South Warwickshire Family History Society War Memorial Transcription Project
The Fallen Men of South Warwickshire - World War One |
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Military History |
| Theatre of War in Which Died | Campaign Medals | Commonwealth War Grave or Memorial |
|---|---|---|
| North Sea | 1914-15 Star, British War & Victory Medals | Chatham Naval Memorial |
| First Arrived in Theatre | Bravery & Conduct Medals | SWFHS Area Memorials |
| 25 Apr 1915 in Gallipoli | ~ | Leamington Spa War Memorial |
| Action, Battle or Other Reason Died | Date and Commissioned | |
| Killed in Accidental Explosion at Sea | 1 Feb 1916 as a Midshipman | |
| Other War Memorials | ||
| Place of Death | Previous Regiments or Units | Tettenhall College |
| North Sea off Jutland | ~ | |
Circumstances of Death
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Robert was either killed in the below described accidental explosion or was drowned as his ship, HMS Vanguard, sank instantly. The following is taken from Wikipedia: The HMS Vanguard anchored in Scapa Flow at about 18:30 on 9 July 1917 after having spent the morning exercising general evolutions concluding practising the routine for abandoning ship. The Captain made a speech to the ship's company in which he stated that under present conditions a ship would either blow up in a matter of seconds, or would take several hours to sink. Practically this meant that all would go down with the ship or that everybody would be saved. It is a remarkable coincidence that his words were to be so tragically proved in less than 12 hours. There is no record of anyone detecting anything amiss until the first detonation at 23:20. Vanguard sank almost instantly, with only three of the crew surviving, one of whom died soon afterwards. A total of 843 men were lost, including two Australian stokers from the light cruiser HMAS Sydney who were serving time in the battleship's brig. Another casualty was Captain Kyōsuke Eto, a military observer from the Imperial Japanese Navy, which was allied with the Royal Navy at the time through the Anglo-Japanese Alliance. The bodies of 17 of the 22 men recovered after the explosion, plus that of Lieutenant Commander Alan Duke, who died after being rescued, were buried at the Royal Naval Cemetery at Lyness, not far from the site of the explosion. The others are commemorated on the Chatham, Plymouth and Portsmouth Naval Memorials. |
| Personal & Family History |
| Birth Date/Place | Baptism Date/Place |
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| 16 May 1897 at Leamington Spa | |
| Parents Names | Abode |
| Robert James and Emily Florence Colbourne | 7 Clarendon Crescent, Leamington Spa |
| Schools | Schools |
| Tettenhall College (May 1909 - Jul 1915) | ~ |
| Address History | Employment History |
| 1897 - Leamington Spa | 1911 - Student at Tettenhall College |
| 1901 - 7 Clarendon Crescent, Leamington Spa | 1915 - Student at Tettenhall College |
| 1911 - Tettenhall College, Tettenhall, Staffs | |
| 1915 - Tettenhall College, Tettenhall, Staffs | |
| 1917 - 7 Clarendon Crescent, Leamington Spa | |
Brother of Edward James Colbourne who also fell

