Gold Hill, Shaftesbury

Harry Walter Stainer

Surname: Stainer
Other names: Harry Walter
Other people in this story:
Albert George Stainer
Martha Rosina Stainer née Warren
Locations in this story:
Shaftesbury, Dorset
Gold Hill, Shaftesbury

Story:
Harry Walter Stainer was born on 22nd September 1898 in Shaftesbury, Dorset, the son of Albert George Stainer and Martha Rosina Stainer (née Warren).  The family home was at 9 Gold Hill, Shaftesbury and Harry lived there throughout his life. He enlisted on 21st September 1916 but was not mobilized until 20th August 1917 when he joined the 34th Territorial Battalion as a Private (Service No. 8/20524).  He transferred to the 303rd Reserve Labour Company of the Labour Corps on 7th October 1917 and later, on the 17th November 1917, to the 649th Agricultural Company (Service No. 432205) as a Lance Corporal.  He was discharged as being physically unfit, by virtue of deformed feet, on 13th March 1919.  Whilst no medal record has been found there is an imprint on his Service Records which simply says 'MEDAL' and nothing else.  It is assumed he may have received the Victory and British War medals but the index cards are missing.  The 1921 Census and 1939 Register show he was still living at 9 Gold Hill, Shaftesbury, with his sister. He was single and working as a Builders Labourer.  He died locally in 1962 and was buried in the Town Cemetery, Shaftesbury on 20 Jun 1962.    

Images:

Links to related web content / sources:
The National Archives
St. James' Church

Harold George Stainer

Surname: Stainer
Other names: Harold George
Other people in this story:
George Theodore Stainer
Jane Stainer née Young
Kate Mary Stainer née King
Walter Charles Stainer
Arthur Stainer
Locations in this story:
Shaftesbury, Dorset
St. James, Shaftesbury
Layton Lane, Shaftesbury

Story:
Harold George Stainer was born on the 30th September 1888 in Shaftesbury, Dorset and baptised at St. James' Church on 28th October 1888 the son of the George Theodore Stainer and Jane Stainer (née Young).  He lived his whole life, apart from during Military Service, in St. James, Shaftesbury. He married Kate Mary King at St. James' Church, Shaftesbury, on 10th September 1914.  There are no records of any children.  

Harold enlisted on the 7th June 1916 but was not mobilized until 12th March 1917 when he joined the Devonshire Regiment (Labour Battalion) as a Private (Service No. 59879).  Shortly after on 9 June 1916 he was transferred to the Labour Corps 3rd Reserve Battalion and was posted to the 303rd Labour Company (Service No. 290276).   On the 13th October 1917 he was transferred to the 191 Training Squadron of the Royal Flying Corps (which became the Royal Air Force on 1st April 1918) (Service No. 104964).  He held the rank of Air Mechanic II and was employed as an Aero Rigger.   He was discharged, having served the whole time in the UK, on 12th April 1919 as being unfit for further service and received the Silver War Badge No. 7071 and a short lived limited pension.  There are no other obvious medal records. The 1921 Census shows him living at 1 St. James Street, Shaftesbury, described as a Cabinet Maker and by the 1939 Register he had moved to 18 Layton Lane, Shaftesbury, still working as a Cabinet Maker and Upholsterer. He died in Shaftesbury on 1st April 1955 and was buried in St. James Churchyard on 6th April 1955.

Two of Harold's siblings served in the war: Walter Charles (b.1893) with the Royal Field Artillery, and Arthur (b.1896) with the Dorset Yeomanry and Royal Garrison Artillery.

Images:

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The National Archives
Walter Charles Stainer
Arthur Stainer
Fontmell Magna Church

George Spicer

Surname: Spicer
Other names: George
Other people in this story:
Absalom Spicer
Margaret Spicer née Jackson
Edith M. Spicer née Millard
Locations in this story:
Sutton Waldron, Shaftesbury, Dorset
Fontmell Magna, Shaftesbury, Dorset
France & Flanders
Winchester, Hampshire
Dorchester, Dorset
Poole, Dorset

Story:
George Spicer was born on 14th October 1881 in Sutton Waldron, Dorset, and baptised at Fontmell Magna, Dorset, on 11th December 1881, the son of Absalom Spicer and Margaret Spicer (née Jackson).  His father passed away in 1893. He lived his early life in Higher Street, Sutton Waldron, Dorset.  He enlisted on 31st August 1914 and joined the Royal Field Artillery (108/23rd Battery) as a Gunner Signaller (Service No. 98021). He served in France and was wounded on 13th July 1917 from which he recovered only to be reported missing on 27th March 1918 but rejoined his battery without any apparent inquiry.  He was demobilized on 28th February 1919 and awarded the Victory and British War medals as well as the 1914/15 Star. 

In 1921 he applied for a disablement pension and requested copies of his military medical records.  It appears the War Office were reluctant to release them.  The 1921 Census shows him living with his widowed mother in Fontmell Magna, Shaftesbury, Dorset, working as a Cabinet Maker. There is a record of him marrying Edith M. Millard in Poole in 1925.  By the 1939 Registry George was living at 2 Parsonage Street, Fontmell Magna, Shaftesbury, Dorset, whilst his wife was a patient in hospital in Dorchester.   George was then working as a Carpenter and Joiner.  He died in 1965 in the Winchester, Hampshire, Registration District.

Images:

Links to related web content / sources:
The National Archives
Shaftesbury from St. Peter's Church

William Charles Sims

Surname: Sims
Other names: William Charles
Other people in this story:
William Sims
Sarah Sims née Ransom
Beatrice Vera Sims née Chubb
Charles Job Stretch
Locations in this story:
Shaftesbury, Dorset
Milford, Wiltshire
India
Sturminster, Dorset
Enmore Green, Shaftesbury, Dorset
Coppice Street, Shaftesbury

Story:
William Charles Sims was born in Shaftesbury, Dorset, on 26th January 1894, the son of William Sims and Sarah Sims (née Ransom).  His father had died in 1899 and his mother re-married Charles Job Stretch in 1899.  William lived with his mother in Milford, Wiltshire, during his childhood, until the family returned to Enmore Green, Shaftesbury, by the 1911 Census.  He enlisted on 28th February 1911 and joined the 2/4th (Reserve) Battalion of the Dorsetshire Regiment (Service Nos. 4561 and 4/1364).  He was embodied on 14th August 1914 with the rank of Acting Sergeant and served in India until he was discharged on 23rd May 1916 having completed the terms of his engagement.  Notwithstanding his discharge he re-enlisted on 15th August 1916 and joined the 4th (Reserve) Battalion (Service No. 202489).  He retained his rank according to his military records.  He was finally demobilized in March 1919 and awarded the Victory and British War medals as well as the 1914/15 Star.  The 1921 Census shows him living with his mother and step-father at 10 Church Lane, Shaftesbury, working as a Baker and Confectioner on his own account. He married Beatrice Vera Chubb in Shaftesbury during the Oct/Dec Quarter of 1921. They went on to have at least three children.   By the 1939 Register he was living at 25 Coppice Street, Shaftesbury and still described as a Baker.  His death was registered at the Sturminster, Dorset, Registry in 1968.

Images:
  • Church Lane, Shaftesbury
  • Church Lane, Shaftesbury 10
  • Church Lane, Shaftesbury 8 & 10

Links to related web content / sources:
The National Archives
Holy Trinity Church, Shaftesbury 1

Montague Smith

Surname: Smith
Other names: Montague
Other people in this story:
Harry Smith
Mary Smith
Eva Annie Smith née Wooders
Harry Sidney Smith
Locations in this story:
Shaftesbury, Dorset
Streatham, Surrey
Drayton Park, Willesden, Middlesex
Brent, Middlesex
France & Flanders
Holy Trinity Church, Shaftesbury
Mustons Lane, Shaftesbury
South Africa
Paddington, London

Story:
Montague Smith was born on 6th July 1889 in Shaftesbury, Dorset, and baptised on 28th July 1889 at Holy Trinity Church, the son of Harry and Mary Smith.  He lived his early life at 7 Mustons Lane, Shaftesbury, one of eleven children in the family.   He enlisted on 15th July 1907 and joined the 9th Lancers of Cavalry of the Line (Service No. 246) and later the 21st Lancers and served in South Africa.  He was discharged to reserves on 14th July 1914 only to be almost immediately embodied on 15th August 1914 as a Shoeing Smith Corporal (Service No. 41347).  He transferred to the Machine Gun Corps (Cavalry) and joined the 2nd Machine Gun Squadron of the Royal Tank Corps on 27th June 1916 and served in France.   He was discharged on 14 Jul 1919 having completed the terms of his engagement.  He was awarded the Victory and British War medals as well as the 1914/15 Star.  He had married Eva Annie Wooders at St. Anselem Church, Streatham, Surrey, on 9th August 1917.  One child is recorded.  By the 1921 Census he was living at 11 Tavistock Crescest, Paddington, London, working as a Store Labourer. But by the 1939 Register he had moved to 86a Drayton Park, Willesden, Middlesex, working as a Bus Conductor.  He died on 21st November 1966 in the Brent, Middlesex, Registry area.

Montague's brother Harry Sidney (b.1869) also had a career in the army, with the Somerset Light Infantry.

Images:

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The National Archives
Harry Sidney Smith
Compton Abbas 1

Sidney John Ryall

Surname: Ryall
Other names: Sidney John
Other people in this story:
William Ryall
Eleanor Ryall née Goodman
Emma May Ryall née Parker
Victor Alfred Ryall
Locations in this story:
Compton Abbas, Shaftesbury, Dorset
France & Flanders
Langton Road, Blandford, Dorset
Cann, Shaftesbury, Dorset

Story:
Sidney John Ryall was born on 25th February 1898 in Cann, Shaftesbury, Dorset, the son of William Ryall and Eleanor Ryall (née Goodman).  He lived most if his early life in Compton Abbas, Shaftesbury.   He enlisted on the 7th June 1916 but was not embodied until 24th May 1918 when he joined the 6th (Service) Battalion of the Dorsetshire Regiment as a Private (Service No. 40961).   He served in France from 11 Oct 1918 as a Lewis Gunner and received a gun shot wound on 18th October 1918 from which he recovered and re-assigned to the 3rd Battalion.   His mother regrettably died in 1918. He was discharged on 4th March 1919 and was awarded the Victory and British War medals.  He went to live at 31 Compton Abbas, Shaftesbury but by the 1921 Census had moved with his widowed father to 12 Compton Abbas working as a Bricklayer.  He married Emma May Parker in Blandford, Dorset, on 16th February 1924 and they went on to have two children.   By the 1939 Register he was living at 8 Langton Road, Blandford, Dorset, still working as a bricklayer.   He died in Blandford on 15th December 1975. Sidney's brother Victor Alfred (b.1896) also served with the Dorsetshire Regiment during the First World War. He died in the Somme region on 15th September 1916.

Images:

Links to related web content / sources:
Victor Alfred Ryall
The National Archives
Enmore Green. New Buildings in the foreground

James Roberts

Surname: Roberts
Other names: James
Other people in this story:
James Roberts
Emma Jane Roberts née Lane
Agnes Ellen Roberts née Pickford
George Roberts
Locations in this story:
Enmore Green, Motcombe, Shaftesbury, Dorset
Shaftesbury, Dorset
Bleke Street, Shaftesbury
Mustons Lane, Shaftesbury
Sturminster Newton, Dorset
St. James Church, Shaftesbury
St. John's Church, Enmore Green

Story:
James Roberts was born in Enmore Green, Motcombe, Shaftesbury, Dorset, on 21st April 1879 and baptised at St. John's Church, Enmore Green, on 1st June 1879, the son of James Roberts and Emma Jane Roberts (née Lane).  He lived most of his life in the Shaftesbury area.   He married Agnes Ellen Pickford at St. James Church, Shaftesbury, on 25th December 1903.   They went on to have eight children. James enlisted with the 4th Battalion of the Dorsetshire Regiment (Territorial Force) as a Private on 6th May 1908 and attended regular annual training camps (Service No. 495).    He was embodied on 4th August 1914 and served solely in the UK with the rank of Pioneer (Service No. 4529).  He was discharged on 5th May 1916 having completed the terms of his engagement.  He was awarded the Territorial Efficiency Medal on 1st August 1915 but no other medal records have been found.  At the time of his discharge he was living at 12 Bleke Street, Shaftesbury, and was still there by the time of the 1921 Census working for Messrs Stratton, Son & Mead, Grocers, of Shaftesbury.  His wife died in 1937.   By the 1939 Register he had moved to 7 Mustons Lane, Shaftesbury and was employed as a Grocer's Yardman.  James died in 1960 in the Sturminster, Dorset, Registry area.  His name is found on the Roll of Honour prepared by his former employers, Stratton, Son & Mead of Shaftesbury. Two of James' brothers served in the war: Charles (b.1888) with the Royal Garrison Artillery and George (b.1887) with the south Wales Borderers and the Monmouthshire Regiment.

Images:

Links to related web content / sources:
George Roberts
Charles Roberts
The National Archives

George Roberts

Surname: Roberts
Other names: George
Other people in this story:
James Roberts
Emma Jane Roberts née Lane
Margretta Roberts née Deacon
James Roberts (Junior)
Charles Roberts
Locations in this story:
Shaftesbury, Dorset
Abertillery, Monmouthshire, Wales
Bedwellty, Monmouthshire, Wales
Layton Lane, Shaftesbury

Story:
George Roberts was born in Shaftesbury, Dorset, on 20th April 1887, the son of James Roberts and Emma Jane Roberts (née Lane).  He grew up at the family home at 15 Layton Lane in Shaftesbury.   By 1909 he had moved to Abertillery, Monmouthshire, to work as a Collier and had served two years with the South Wales Borderers (3rd Volunteer Battalion) on a Territorial basis.   On 14th January 1909 he re-enlisted with the Monmouthshire Regiment (48th Provisional, 3rd Battalion) as a Territorial and he attended annual training camps (Service No. 699).  He married Margretta  Deacon on 13 Nov 1910 at St. Michaels Church, Abertillery, Monmouthshire, and they went on to have four children.  He was mobilized on 5th August 1914 and served as a Private in the UK only.  He was discharged on 17th May 1916 having completed his terms of engagement.  He gave his address as 29 Kings Head Road, Abertillery.  No medal records can be found for this soldier.  The 1921 Census shows him living at 4 Vine Cottages, Pantypwelyn Road, Abertillaery, described as a Colliery Haulier (out of work). By the 1939 Register he had moved to 32 Montague Street, Abertillery and was noted now working as a Colliery Coal Cutter (Below Ground).  He died in 1955 in the Bedwellty Registration District. 

Two of George's brothers served in the war: James (b.1879) with the Dorsetshire Regiment and Charles (b.1888) with the Dorsets.

Images:

Links to related web content / sources:
The National Archives
James Roberts
Charles Roberts

Ivor George Ridout

Surname: Ridout
Other names: Ivor George
Other people in this story:
Charles Ridout
Hannah Sarah Wright Ridout née Stone
Elsie Ridout née Pickford
Locations in this story:
Stour Row, Shaftesbury, Dorset
Gore Farm, Margaret Marsh, Nr. Shaftesbury, Dorset
West Milton, Powerstock, Dorset
Wilkins Farm, Bozley Hill, Cann, Shaftesbury, Dorset
Stour Provost, Dorset
Poole, Dorset
Shaftesbury, Dorset
Mampitts Road, Shaftesbury

Story:
Ivor George Ridout was born on 7th May 1889 at Stour Provost, Dorset, and baptised there on 28th July 1889 the son of Charles Ridout and Hannah Sarah Wright Ridout (née Stone).  He spent his early life in and around Stour Provost and Stour Row, Dorset.  He enlisted on 8th April 1908 with the Dorsetshire (Queen's Own) Yeomanry Territorial Force, attending annual training camps (Service No. 227).  He was embodied on 5th August 1914 and appointed a Sergeant (Service No. 1061).  He served in the UK only and was given special leave on a number of occasions to help with the harvest work at his father's farm, Gore Farm, Margaret Marsh, Dorset.  He was finally discharged on 7th May 1916 having completed the terms of his engagement.  No medal records can be found for Ivor.   He had married Elsie Pickford on 14th April 1915 at West Milton, Powerstock, Dorset.  They went on to have three children.  By 1923 he was Farming at Pigeon House Farm, Stour Provost, and by the 1939 Register had moved to Wilkins Farm, Bozley Hill, Cann, Shaftesbury, still farming.  He died on 10th October 1968 in the Poole, Dorset, Registry District, his address being shown as 3 Mampitts Road, Shaftesbury.  He was buried in the Town Cemetery, Shaftesbury, on 14th Oct 1968.

Images:

Links to related web content / sources:
The National Archives
PN411

Osborne Bernard Ricketts

Surname: Ricketts
Other names: Osborne Bernard
Other people in this story:
James John Charles Ricketts
Sarah Ann Ricketts née Broadway
Sophia Louisa Ricketts née King
Hubert Martin Ricketts
Locations in this story:
Culverhouse Farm, Motcombe, Shaftesbury, Dorset
Sulva Bay, Gallipoli, Turkey
Sadden Farm, Burbidge, West Grafton, Marlborough, Wiltshire
Shaftesbury Grammar School, Shaftesbury, Dorset

Story:
Osborne Bernard Ricketts was born on 14th April 1892 in Motcombe, Shaftesbury, Dorset, and baptised there on 30th August 1892, the son of James John Charles Ricketts and Sara Ann Ricketts (née Broadway).  He lived most of his early life at Culverhouse Farm, Motcombe, where his father was the Farmer and attended Shaftesbury Grammar School, leaving in the spring of 1905. He enlisted on the 1st May 1908 and joined the Dorset (Queen's Own) Yeomanry Territorial Force, attending annual camps for training (Service No. 226).  (N.B. His military records are in the name of Bernard only.)   He was re-engaged on 30th April 1914 and embodied on 5th August 1914 with the rank of Corporal (Service No. 1058).  He was at Gallipoli, Turkey, and landed at Sulva Bay where he was severely wounded on 2nd August 1915.  He was invalided back to the UK on 9th October 1915 and discharged on 5th June 1916 having completed his terms of engagement.   He was awarded the Victory and British War medals as well as the 1914/15 Star.   He married Sophia Louisa King on 24th April 1917 at Motcombe, Dorset. By the 1939 Register he was living at Sadden Farm, Burbage, West Grafton, Marlborough, Wiltshire, and was working as a Dairyman and Cowman.  He died in Marlborough in 1966.

Osborne Bernard's younger brother Hubert Martin (b.1896) died on 9th September 1915 while serving with the Dorset Yeomanry at Gallipoli.

A "First List of Old Shastonians Serving in H.M. Forces" was produced by Shaftesbury Grammar School in September 1915. It shows the regiment in which the brothers served and the date and term in which they left school. Their names are also included on a hand written list of Shaftesbury Grammar School old boys serving during the war. An asterix can be seen next to Hubert's name, indicating that he had died. The board is now at Gold Hill Museum.

Printed Sources:
Shaftesbury Grammar School Magazine, October 1915
First List of Old Shastonians Serving in H.M. Forces, September 1915

Images:
  • List of Old Shastonians 1
  • List of Old Shastonians 4
  • Shaftesbury Grammar School Old Boys 1
  • Shaftesbury Grammar School Old Boys 6
  • Shaftesbury Grammar School 4

Links to related web content / sources:
The National Archives
Hubert Martin Ricketts
Shastonian