
Percy Guy Carpenter was born in Worthing, West Sussex, in the autumn of 1887. One of eight children, he was the middle of three sons to Alfred and Alice Carpenter. Alfred was a chief clerk at the town’s post office, and the 1891 census found the family living on Oxford Road, to the south of the central railway station.
By the time of the next census, taken in 1901, the family had moved to a small cottage at 93 Newland Road. Alfred had changed jobs, and was noted as being the chief clerk at the local gas works. This seemed not to have been a long-term position, however. The 1911 census recorded his occupation as post office clerk (out of employment).
The Carpenter family were still living at 93 Newland Road by this point, and, of the six children who remained at home, all of them were working. Percy was employed as a tailor’s porter, while his sibling’s jobs included chemist’s stock keeper, ironmonger’s clerk and bookbinder’s apprentice.
War came to Europe in the summer of 1914, and Percy would be called upon to serve his country. Little information about his time in the army remains, but it is clear that he enlisted in the Royal Sussex Regiment at some point early in 1915.
Attached to the 2nd/4th (Cinque Ports) Battalion, Private Carpenter found himself in France by the end of March. He remained overseas for a year, but, while there, he contracted pneumonia. Medically repatriated to Britain for treatment, Percy was admitted to the 1st Eastern General Hospital in Cambridge, but died from a combination of pneumonia and nephritis on 18th March 1916. He was 28 years of age.
The body of Percy Guy Carpenter was taken back to Sussex for burial. He was laid to rest in Broadwater Cemetery, not far from where his family still lived in Worthing.