
William John Walters was born in Portsmouth, Hampshire, on 9th July 1898. The fifth of nine children, his parents were Charles and Sarah Walters. Charles was a licensed boatman, and, for William’s short life, the family lived on Grange Street, Portsea.
Young William found work as a shop boy when he finished school, but he was drawn to the sea like his father and, on 22nd November 1913, he joined the Royal Navy. Too young to full enlist, he was given the rank of Boy 2nd Class and sent to HMS Impregnable, the navy’s school ship in Devonport, Devon.
Boy Walters’ service records show that he was 5ft 3.5ins (1.61m) tall, with brown hair, brown eyes and a dark complexion. He was also noted as having tattoos on both of his forearms.
By the summer of 1914, William has been promoted to Boy 1st Class. He returned to Hampshire, and was based at HMS Victory, the Royal Naval Dockyard in Portsmouth. This was just a staging post, however, as, on 26th August, he was assigned to the pre-dreadnaught battleship HMS Bulwark.
Part of the Channel Fleet, Bulwark was tasked with patrolling and defending Britain’s southern coast. On 26th November 1914, Bulwark was moored in the River Medway, close to Sheerness, and was being stocked with shells and ammunition. That morning, some poorly stowed cordite charges overheated, detonating the shells stored nearby. The resulting explosion ripped through the battleship, and more than 740 crew were killed. The body of Boy 1st Class Walters was among those to be recovered: he was 16 years of age.
Those who were killed in the explosion were laid to rest in the naval section of Woodlands Cemetery, Gillingham, Kent. As his body had been identified, William John Walters was laid to rest in a marked grave.
William’s headstone gives his name as IWJ Walters. There are no records to suggest that his forenames were anything other than William John, however.
William’s mother Sarah died around the same time as him. It is unclear whether she passed knowing her son had lost his life or not.