Category Archives: Arras

William Samuel Perrier

William Samuel Perrier
2nd Lieutenant
4thBattalion Royal Fusiliers

 Division 46

CIMG2206CIMG2207

 William Samuel Perrier  was the grandson of Charlotte Maskell and is commemorated on the grave of his grandmother and Horace Clarkson.   Grave number 5122.

 William Perrier was aged 25 when he was killed in action.  He has no known grave and is commemorated on the Menin Gate Memorial Panel 6&8.  The grave memorial is particularly important because it bears William Perrier’s own words in an extract of a letter to his parents, written shortly before he went into action.  The small lead letters are slowly wearing away so the full inscription is given below.

In
Loving Memory
Of
2ND LIEUT. W. S. PERRIER
4TH BATTALION ROYAL FUSILIERS.
(GRANDSON OF CHARLOTTE MASKELL)
WHO FELL IN ACTION AT ST. ELOI ON 27TH MARCH 1916
AGED 25 YEARS
AND WAS INTERRED ON THE FIELD  OF BATTLE.
 ……….………….

EXTRACT OF A LETTER WRITTEN BY THE ABOVE
BEFORE GOING INTO ACTION.

 MY DEAREST MOTHER AND FATHER –
IF YOU RECEIVE THIS LETTER YOU WILL KNOW THAT YOU HAVE
MADE YOUR GREATEST SACRIFICE I.E. YOU HAVE GIVEN YOUR SON’S LIFE
TO HIS COUNTRY.  WHEN YOU LET ME JOIN THE ARMY AS AN OFFICER
YOU DID SO WITH THE FULL KNOWLEDGE THAT THE GREATEST SACRIFICE
YOU COULD MAKE WAS TO GIVE YOUR SON’S LIFE FOR YOUR COUNTRY.
WELL THE SACRIFICE HAS BEEN MADE.  FOR THIS LETTER WILL
ONLY BE SENT TO YOU IN THE EVENT  OF MY DEATH.
I KNOW FULL WELL THE GRIEF THESE TIDINGS WILL CAUSE YOU.
YET YOU WILL BE HAPPY BECAUSE I AM HAPPY.
I AM DOING MY DUTY, AND I KNOW AND FEEL THE SACRIFICE
HAS NOT BEEN IN VAIN AND THAT ENGLAND WILL RISE TO
GREATER THINGS THAN SHE EVER DREAMT OF

I AM EVER YOUR LOVING SON BILLY

The 27th March 1916 was the date set for the British to regain St. Eloi which had been lost the previous March prior to the Second Battle of Ypres.  After that battle the area settled in to  a constant war of harassment.  Martin Marix Evans describes the scene in his book ‘Passchendaele’.

 “Fortifications were improved though more attention was given to this by the Germans than the British.  The former…built deep underground bunkers…concrete pillboxes and redoubts to secure the line.  The British…were dedicated to the ejection of the invader….their trenches were seen as jumping off points for an advance…..The conditions endured by both sides were abominable.”  

 Five months after the Germans had taken St. Eloi the British began a massive mining operation and at 4.15 am on the 27th March 1916 a bombardment of the German front line started and six mines were blown.  Two front line companies of a German Jäger  Battalion were wiped out.  The British (9th Brigade) rushed to take the first three craters and the German third line.  It is likely that William Perrier was lost in this action.  The battle ground was confusing with old craters mistaken for new and the line split in the German counter attack.  Fighting was fierce and the line, such as it was,  was taken over by the Canadians on 6th April.  The fighting continued until the 14th  -15th April by which time the Canadians had suffered 1,373 casualties.

Richard Penford

Richard Penford
Corporal 7495
1st Batt. Royal Berkshire Regt.

Division 34

RPenfold photo RPenfold grave

 

 Corporal Richard Penford was the son of George and Mary Penford. He had emigrated to Canada where he had a wife, Mary, and two children. They lived at 196A, Gowan Avenue, Todmorden, Toronto. He was in the “reserve” and at the onset of WW1 he returned to Britain when “called up”. His CWGC headstone states “Missed by wife and children”. The Standard 12June 1915 reports:

 Penford Military Funeral
Hero of 1st Berks. Charge at Festubert

“previously wounded in the head in March 1915, he had spent a month at the Base. Corporal Penfold on returning to the front fought at Festubert on May 16th, where he received the injury which proved fatal.  He and his comrades had taken one line of German trenches and were taking the second when shrapnel caught him in the groin.  He died at Sheffield Royal Hospital on 3rd June.  Full military honours were accorded at the funeral. His widow and young two children were unable to attend his funeral being in Canada at the time but several other family members were in attendance, there were  beautiful floral tributes.”

 Like most of the Canadians buried in the Reading Cemetery, Corporal Penford, has had his name recorded in the “Books of Remembrance”.  It is to be found in the Addendum to the 1915 B.E.F. entries.

Penfold Remembrance Page

Cedric Charles Okey Taylor

Lieutenant C.C. Okey Taylor
3rd Battalion East Kent Regiment (The Buffs) & Trench Motar Battery

Division 48

OKEY TAYLOR CC  CIMG2137CIMG2138

Cedric Charles Okey Taylor  was the grandson of a local Reading dignitary. His death is reported in The Chronicle of 15th December 1916.

“Attached to the Trench Motor Battery Z/14, 14th Division, BEF, France, fell in action on Sunday, December 3rd 1916.  He was not quite 22 years of age and the only son of Mrs. Taylor, of 31, Weltje Road, Ravenscroft Park, London, and the late Charles Warmsley Taylor, of Reading.”

His Captain communicated the news to his mother.

“He was at a gun position with his men when the dug-out was blown in.   His death must have been instantaneous, and two of his men were killed with him.  We have recovered his body, and he will be buried tomorrow, and as many of his brother officers that are available will attend.  I need hardly say how deeply sorry all his friends are, and to me it I is a personal loss, since he has been associated with me  longer than any other officer, and we have been together since he joined the Expeditionary Force.  One cannot speak too highly of his ability, his devotion to duty, and the keen interest he took in all his men and their welfare.  It is a sad loss which we all feel, and offer you our deepest sympathy.”

He is commemorated upon the grave of his grandfather in the Reading Cemetery and is buried in the Faubourg D’Amien Cemetery, Arras. Location I. J.58.

Upon his death he left his estate to his married sister Olive Margaret Okey Allner.