
Colin Thomas Frazer Rough was born in the autumn of 1896, and was the oldest of seven children to Thomas and Zelia. Thomas was a dairyman from Devon, and the family were initially raised in Charmouth. Thomas took up work as a farmer in 1911, and this meant a move to to Axminster: having finished his schooling, Colin helped his father on the farm.
Colin was still working with his father when war broke out across Europe. He stepped up to play his part, and enlisted in the Royal Garrison Artillery 11th December 1915. His service records show that he was 19 years and three months old, and stood 5ft 8ins (1.72m) tall.
Gunner Rough was not formally mobilised until May 1916. He would spend the next two-and-a-half years on home soil, and was based in Catterick, Yorkshire.
On 31st July 1918, Colin was sent to France with his unit. Full details of his service overseas have been lost to time but it would seem that he was back on home soil by the beginning of 1919.
Gunner Rough had contracted influenza and pneumonia, and returned home to recuperate. The conditions were to prove too severe, however, and he passed away on 8th February 1919, at the age of 22 years old.
Colin Thomas Frazer Rough was laid to rest in the family plot in Axminster Cemetery. Tragically, his younger brother Alan had passed just three weeks earlier: the two were buried alongside each other.