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Thursday, 10 December 2020

1st - 30th November 1920

1st November 1920

Walter Evans (see 31st January 1919), who had been transferred to the Army Reserve Class Z in January 1919, enlisted on a three year term in the 10th Battalion Manchester Regiment (Territorial Force); he was then living in Oldham and working as a labourer.

 

2nd November 1920

A review of the pension award in the case of John Killerby (see 27th September 1919), who had been transferred to the Army Reserve Class Z in September 1920, resulted in his assessed degree of disability being reduced to 30% and his pension being reduced to 12s. per week.

A review of the pension award in the case of William Sutcliffe Wood (see 11th June 1917), who had been discharged from the Army as no longer physically fit for service on account of dysentery in June 1917, resulted in his assessed degree of disability being set at 50% and his pension being increased to £1 per week.

 

5th November 1920

John Thomas Nunnington (see 12th February 1919), wh had been transferred to the Army Reserve in February 1919, wrote the Dukes’ Regimental Depot regarding his medal entitlement: “Will you kindly inform me when I shall receive my medals which I am due to. I met a young fellow in the street the other day who had been issued with his service medals for the European War”. He would be informed that the medals would be despatched to him ‘with as little delay as possible’.


9th November 1920

A review of the pension award in the case of Harry Hinchliffe (see 6th June 1918), who had been discharged from the Army on account of wounds in June 1918, resulted in his pension being reduced to 12s. per week.

 

10th November 1920

Matthew Best (see 15th December 1917), who had been discharged from the Army in November 1917, was awarded a one-off gratuity payment of £90 in lieu of any further pension payments.

 

A further review was carried out of the pension award made in respect of the late Pte. Harry Towell (see 30th October 1919), who had been killed in action on 5th July 1916; the pension granted to his mother, Mary, was reduced from 10s. per week, to 7s. 6d..

 

12th November 1920

2Lt. Edgar Leyland Mills Lumb (see 6th January 1919) relinquished his commission ‘on completion of service’; on the same date he was appointed to a commission as Second Lieutenant with 6th Battalion West Yorkshire Regiment (Territorial Army).

 

13th November 1920

A review of the pension award in the case of Cyril Hollingsworth (see 14th December 1918), who had been discharged from the Army in December 1919, resulted in his assessed degree of disability being reduced to less than 20% and his pension being reduced to 5s. 6d. per week.

 

16th November 1920

CSM Albert Blackburn DCM (see 3rd June), who had been discharged from the Army in March, was awarded a one-off gratuity payment of £63 15s. in lieu of any further pension payments.

 

18th November 1920

A payment of £18 14s. 8d. was authorised, being the amount due in pay and allowances (including a war gratuity of £15 10s.) to the late Cpl. John Kennedy MM (see 26th August 1918), who had been killed in action in August 1918; the payment would go to his mother, Frances. The reason for such a protracted delay in settling Cpl. Kennedy’s account is unknown.

 

22nd November 1920

An official report by the Directorate of Graves Registration and Enquiries confirmed that the remains of the late Pte. Harry Clay (see 2nd March), who had been killed in action on 26th August 1918 while serving in France with 9DWR, had been recovered and had been reinterred at Adanac Military Cemetery, Miraumont.

 

23rd November 1920

A review of the pension award in the case of Thomas William Woodcock (see 29th June 1916), who had been discharged from the Army in June 1916, resulted in the amount of his weekly pension being increased from 8s. to 12s.

George Richard Goodchild MSM (see 3rd June 1919), who had been transferred to the Army Reserve in January 1919 , wrote to the Infantry Records Office in York: “I note that, according to a supplement to the London Gazette just issued, annuities are payable to men who have been awarded the Meritorious Service Medal. I have received that award and should be obliged if you would be good enough to acquaint me with the conditions under which an annuity may be claimed”. The outcome of his enquiry is unknown.

 

24th November 1920

A review of the pension award in the case of Harry Gordon Binns MM (see 30th November 1918), who had been discharged from the Army in November 1918, resulted in his assessed degree of disability being revised to 30% and his pension being increased to 13s. per week.

 

26th November 1920

The Pensions Officer at St. Dunstan’s Blinded Soldiers and Sailors Committee wrote to the Dukes’ Record Office on behalf of 2Lt. Billy Oldfield MM (see 13th April 1919), who had been severely wounded and blinded in April 1918, requesting the issue of the 1915 Star medal to which he was entitled. In reply he was informed that, having been commissioned, 2Lt. Oldfield’s medal would be despatched direct from the War Office, rather than via the Regiment and, as such, any further enquiries should be directed to the War Office.

 

 

29th November 1920

A review of the pension award made in respect of the late Pte. John Holden (12384) (see 8th January) who had been killed in action in October 1916, resulted in the pension payable to his widow, Margaret Ann, being increased from £1 16s. 8d. to £2 1s. 10d. per week.

 

30th November 1920

A pension award was authorised in respect of the late L.Cpl. Walter Blamires (see 22nd September 1919), who had died of wounds in July 1916; his father, Joseph, was awarded 5s. per week.

Wednesday, 9 December 2020

21st - 31st October 1920

22nd October 1920

John Henry Markham (see 30th April 1919), who had been transferred to the Army Reserve Class Z in April 1919, was awarded a one-off gratuity payment of £35 in respect of a 1% disability which he had suffered whilst in service (details unknown). 

26th October 1920

Majs. James Christopher Bull MC (see 19th March) and William Norman Town (see 19th March) formally relinquished their commissions ‘on completion of service’; both would retain the rank of Major.

Bertie Constantine (see 8th November 1918), who had been discharged from the Army as no longer physically fit for service on account of his wounds in November 1918; was awarded a one-off gratuity payment of £45 10s. in lieu of any further pension payments.

A review of the pension award in the case of Percy France (see 16th March 1919), who had been discharged from the Army in March 1919, resulted in his assessed level of disability being set at less than 20% and his weekly pension at 5s. 6d.

Ann Benson, mother of the late Pte. Fred Benson (see 15th July 1920), who had been killed in action in July 1916, died. 

27th October 1920

Billy Rawlinson (see 14th May), who had been discharged from the Army as no longer physically fit for service on account of his wounds in July 1917) was married, at Burton-in-Lonsdale Parish Church, to Elizabeth Alice Edmondson.

Wednesday, 2 December 2020

Monday 31st August 1914

Herbert Montagu Soames Carpenter enlisted in the Honourable Artillery Company; within days he would be commissioned Second Lieutenant and would be posted to serve with the newly-formed 10th Battalion Duke of Wellington’s (West Riding) Regiment. He was 29 years old and a former member of the King’s College School Officer Training Corps and had served three years with the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve. He worked, for Messrs. Allcard & Co., as a clerk on the London Stock Exchange.

Herbert Montagu Soames Carpenter
Image by kind permission of Henry Bolton


Monday, 19 October 2020

Wednesday 20th October 1920

A review of the pension award in the case of William Murphy (see 22nd October 1919), who had been discharged from the Army in December 1915, resulted in his weekly pension being reduced to £1 8s. per week.

Tuesday 19th October 1920

There is nothing to report regarding the officers and men of 10DWR.

Monday 18th October 1920

Percy Cole (see 1st October) wrote to the Infantry Record Office in York regarding his ‘Mons Star’ medal (actually a 1914-15 Star); “On July 17th I returned you my Mons Star for alteration. Kindly let me know when I may expect this returned to me. I drew your attention to this matter about two months ago and you replied that it had been sent away for alteration but that you would forward it to me in short time”. Having received a reply he would write again on 22nd October; “Your reply to my letter of 18th inst. to hand. Please let me know when the War Office letter was issued giving instructions that all alterations to Mons Star and other medals are to be done in bulk. It seems strange that after three months delay this is the only explanation you can give me”.

A review of the pension award made in the case of Frank Revell (see 17th March), who had been transferred to the Army Reserve Class Z in March 1919, resulted in his weekly pension being increased to 17s. per week.

The remains of the late Pte. Amos Oddy (see 11th November 1919), identified by his ID disc, were recovered from an unmarked grave near Inverness Copse, east of Ypres; he had been killed in action in September 1917.

Sunday 17th October 1920

There is nothing to report regarding the officers and men of 10DWR.