South Warwickshire Family History Society War Memorial Transcription Project The Fallen Men of South Warwickshire - World War One
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1s |
Military History |
Theatre of War | Medals | Commonwealth War Grave or Memorial |
---|---|---|
France and Flanders | British War & Victory Medals | Soissons Memorial |
Arrived in Theatre | Medal Citation (if app) | SWFHS Area Memorials |
After March 1917 | ~ | Ettington |
Action, Battle or Other Reason Killed | Date and Place Enlisted | Other War Memorials |
Third Battle of the Aisne | March 1917 at Warwick | ~ |
Place of Death | Previous Regiments or Units | |
Berry au Bac | ||
Circumstances of Death
William is listed as being killed in action on the 27 May 1918 after he was initially reported missing in action. The war diary for that day briefly states:"Enemy attacked along whole Brigade front". There is no Report on Operations in the diary and so there is no real detail about the events of the 27th.
What we do know is that the 2nd Battalion, Royal Berkshire were in the front lines at Gernicourt Wood just south of the River Aisne when the whole brigade/division front was attacked by the German army on the first day of the Third Battle of the Aisne, part of the German Spring Offensive. Two days later the battalion had been pushed back more than 10km to a position near Ventelay.
Between the 27th and 29th May the battalion suffered casualties of 623 men. On the 1st June the whole of 8th Division was so depleted that it was withdrawn from the lines and during the battle the allies were forced in som places to retreat some 55km before various counter attacks drove the Germans back.
In the wider battle on the morning of 27 May 1918, the Germans began a bombardment of the Allied front lines with over 4,000 artillery pieces. The British suffered heavy losses, because French General Duchene was reluctant to abandon the Chemin des Dames ridge, after it had been captured at such cost the previous year, and had ordered them to mass together in the front trenches, in defiance of instructions from the French Commander-in-Chief Henri-Philippe Petain. Huddled together, they made easy artillery targets. The Germans were successfully halted by the Allies at the Marne on 6 June 1918. Duchane was sacked for his defiance and failure to follow orders.

Personal & Family History |
Birth Date/Place | Baptism Date/Place |
---|---|
Apr Qtr 1899 at Stratford on Avon | 1901 at Holy Trinity, Stratford on Avon |
Parents Names | Abode |
Alfred and Louisa | Both deceased |
Schools | Colleges |
~ | |
Address History | Employment History |
1899 - Stratford on Avon | 1911 - School |
1901 - 16 Paddock Place, Stratford on Avon | |
1911 - 16 Bull Street, Stratford on Avon | |
1917 - Ettington | |
- Brother of Alfred James Bearley who also fell. Alfred is named on the Stratford on Avon War Memorial
- William left his effects to his sister Gertrude as both of his parents had died by time he was killed