in London
Killed in action on 27 October 1914, aged 35
CWGC: “Son of Daniel and Ellen Hillier, of 9 Hemans Street, Lambeth, London. Served in the South African Campaign.”
Remembered at Le Trouret Memorial, France

Tentative identification

The Commonwealth War Graves Commission database lists a Charles Hillier, whose parents lived at 9 Hemans Street, off Wandsworth Road. However, this man was christened Charles James John in Cork, Ireland, the son of Daniel Hillier, a coal porter from  Stratfield Saye, Berkshire, and Ellen (née Pierce)
from Cork. 

The CWGC database also states that Hillier served in the Boer War. On 24 October 1900 Charles  Hillier, a private with the South West Borderers, was admitted, for unknown reasons, to Brookwood Asylum in Surrey.

Filed Under: H names, Stockwell War Memorial Tagged With: 1914, age 35, France, KIA

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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