Pioneer Albert Henley

Pioneer Albert Henley

Albert James Henley was born in the spring of 1875, the youngest of nine children to Caleb and Ann Henley. Caleb was an agricultural labourer from Cuckfield, and it was in this West Sussex village that the Henley siblings were born and raised.

Albert found work on a farm when he left school, but soon found other employment as a bricklayer. On 15th August 1896 he married Sophia Leney: the couple went on to have four children – Kate, Minnie, Albert and William.

War came to Europe, but Albert was not initially called on to serve king and country because of his age. He did enlist, however, joining the Royal Engineers in January 1917. His service records suggest that he was a month short of his 45th birthday (which does not tie up with his baptism records) and stood 5ft 10.5ins (1.79m) tall. He is noted to have been of good physical development, weighing in at 159lbs (72.1kg).

Pioneer Henley was assigned to the 307th Road Construction Company and, after a month’s training was dispatched to France. He spent more than eighteen months overseas, before being medically evacuated to England in the autumn of 1918, having contracted bronchitis. Albert was admitted to hospital in Dover as soon as he had crossed the Channel, but died there the following day. He passed away on 20th November 1918 and was 43 years of age.

Albert James Henley was brought back to West Sussex for burial: he was laid to rest in the cemetery of his home village, Cuckfield.


A sad epilogue to Albert’s story is that his widow, Sophia, had to wait for his belongings to be returned to her. In a letter to the regiment on 14th December 1918, she wrote:

…it is nearly a month since he passed away, and I have not heard anything. When I came there on the 20th [November] they said his personal belongings would be sent on in a few days.

The Royal Engineers office responded that they were unable to forward his personal effects on until authority had been received from the War Office. It was to be another six months before Sophia finally got her late husband’s items – a purse, knife, notebook, letters, photo, gloves, watch (with case and chain), handkerchief, muffler and four coins – back.


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