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Sunday, 23 July 2017

Tuesday 24th July 1917

Le Coq de Pailie, close to Berthen

Another very hot day
At 9.30am Brig. Genl. Lambert (see 23rd July) inspected some of the recent new drafts to the Battalion. The inspection generated a number of disciplinary issues.
Ptes. George Green (22749), Smith Hesselden (see 2nd April), Stanley Roebuck Hutton (see 25th November 1916) and Henry Jarratt (see 5th April) were all reported by Sgt. Arthur Kilburn Robinson (see 25th June) as having been “unshaven on 9am parade”; they were ordered to be confined to barracks for three days on the orders of Capt. Adrian O’Donnell Pereira (see 25th June). Pte. George Herbert Lant (see 5th July) was reported by Sgt. Ernest Craddock (see below) as having a “dirty rifle on 9am parade”; he was ordered to be confined to barracks for three days on the orders of Capt. Pereira. Pte. Albert Edward Pope (see 8th July) was reported on both counts (unshaven and a dirty rifle) and was to be confined to barracks for a total of five days, again on the orders of Pereira. Pte. Joseph Hartley (see 28th May) was reported by Sgt. Dan Fretwell (see 4th October 1916; it is not known when he had been promoted) for smoking on the same parade; he was to be confined to barracks for three days, again on the orders of Pereira.
Sgt. Ernest Craddock was 33 years old and from Prudhoe, where he had worked a as house painter; he was a married man with two children. It is not clear when he had joined the Battalion or when he had been promoted. 

Ptes. John Bayliss (see 5th July), William Franklin (see 9th July) and Robert Phillips (see 5th July) were all reported by CSM Charles Edward Parker MM (see 7th May; Parker had been promoted since May) as having been “dirty and unshaven on parade”; on the orders of Capt. Bob Perks DSO (see 18th July), they were to be confined to barracks for five days. Pte. Harold Draper (see 5th July) was reported by L.Cpl. Thomas Riding (see 2nd July) as having “dirty small arms ammunition on parade”; on the orders of Capt. Perks he was to be confined to barracks for three days.
Pte. Victor Munnery (see 5th July) was reported for “breaking out of ranks”; he was awarded seven days’ Field Punishment No.2.
Pte. James Lister Petty (see 21st June) was promoted (unpaid) Lance Corporal.
Pte. Harry Robinson (see 17th May) was found to have been absent from a working party and was awarded seven days’ Field Punishment no.2.
Pte. John Thorp Newsome (see 11th July) re-joined the Battalion following two week’s treatment at 23rd Divisional Rest Station, having reported sick with “ICT” (inflammation) to both legs. Having been in England for more than a year after being wounded on the Somme in July 1916, Pte. Norman Greenwood (17998) (see 2nd September 1916) re-joined the Battalion.
The application for a commission by CSM Albert Edgar Palmer (see 10th July) was endorsed by Brig. Genl. Lambert.
2Lt. Leopold Henry Burrow (see 16th July) was transferred from 7th Stationary Hospital at Boulogne to 83rd General Hospital, also in Boulogne.
Pte. Herbert Butterworth (see 12th June), who had been wounded on 7th June and had been evacuated to England, was now sufficiently recovered to be posted to 3DWR at North Shields. 

A payment of £12 8s. 9d. was authorised, being the amount due in pay and allowances to the late L.Cpl. Thomas Hodson (see 29th July 1916) who had been officially ‘missing in action’ since 29th July 1916; the payment would go to his father, Thomas.

A pension award was made in the case of the late L.Cpl. James Heaton (see 5th February) who had been killed in action in October 1916; his mother, Minnie, was awarded 5s. per week.



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