Military History |
Theatre of War Killed | Medals | Commonwealth War Grave or Memorial |
---|---|---|
France and Flanders | 1914-15 Star, British War & Victory Medals | Cement House Cemetery |
First Arrived in any Theatre | Medal Citation (if app) | SWFHS Area Memorials |
10 Jul 1915 at Gallipoli, Balkans | ~ | Warwick (Eleanor Cross) War Memorial |
Warwick School Memorial | ||
Action, Battle or Other Reason Killed | Date and Place Commissioned | |
Third Battle of Ypres (Passchendaele) | 2 Sep 1914 from Officer Training Corps | |
Place of Death | Previous Regiments or Units | Other War Memorials |
Weilles Maisons nr Langemarck | Cambridge University OTC | Emmanuel College, Cambridge |
Army Service History
- 2 Sep 1914 - Commissioned to 2nd Lt from Cambridge University OTC
- 15 Aug 1915 - Promoted to Lieutenant
- 29 Mar 1917 - Promoted to Captain
Wounded at Gallipoli (1915)
Circumstances of Death
Captain Coyne is listed as being killed on 27 Aug 1917. The 9th Battalion war diary entry for that day is transcribed below. IN THE LINE – 27th: At 1.55pm the enemy was attacked , the objective for the Battalion being Pheasant Trench from U.30.d.15.95 to C.6.b.90.15. The intention was to capture and hold this line with the first wave and to establish a line of posts from U.30.b.71.29 to D.1.a.65.20 with the second wave. The disposition of the Battalion was as follows:- First Wave C Coy on the right Second Wave A Coy on the right Each company was composed of three platoons, two platoons of each Coy formed the first lines of the waves the remaining one platoon the second line. The 8th Bn Duke of Wellington’s Regt was on our left and the 7th Bn Worcestershire Bn on our right. Both of these units took part in the attack which was made simultaneously by the 11th and 48th Divisions. At Zero (1.55pm) a shrapnel barrage was put on the enemy trench. The companies left their assembly trenches immediately & assumed the formation indicated. Owing to heavy rain the ground was in very bad condition, being impassable in places where shell holes were continuous and full of water. The enemy barrage was put down on the Langemarck-Winnipeg Road at 1.58pn. The advance was checked by machine gun & rifle fire from Pheasant Trench which was very strongly held, and from several concrete emplacements west of the trench, the chief of these being Vieilles Maisons which consisted of three buildings. By the time our barrage lifted to enable our men to enter Pheasant Trench the lines were thinned by casualties and although a few men entered the trench they were unable to remain there. One house at Weilles Maisons was captured and a line of posts was formed East of Bulow Farm, running parallel with Pheasant Trench. |
Personal & Family History |
Birth Date/Place | Baptism Date/Place |
---|---|
Jul Qtr 1894 at Hartley Wintney | 5 Aug 1894 at Hartley Wintney |
Parents Names | Abode |
Lt Col Thomas J and Rachel Ann Coyne | The White House, Hatton Hill, Warwick |
Schools | Colleges |
Alleyn's School 1903 | Warwick School 1904-13 | Emmanuel College, Cambridge 1913-194 |
Address History | Employment History |
1894 - Hartley Wintney | 1901 - Scholar |
1901 - Alleyn School ? | 1911 - Scholar |
1911 - Budbrook Barracks, Warwick | 1914 - Student at Cambridge |
1914 - Emmanuel College, Cambridge | |