Category Archives: Royal Berkshire Regiment

Albert Henry West

Albert Henry West
Private 201566
2nd/4th Royal Berkshire Regiment

Division 40

West AH photo West AH mem name

 Albert Henry West, is  commemorated on a family memorial with the words “Dear son Dick, Killed in Action March 21st 1918 aged 19.

 A CWGC search reveals only one West killed on that date.  It is assumed that they are one and the same person. This was confirmed by an Ancestry UK search.  Relatives have begun a family tree which contains the known information.

Albert was the third son of George Alfred West and Jane West nee Palmer. His brothers were George and Thomas. He had an older and a younger sister called Florence and Gertrude. Sadly Florence also died in 1918, in October, as a result of the flu epidemic.

The 21 March was the first day of the German Spring Offensive. This was a time of rapid movement by the German forces and as a result it would have been almost impossible to remove the dead from the field of battle. Albert Henry West has no known grave and is listed among the missing on the Pozieres Memorial Panel 56 and 57.

L. V. Wellman M.M. & D.J. Wellman

L. V. Wellman M.M.
Corporal
155th Field Company
Royal Engineers.

 Division 35

d j wellman D J Wellman

Corporal L.V. Wellman, Vic,  is buried in grave number 13847 which is marked by a CWGC war pattern headstone.  He was one of three brothers to serve in the war.  His brother Jack,  was killed in action July 16th 1916. 

Lance Corporal D. J. Wellman
3614 ‘A’ Company
2nd/4th Royal Berkshire Regiment
He is buriedat Laventie Military Cemetery, La Gorgue. Location II. C. 17.  He had only been at the front for two months and was in the signalling section  of the 2nd/4th Royal Berkshire Regiment.  He had worked at Huntley and Palmer’s until January 1916.   

Brother Tom served in India and they had a sister Dolly.

 The death of  Vic was particularly hard to bear as the short poem with the notification of death in the Standard 8th November 1919 indicates.  In loving memory of our dear and eldest son, L. V. Wellman, who passed away on October 31st, 1919, after suffering form gas poisoning. Although just recently discharged, has served 3yrs in France with RE; also won the MM.

The war was over, victory won,
How gladly we rejoiced
To think that our Vic, would soon be home,
Having his duty done.
But, alas, our joy was but in vain,
He only came home to leave us again;
Not to that battlefield where our Jack was slain,
But to Heaven where he will find rest without pain.

From his loving Mum and Dad.

The sorrow continued  although the Wellman’s were typical of their stoic generation.

Std. July 17th 1920 – In loving memory of Lance Corporal D. J. Wellman of 51 Weldale St. Reading – KiA July 16th 1916 – From mother and father, sister and brother.

Some may think that we forget him
When at times they see us smile;
But they little know the sorrow
Which that smile hides all the while.

 

When a brother is good and kind,
It’s then that you miss him most;
And although you are gone from us, dear Vic,
You’ll always be in our mind.
From his only sister Doll and brother Tom in India

Charles Edward Weeks

Charles Edward Weeks
Private 200817
1st Batt. Royal Berkshire Regt.

 Division 32

CEWeeks CIMG2215

Charles Edward Weeks, was the son of Charles William and Agnes Esther Weeks, of 180 Kings Rd. Reading.  The 1911 census indicates that at the age of 17 Charles was working as a grocers assistant. His father had his own business as a book keeper and his younger brother, Cyril aged 9, was  in school.   Charles had attended Wokingham Road School, now known as Alfred Sutton Primary School and it is assumed that this was the school Cyril attended. Agnes had given birth to four children but only Charles and Cyril had survived.

Charles joined the army in Sept. 1914.   The Standard of August 19th 1916 gives an account of the wounding, in both legs, one arm and head, which Charles Weeks received on July 30th 1916. He had been left for dead when a 9.2inch (250lb.) shell fell in front of him but was brought out by the Warwick’s.  After the usual field dressings had been administered and treatment at a casualty clearing station he was transferred to Etaples and later evacuated to England where he spent some time in a war hospital in Norfolk. Writing from hospital  he commented that the food and treatment was A1.  Swelling in his face had gone down and he was now able to see out of both eyes.  His left thigh and right knee were still painful. In total he had twenty three injuries but only considered eleven to be bad.

Charles Weeks survived these injuries and returned to France where he was killed on 25th March 1918*, his body was never found.  A headstone in Division 32, of the Reading Cemetery, describes him as “Missing in France”, he is officially commemorated on the Arras Memorial, Bay 7,  he was 24 years old.

* Four days from the start of the German Spring offensive.