The Germans use of gas shells continued and the War Diary
noted “without causing casualties he (the
Germans) created some discomfort”.
Pte. Arthur Cliffe
(see 29th July), who had
been wounded two days’ previously, died at 44th Casualty Clearing
Station at Puchevillers; he would buried at the adjacent Puchevillers British
Cemetery. A chaplain, Rev. C.F. Knyvet, would write to Pte. Cliffe’s parents:
“I am very sorry to send you the sad information that your son has died of
wounds received in the recent severe fighting. He was brought into this
Casualty Clearing Station on July 30th, very severely wounded in the
abdomen and thigh, and passed away the following day. The nurses and doctor who
attended him did all they could to make him as comfortable as possible. He is
buried in the little cemetery near this camp, where I laid him to rest. A cross
of wood stands at his head, with his name and regiment inscribed. The French
have promised that the cemeteries shall never be disturbed and they are kept in
order by the soldiers who work under the Graves Registration Commission. I wish
I could tell you the name of this whole village. The cemetery is all amongst
the cornfields, and the children of the village come with their schoolmistress
twice a week and put flowers on the graves. Besides these, grass seeds have
been sown and dwarf begonias have been planted”.
Pte. Charles Smith (12380) (see 11th July), who was under treatment at 6th General Hospital in Rouen having been wounded in early July, was evacuated to England; on arrival he would be admitted to Oakbank War Hospital in Glasgow.
Pte. John Onion (see 5th July), who had been in England since having been wounded on 5th July, was discharged from hospital in Birmingham; he would have ten days’ furlough before reporting to the Regimental Depot in Halifax.A payment of £8 12s. 7d. was authorised, being the amount outstanding in pay and allowances to the late Pte. Edward Tetlow (see 8th June), who had been killed in June whilst attached to 181st Tunnelling Company, Royal Engineers; the payment would go to his mother, Eliza.
69th Brigade War Diary recorded casualties for
the Brigade for the month of July:
Killed
24 officers and 132 other ranks
Accidentally killed 0
Died of wounds 4 officers and 12 other ranks
Wounded 57 officers and 1,288 other
ranks
Accidentally wounded 0
Missing 2 officers and 212 other ranks
10DWR’s casualties were recorded as:
Killed 7 officers and 55 other ranks
Accidentally killed 0
Died of wounds 1 officer
Wounded
13 officers and 295 other ranks
Accidentally wounded 0
Missing 1 officer and 64 other ranks
If we assume a maximum
Battalion strength of perhaps 800 men at the start of July, though even this is
likely to be an over-estimate, then these figures indicate a casualty rate of
more than 50% and a mortality rate of 16%.
The official record of
the Commonwealth War Graves Commission detail 102 men from 10DWR killed in July
1916; the difference between this and the Brigade War Diary total of 119 killed
or missing can presumably be reconciled by taking account of missing men
subsequently returning to duty and those found to have been taken prisoner.
The official cumulative casualty figures for the Battalion
since arriving in France were now:
Killed 92
Accidentally killed
4
Died of wounds 4
Wounded 469
Accidentally wounded
43
Missing 68
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