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South Warwickshire Family History Society War Memorial Transcription Project

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 The Fallen Men of South Warwickshire - World War One


Private 17170 Wilfred Rowland SIMMONDS - 2nd Battalion Hampshire Regiment

1s
Killed in Action on Friday August 6th 1915 aged 18


Military History

     
Theatre of War Medals Commonwealth War Grave or Memorial
Gallipoli 1914-15 Star, British War & Victory Medals Twelve Tree Copse Cemetery
     
Arrived in Theatre Medal Citation (if app) SWFHS Area Memorials
17 Jul 1915 in the Balkans ~ Alveston
    Studley War Memorial ??
Action, Battle or Other Reason Killed Date and Place Enlisted  
Battle of Krithia Vineyard August 1914 at Birmingham  
     
Place of Death Previous Regiments or Units  
near Gully Beach, Turkey Pvt 11942 Oxford & Bucks LI   
     
  • Enlistment Age - Wilfred was underage (17) when he enlisted

Circumstances of Death

Wilfred is listed as being killed in action on 6th August 1915 during a diversionary attack near Krithia Vineyard. The was diary for that day and an entract from C. T. Atkinson's book ROYAL HAMPSHIRE REGIMENT. 1914-1918 published by Naval and Military Press.

War Diary

Gully Beach Aug 6th 1915: Marched up mule track and took over trenches from Royal Fusiliers, heavy gun fire up to 1pm, bombardment from 2.15pm until 3.50pm. Attack launched, first line advanced at proper time, attack did get home, majority of first line killed or wounded. Captain B.S. Parker led attack of second line, killed soon after leaving his trenches, attack failed.

Failure of attack attributed to the number of of machine guns in front and flanks of position, these guns had not been knocked out in the bombardment, and as soon as attack was launched opened very heavy fire.

Strength of Battalion going into action - Officers 27 Other Ranks 846.

Casualties                     Officers             Other Ranks

Killed                               3                          31
Wounded                         2                         183
Missing                          16                         212
Sick                                 1                          13

                                      22          :             439

Book Extract

ROYAL HAMPSHIRE REGIMENT - 1914-1918 by C.T. Atkinson. Naval and Military Press

The assaulting troops were in position by 8 a.m. (August 6th) but had to wait for six hours before the bombardment started. As again the artillery support was utterly inadequate: General Davies, who had just arrived from France to take over the Eighth Corps1 from General Hunter-West on, invalided, was quite horrified to see how very far it fell short of the Western Front standard, low as that was in 1915, and the volume and vigour of the Turkish reply showed that they were unpleasantly ready for the attack and augured ill for its chances. After an hour’s deliberate bombardment by a handful of heavy guns, the field guns took up the tale and for 30 minutes plastered the objective as vigorously as their scanty ammunition would allow: then at 3.50 p.m. the infantry went forward with the utmost dash and gallantry, the Hampshire attacking in four waves. A low crest fifty yards from our line was crossed almost without loss but then machine-guns opened up on all sides and mowed the attackers down wholesale before many of them had got any way across No Man’s Land, some guns across the Krithia Nullah on our right being particularly deadly. Our guns could do nothing to subdue their fire and under it the attack soon withered away.

The Hampshire suffered terribly, above all in losing Captain Parker, who fell in leading the advance of the second line, and with him two other ‘originals’, Captain Day and Lt. Webb, both previously wounded but back at duty, and 2/Lt. Gawn, who had won the D.C.M. in Somaliland, while 2/Lt. C. Moor fell on the Turkish parapet, which a very few of the leading waves seem to have reached. The supports lost as heavily as the leaders but pressed forward with equal determination, and some men, among them Lt. Morris and some of Z Company’s second wave, entered the Turkish lines and established themselves in H.i2a, some apparently even reaching H.13. Too few to maintain their foothold, they were overcome by numbers, though Sergeant Sinsbury held on for some time to a sap with a few men and, when they were bombed out, he covered their retirement with great skill and resource.2 Rather more Worcestershire got in and held out till dark, while a fair number of Essex from Hampshire Cut established themselves in H.12 and eventually managed to retain a tiny corner, but within a few minutes the attack had come to a complete standstill, the unhit survivors lying out among the dead and wounded, pinned to the ground by the machine-guns and unable to move until darkness let them and the more slightly wounded crawl back. It had been the worst day in the whole story of Cape Helles.

Inadequate artillery support had once again led to a heavy sacrifice of lives to little purpose. Nothing had been gained locally and even if the Turks had been distracted from the main attack at Suvla, its unavailing gallantry had left the 88th Brigade a wreck, the Hampshire having lost eighteen officers and 224 other ranks killed and missing....

During the night any wounded who could be reached were brought in, and then the 86th Brigade relieved the 88th and the surviving Hampshires made their way back to Gully Beach, where they were warmly congratulated on their gallantry by General de Lisle and reorganized in two companies. Little rest could be given to the brigade: shattered as it was, it had on August 14th to take over the line again from the 86th. Things had gone wrong at Suvla, and though Sir Ian Hamilton had deliberately refrained from using the Twenty-Ninth Division in that attack because he had already asked so much of it and wished, if possible, to spare it, he had now to employ the ‘Old Guard’ of the M.E.F. in a last-minute effort to retrieve the situation.



 Personal & Family History

 

Birth Date/Place Baptism Date/Place
Jan Qtr 1897 at Aston  
   
Parents Names Abode
Henry and Janet Simmonds 8 Tiddington, Alveston                   
   
Schools Colleges
  ~
   
Address History Employment History
1897 - Aston 1911 - Plough Boy
1901 - School Lane, Tiddington  
1911 - School Lane, Tiddington  
1915 - 8 Tiddington, Alveston