I looked at the information I had already gathered and created a list (which follows).
These men died on November 5th 1916 and where buried (according to the personnel files) about 450yards N.N.W of Gueudecourt, Sheet 57c N.20 D.3.7 and are commemorated at Villers-Bretonneux
Gordon Bromley (M)
Alic Brown (R M)
William Gibney (M)
Leslie Miller (M)
Robert Miller (M)
Wallis Rankine (M)
C Company
Alan Andrews (* M)
Thomas Bannan (M)
Ernest Clarkson (M)
William Constable (M)
Robert Costellow (M)
Herbert Elmes (R M)
Reginald Flower (R M)
William Graham (M)
Charles Hambling (M)
John Harris (* M)
William Harris (R M)
John Howell (M)
George Jamieson (M)
Joseph Lanyon (* M)
Osswild McGregor (R M)
David Murray (M)
Milton Penketh (R M)
Thomas Rutherford (R M)
Horace Schofield (M)
Leslie Tiedeman (M)
Sydney Todd (R M)
Sydney Vandine (R M)
George Wallgate (* M)
Thomas Whitton (M)
D Company
James Lewis (M)
Company Unknown or Not Sure
Charles Cregan (M)
Edward Fanning (R M)
Thomas Lunn (R M)
Matthew Thorburn (M)
James Henry (M)
R - Same burial reference as Thomas in their Red Cross File [Buried about 450yards N.N.W. of Gueudecourt, Sheet 57c S.W N.20 D.3.7]
M - Same burial reference as Thomas written on their Military File [Buried about 450yards N.N.W. of Gueudecourt, Sheet 57c S.W N.20 D.3.7]
There were some soliders that I couldn't place on the above list because the records did provide me with the same information.
James Charles Simington
# No exact co-ordinate found in any records for burial, just general stuff - can assume with others.
Emanuel Hansen
John Harold McIntyre
Niall Joseph Mullarkey
George Joseph Parr
2 comments:
You should be able to find the details you want from the WW1 records held at the National Archives? Check out http://www.naa.gov.au/collection/recordsearch/index.aspx and enter as a guest - good luck!
Michelle
Re-reading your blog I realise that you must have researched the records at the National Archives. I was obviously SO excited to see that someone else was working on something I was so heavily involved with that I initially failed to realise that. I can imagine how frustrating your findings must be - so near and yet so far! Again thanks for sharing your great research - much appreciated.
Michelle
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