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Gunner Alfred Potter

Gunner Alfred Potter

The early life of Alfred John Potter is a challenge to piece together. The second of four children – and the only son – to John and Alice, he only appears on the 1911 census. This shows him living with his grandparents, William and Sarah Endacott, at 3 Lawrence Terrace in Paignton, the town in which he was born. Alfred was 16 at this point, and was employed as a mason’s apprentice.

The same census return found Alfred’s parents and siblings were also living in Paignton, but in a 5-roomed cottage on Polsham Road. There is nothing to confirm why he had moved out, although with three sisters, his grandparents may have offered the space and privacy he wanted.

Details of Alfred’s time in the army are similarly lacking. That he had enlisted by March 1918 is clear. He joined the Royal Field Artillery and was assigned to the Command Depot in Ripon, North Yorkshire.

By the late summer of 1918, Gunner Potter had contracted pneumonia. He died on 6th September at the age of 23 years old. Records state that he passed away in Torquay and, given the proximity to his home town, it is likely that he had been admitted to a hospital or convalescent home in the area.

Alfred John Potter was laid to rest in Paignton Cemetery, overlooking his home town.


Private Jeremiah O’Brien

Private Jeremiah O’Brien

Jeremiah Joseph O’Brien was born in Paignton, Devon, in 1888. The fifth of seven children, his parents were James and Susan O’Brien. James was a general labourer, and his son followed suit when he completed his schooling.

The is little more information available about Jeremiah’s early life, and it is only in the papers for his military service that we pick him up again. These confirm that he was working as a labourer when he volunteered for the Devonshire Regiment on 20th January 1915.

The documents confirm that Jeremiah was living at 4 Well Street, Paignton, when he joined up, and that he was just over 5ft 5ins (1.65m) tall. Assigned to the 3rd (Reserve) Battalion, he remained on home soil, his unit being used to defend Plymouth, Devon.

Private O’Brien’s time in the army was not to be a lengthy one. He came down with haemoptysis, a condition he had initially suffered from in childhood. He was declared unfit for military service, and was discharged from the army on 4th March 1916.

Jeremiah appears to have returned home at this point and succumbed to the lung condition on 6th May 1916. He was 29 years of age.

Jeremiah Joseph O’Brien was laid to rest in Paignton Cemetery, overlooking his home town and the sea.


Acting Bombardier Frederick Lavers

Acting Bombardier Frederick Lavers

Frederick William Lavers was born in Paignton, Devon, on 5th November 1889. The middle of five children, and the only son, his parents were John and Jane Lavers. John was a carman, and the family had rooms in a house on Winner Street in the town.

When Frederick finished his schooling, he found work as a butcher’s boy. This wasn’t the career for him, however, and, on 16th January 1905, he signed up to join the Royal Navy. His service records suggest that he had said he was a year older, and confirm that he was 5ft 3ins (1.6m) tall, with light brown hair, blue eyes and a fresh complexion.

As he was under the age to formally enlist with the Royal Navy, Frederick was given the rank of Boy, and dispatched to HMS Vivid, the dockyard in Devonport, for his training. Something was amiss, however, and, after eighteen months, he was discharged as being unsuitable.

Undeterred, Frederick tried another tack and, on 26th April 1909, he enlisted in the Royal Garrison Artillery. By the time of the 1911 census Gunner Lavers was stationed at West Ridge in Rawalpindi, India. There is little information available about his service, however, and Frederick is only picked up again on 30th December 1918.

At this point, the now Acting Bombardier Lavers was put on a hospital train from Marseilles, as he was suffering from psoriasis. He disembarked three days later in Le Havre, and, is appears, then returned to Britain for treatment. On 24th February 1919 he was medically discharged from army service, and awarded the Silver War Badge.

Frederick’s trail goes cold again after this. He appears to have returned home, and passed away on 20th October 1920. He was 28 years of age.

Frederick William Lavers was laid to rest in Paignton Cemetery, overlooking his home town.


Lieutenant Charles Vanstone

Lieutenant Charles Vanstone

Charles Douglas Howard Vanstone was born in Paignton, Devon, on 27th October 1888. The fourth of seven children, he was the second son to Frederick and Charlotte Vanstone. Frederick was an architect’s surveyor and civil engineer, and the family lived comfortably in the seaside town.

The 1891 census found them living at Sorrento, a villa on Esplanade Road, overlooking the sea. By the time of the next census, they had moved to Torbay Park, and lived in a 12-room property. The family’s three sons all followed in their father’s trade, and, according to the 1911 return, four of the Vanstones were recorded as being civil engineer architects and surveyors.

When war came to Europe, Charles stepped up to play his part. He received a commission in August 1915 and, as a Second Lieutenant, was assigned to the Rifle Brigade. Attached to the 15th (Reserve) Battalion, the records suggest that he was in France by 23rd March 1916.

Lieutenant Vanstone seems to have been part of a Trench Mortar unit at the Somme. Wounded during the battle, he was medically evacuated to Britain for treatment. Admitted to the Reading War Hospital in Berkshire, his injuries were to prove too severe. Charles passed away on 7th February 1917: he was 28 years of age.

Charles Douglas Howard Vanstone’s body was brought back to Devon for burial. He was laid to rest in his home town’s sweeping cemetery.


Charles’ death was the third loss for the Vanstone family in as many years. His older sister, Constance, had died in 1914, while his younger brother, Stanley, a Lieutenant in the 20th Royal Fusiliers, died of wounds he received on the Western Front in October 1915. Just 25 years of age, he is buried in Merville Communal Cemetery, France.


Chief Artificer Engineer Alfred Ward

Chief Artificer Engineer Alfred Ward

The life of Alfred Ernest Ward is a challenge to unpick. He lies at rest in Paignton’s sweeping cemetery in Devon, his headstone confirming that he was Chief Artificer Engineer on board the destroyer HMS Magic.

Alfred’s Pension Index Card confirms his beneficiary as his father, also called Alfred Ernest Ward, who lived at 41 Crown Hill Park in Torquay. Another document, the Naval Officer Casualty Docket, states that he died of pneumonia on 12th February 1919, while he was admitted to the Wallasey Cottage Hospital in Birkenhead on the Wirral.

There is a navy service record for an Alfred Ernest Ward, and, while there is nothing to definitively connect this to the man buried in Paignton, it seems likely that they are the same person. This Alfred was born in Huntingdon, Huntingdonshire, on 30th September 1876, and was working as a fitter and turner when he enlisted on 11th October 1897.

Over the eight years that the document records, Alfred rose from his initial rank of Engine Room Artificer 4th Class to Engine Room Artificer 2nd Class. His service details end on 5th December 1905, when he seems to have transferred to the Officer’s Section.

There are census records for the late 1800s for Ernest Ward (presumably forsaking Alfred to avoid confusion with his father). Alfred Sr working as a rope and marquee rick cloth maker. Married to Eliza Ward, the couple had three children, of whom Ernest was the oldest. By 1901, Engine Room Artificer Ward was assigned to HMS Furious, a cruiser based at Sheerness in Kent.

There are no further details for Chief Artificer Engineer Alfred Ernest Ward between 1905 and 1919, and his life during this time is destined to remain lost to time.


Private Michael O’Hara

Private Michael O’Hara

In Paignton Cemetery, Devon, is a headstone dedicated to Private Michael O’Hara of the East Lancashire Regiment. There is little concrete information available about Michael, and a lot of what exists is contradictory.

The British Army Register of Soldiers’ Effects states Private O’Hara was attached to the regiment’s 7th Battalion, and confirms that his next-of-kin was his sister, Margaret Barrus.

An entry in the 1881 census suggests that Michael and Margaret’s parents may have been William and Mary O’Hara. The family were living in rooms a 5 Shed Street in Habergham Eaves, Lancashire, and 14-year-old Michael, who had been born in Bacup, was working as a mule spinner in a local cotton mill.

At this point the Michael’s story becomes vague again, and subsequent census returns throw up too many inconsistencies to corroborate a definite path for his life.

When war came to Europe, Michael stepped up to play his part. Again, full service details have been lost, but it is evident that he was sent to France on 17th July 1915. By the following spring Private O’Hara was back on British soil again, and had been admitted to the American Women’s Hospital at Oldway House in Paignton, Devon. The reason he was there is unclear, but it was to prove fatal: Michael passed away on 13th May 1916. Based on the 1881 census, he would have been around 49 years of age.

The body of Michael O’Hara was laid to rest in Paignton Cemetery, much of his life story buried there with him.


Serjeant Samuel Dymond

Serjeant Samuel Dymond

Samuel John Dymond was born in Broadhempston, Devon, in 1878. The son of Samuel and Jane Dymond, his childhood appears to have been disjointed: the 1881 census found him living with his uncle and aunt, while a decade later he was under his grandmother’s roof.

This background may have driven him to a more stable life and, on 22nd May 1896, he enlisted in the army. Joining the Devonshire Regiment, his service records show that he was 5ft 5.5ins (1.66m) tall and weighed 126lbs (57.2kg). He had fair hair, grey eyes, a fresh complexion and two scars on his right kneecap.

Private Dymond spent the first couple of years on home soil. In February 1898, however, he journeyed overseas, serving in the East Indies and South Africa, for which he was awarded the South Africa Medal, with a clasp for the defence of Ladysmith. By January 1902, Samuel was on the move again, and he spent the next two years in India.

At the beginning of 1904, Samuel returned to Britain. He remained on home soil until his contract came to an end on 21st May 1912.

Away from the army life, love beckoned. Samuel married Alice Reynolds on 9th October 1904 in the parish church at Marldon, Devon. The couple went on to have three children: Dorothy, Annie and Albert.

By the time of the 1911 census, Samuel was working as a labourer, and the family were living at Vine Cottage on Church Street, Paignton, Devon.

When war broke out, Samuel was called into service once more but, frustratingly, it is at this point that his trail goes cold. Returning to the Devonshire Regiment, he was certainly in France by 11th December 1914. Later on in the war he transferred across to the regimental depot, but whether this was on home soil of overseas is unclear.

The next record for Samuel is that of his passing. He died in a military hospital in Devonport on 13th January 1920, the British Record of Soldiers’ Effects only at that point confirming that he had reached the rank of Serjeant. He was 42 years of age.

Samuel John Diamond was laid to rest in Paignton Cemetery, overlooking the town that had become his home.


Private Thomas Legg

Private Thomas Legg

Thomas John Gladstone Legg was born in Dunster, Somerset, on 30th July 1898. The fourth of six children, his parents were John and Louisa Legg. John was a baker, and the family lived on West Street in the village.

By 1911, the Leggs had moved south, settling in Winsford, on the outskirts of Exmoor. Thomas was still in school, but his two older brothers were helping their father with the bakery business, and they had taken in a boarder – road worker John Jeffrey – to help bring in a bit of additional income.

When war broke out, Thomas stepped up to play his part. There is little information available about his military service, but it is clear that he had enlisted in the Devonshire Regiment by the spring of 1918.

Private Legg was assigned to the 15th Battalion, although he soon transferred to the 474th Agricultural Company of the Labour Corps.

The profound sympathy of parishioners goes out to Mr and Mrs J Legg… who have sustained a double bereavement. On October 22nd their daughter, Miss Ivy Marion Legg, aged 23, succumbed to pneumonia. Their son, Pte J Legg, came home from training to attend his sister’s funeral, and he was attacked by pneumonia and died in a few days. Amid general tokens of respect and sympathy, the interments were made in Highbray Churchyard. Both father and mother have been seriously ill, but are now recovering. There are still several critical cases of complications following influenza in the parish.

[North Devon Journal: Thursday 14th November 1918]

Thomas passed away on 2nd November 1918: he was 20 years of age. He was laid to rest alongside his sister in All Saints’ Churchyard, High Bray.


Private Willie Howells

Private Willie Howells

In the peaceful Congregational Chapelyard of Berea, St Davids, Pembrokeshire, is a headstone dedicated to Willie Howells, grandson of Benjamin and Mary. The inscription – in Welsh – confirms that he died on 26th November 1918, at the age of 23.

The 1901 census records the couple living at Rhos y Gorse with four of their eleven children and two of their grandchildren, including William. There is no documentation to confirm which of their children was his parent.

Tragically, Willie’s military records are also lost to time. The Commonwealth War Graves Commission give his name as Private BW Howells. They suggest that his first regiment was the South Wales Borderers, and that he transferred to the Northern Command Labour Centre of the Labour Corps. His service numbers for both units draw a blank, however.

The life of Willie Howells is destined to remain a mystery, one of the many whose stories were buried with them.


Private William Hasley

Private William Hasley

William George Hasley was born on 14th June 1897. He was the oldest of three children to William and Sarah Hasley. William Sr, a former soldier, worked as a commissionaire, and the family lived at 11 Coach & Horses Yard, St James, Westminster.

Things had changed by 1900, and William Sr was employed as an engineer’s labourer. The family had moved to Dorset, setting up home in the village of Bourton, and their daughter, Susan, was born there at the turn of the century. Susan Sr came from just up the road in Zeals, Wiltshire, and it is likely that she was staying there when her youngest child, Sidney, was born in 1902.

By the time of the 1911 census, the family of five were living at Beach Cottage, Bourton. William Sr was drawing his army pension, but still employed at the engineering foundry; his eldest son, while still at school, was also listed as a news boy, possibly selling the periodicals to villagers.

War came to Europe in the summer of 1914, and William Jr was quick to step up and play his part. Giving up his job as an engineer’s fitter, enlisted on 1st September 1914, and joined the Somerset Light Infantry. His service records show that he stood 5ft 8.5ins (1.74m) tall, and weighed 124lbs (56.3kg). Private Hasley was noted as having brown hair, brown eyes and a sallow complexion. He also had a scar on the tip of the middle finger of his left hand.

Assigned to the 3rd (Reserve) Battalion, Private Hasley’s unit moved to Devonport, Devon, at the start of 1915. It was here that he contracted tuberculosis, which would ultimately lead to his medical discharge from the army in July. He served just 308 days.

At this point, William’s trail goes cold. It is likely that he returned to Bourton, although he had regular check-ups by the army inspection board. He was deemed totally incapacitated by the illness on 3rd January 1917.

William George Hasley’s lung condition would seal his fate. He passed away on 23rd March 1917: he was just 19 years of age. He was laid to rest in Bourton Cemetery.