Arthur James Beechey

Arthur James Beechey
Private Portsmouth Battalion,
Royal Naval Division,
Royal Marine Light Infantry

 Division 41

Beechey AJ photo

Arthur James Beechey, is commemorated on a family memorial.  Grave number ?

He was the son of Mr and Mrs A. Beechey, of 141, Southampton St. Reading.  He was killed in action during the Dardanelles campaign on 1st May 1915.

 Arthur Beechey is buried at Beach Cemetery which is situated on what was known as Hell Spit, at the southern part of Anzac Cove.  Beach Cemetery was used from the day of the Landing at Anzac, almost until the Evacuation.  British forces had landed on the peninsula on the 25th April 1915 and fierce fighting had taken place along the coast ever since.   

The plan was for the Royal Naval Division to launch an feint attack further up the coast at Bulair.  This was carried out and observed by the German Commander of the Turkish forces.  The aim of the attack being to cut off the peninsula from the rest of Turkey.  It was here that von Sanders heard of the attacks around the peninsular. 

At Anzac Cove the landing of Australians and New Zealand forces had taken place.  The fighting was continuos with Lt. Col. Mustapha Kemel sending reinforcements to the front to prevent further allied advances.  Frequently the frenzied attacks meant  certain suicide for the Turkish soldiers.  The Anzacs defended their positions in shallow trenches and gullies.  Although they stood their ground the Anzac forces were shaken by the ferocity of the almost continual attacks and the strain was beginning to show when relief came on the 28th April in the form of the Chatham and Portsmouth Battalions of the R.M.L.I. and the next day by the Deal Battalion.  The following account is taken from Gallipoli by Robert Rhodes James, page 170. 

      “’Chatham was in fair shape,’ one officer has written frankly; ‘Portsmouth had been entirely rebuilt [after Antwerp] from bottom to top.  And Deal was entirely composed of recruits and the left-over officers from the Fleet.  And none of us had had any battalion training at all.’  The delight of the exhausted Anzacs was changed to consternation when they beheld the lines of pith-helmeted, pale and bewildered young men-‘children under untrained officers and I feel very sorry for them’, Birdwood wrote in his diary- toiling up the ravines, each Marine laden with blankets, waterproof sheets, ammunition and rations as well as his rifle.  ‘Such boys they look,’ Malone wrote in his diary; ‘still they must be sturdy.’  The Marines had expected to take over a reasonably established trench system…. A heavy thunderstorm, which drenched the Marines as they trudged up the slopes to the isolated pot-holes which constituted the Anzac firing line, filled their cup of misery.  ‘I have now been given some so-called Marines and Naval Battalions,’ Birdwood wrote despairingly, ‘who are so as I can see nearly useless.  They are special children of Winston Churchill, immature boys with no proper training, and I am quite afraid of them giving me away someday.’

                   No doubt, the Marines were also unimpressed with the Anzacs.  ‘Everything was chaos,’ writes one, ‘and nobody knew where anyone was….one met Australians all over the place, wandering around, drinking tea, and having pot shots at anything they saw.’  In spite of heavy losses-amounting to nearly 50 per cent – largely due to their own inexperience, the Marines held on with admirable tenacity until the reorganisation of the shattered Anzac battalions was completed.”

  And so, in these conditions Arthur James Beechey, aged 18, lost his life.  He was an old boy of Reading School and worked for Messers Dymore Brown and Son until he enlisted in July 1914.  His father was in the Army. (Reading Standard July 3rd 1915)

 

Leslie Ernest John Beard

Leslie Ernest John Beard
Lance Sergeant  200528
2nd/4th Battalion Royal Berkshire Regiment.

Beard LEJ photo Beard LEJ name

The 2nd/4th battalion was formed in early September 1914 with men coming from all over Berkshire. Their first base was at Hitcham, in Buckinghamshire, on their commanding officers farm.  The War Office could not spare any equipment and kit was supplied initially by the general public. In November they moved to Maidenhead from where some two hundred men were sent to the 1st/4ths in exchange for a draft of men who were not passed fit for general service or who had not volunteered for service abroad.  Training at the time involved a good deal of route marching and drill.

In December the battalion numbered one thousand and their first task was the guarding of German prisoners-of-war at Holyport.  By February 1915 they were in Northampton, as part of the 2nd South Midlands Division, moving in April to Chelmsford where they dug trenches for the defence of London and patrolled the Essex roads looking for spies who might use  lights to signal enemy aeroplanes.  It was not until 25th May 1916 that the battalion finally left Southampton for France, ending up eventually at Merville near ArmentiÀres south of Ypres. After a short period of instruction in trench warfare attached to other battalions the 2nd/4ths took over trenches near Laventie.

The battalion took casualties from their first days in the trenches and these gradually increased as the men were involved in carrying out patrols to investigate enemy wire and trenches.  During the last week of June when the bombardment of the Somme was underway there was activity all along the British front line in order to keep the Germans guessing about where exactly the offensive would come. The 2nd/4ths were involved  in such work loosing several junior officers and men before retiring to billets on 27th June.  They went back into the front line on 6th July  moving to Croix Barbee on 13th July.  It was on this day that an elaborate raid on enemy trenches was carried out involving five officers and one hundred men.  The objective was the capture prisoners, identification enemy units and the  killing of Germans.

Officers and men were divided into ten groups some men were carrying a Bangalore torpedo which would be used to blow a gap in the wire.  The company set out at midnight and formed up, five yards between each line, in front of the British wire, in No-Mans Land.  When all was ready the first wave moved forward, but reaching the German wire found only a partial gap.  It was decided  to use the Bangalore torpedo but by this time the Germans had observed the movements and were shelling No-Mans Land.  The torpedo carriers were wounded in the shelling and the fuse lost.

Four or five machine guns opened up as the first wave cut through the wire by other means and “gallantly penetrated the enemy’s first line under severe opposition”. (Commanding Officers report)  The rest of the raiding party lost touch with the first wave and in a short time the signal was given for recall.  Three officers were wounded and two killed: six men were killed and eleven recorded as missing, fifteen men were wounded.

Leslie Beard was one of the missing and his name is recorded on Panel 93 the Loos Memorial to the Missing sited around the Dud Corner Cemetery. Leslie was the son of Joseph John and May Beard of 95, Wokingham Road, Reading.  His name  appears on both the Alfred Sutton School and the Park Church memorials.  He was 19 years old.

Walter Barnes

Walter Barnes
Private 36433 (A Company)
9th Worcestershire Regiment

 Division 58

Walter Barnes, was the son of Charles and Susanna Barnes of 19, Mill Lane, Reading.   His wife was Caroline Ethel Barnes of 8 St. George Street, Reading. 

 Walter was at first reported missing in Mesopotamia on 14th September 1918.  On December 6th 1919, the Reading Standard, ‘In Memoriam’ column carried the confirmation that Walter Barnes, aged 28, had now been reported killed on the 14th September 1918. His relatives had waited over one year for official confirmation of his death. 

A verse from his wife accompanied the notice: 

“The passing of the sweetest soul that ever looked with human eyes.
Ah, true brave heart, God bless thee where so’er; in the great Universe today thou art.
Deeply mourned and never forgotten by his sorrowing wife.”

 Walter’s body was never identified and so he is commemorated on the Tehran Memorial, Iran.   Panel 3 Column 1.