Ashmore Pond

Gordon James Gray

Surname: Gray
Other names: Gordon James
Other people in this story:
Charles Gray
Elizabeth Ann Gray (née Taylor)
Bessie Gray née Weeks
Winifred May Gray née Weeks
Herbert Charles Gray
Locations in this story:
Ashmore, Shaftesbury, Dorset
France & Flanders
Germany
Tollard Royal, Wiltshire
Long Langton, Dorset
Dewlish Mill, Puddletown, Dorset
Farnham, Dorset

Story:
Gordon James Gray was born in Ashmore, Shaftesbury, Dorset, on 13th March 1895 and baptised there on 5th May 1895, the son of Charles Gray and Elizabeth Ann Gray (née Taylor).  He lived his early life with his family in Ashmore.  He enlisted with the 1st Battalion of the Coldstream Guards as a Private (Service No. 10310).  He served in France and Flanders from 26 Aug 1914 and at some time thereafter was taken prisoner and spent time in a POW Camp in Germany.  On his release and discharge he was awarded the Victory and British War medals as well as the 1914/15 Star.  His father had died in 1918 and by the 1921 Census Gordon was living with his widowed mother in Noad Street, Ashmore, working as a Ploughman.  He married Bessie Weeks on 4 Feb 1922 at Tollard Royal, Wiltshire, but she regrettably died at the Westminster Memorial Hospital, Shaftesbury, and was buried at Farham, Dorset, on 8 Mar 1922 within weeks of the marriage.  He went on to re-marry Winifred May Weeks (his first wife's sister) in Long Langton, Dorset, on 18th February 1930.  By the time of the 1939 Register he was living at Dewlish Mill, Puddletown, Dorset, and was described as a Gamekeeper whilst also acting as an ARP Warden. He died in Dewlish Mill in 1970 and was buried there at All Saint's Church on 16th November 1970. Gordon's brother Herbert Charles (b.1899) also served in the war, with the Machine Gun Corps.

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Herbert Charles Gray
Gold Hill, Shaftesbury

William Henry Gray

Surname: Gray
Other names: William Henry
Other people in this story:
James Chasey Gray
Susanna Kensell Gray née Norris
Edith Annie Gray née Fry
Gordon James Gray
Locations in this story:
Shaftesbury, Dorset
Enmore Green, Shaftesbury, Dorset
Weymouth, Dorset
Chetnole, Dorset
Noad Road, Ashmore, Shaftesbury, Dorset
Watery Lane, Donhead St. Mary, Wiltshire
Beicos, Malta

Story:
William Henry Gray was born in Shaftesbury, Dorset, on 20th June 1896 and baptised at Holy Trinity Church on 12th July 1896, the son of James Chasey Gray and Susanna Kensell Gray (née Norris).  He lived his early life with the family at 8 Gold Hill, Shaftesbury and later on in Enmore Green, Shaftesbury. He enlisted with the Royal Navy on 31st January 1912 as a Boy Class II later becoming an Able Seaman (Service No. J15923). He served throughout the war in various ships and shore establishments being regarded as a 'sharpshooter'.  He eventually bought himself out of the service subject to him agreeing to remain on the Reserves on 30th June 1923.  He was awarded the Victory and British War medals as well as the 1914/15 Star.  He had married Edith Annie Fry (who came from Ashmore, Shaftesbury, Dorset) in 1917 and his address given on the Absent Voters List for 1918 was Noad Road, Ashmore.  The 1921 Census shows that he was based on HMS Iron Duke then assigned to Beicos, Malta,  whilst his wife lived at 19 Bell Street, Shaftesbury.  By the time of the 1939 Register he had settled at Watery Lane, Donhead St. Mary, Wiltshire, and was working as a Roadman for the Dorset County Council as well as being the local Civil Defence Decontamination Volunteer.  He died in the Weymouth, Dorset, Registry District in 1988 and was buried at Chetnole, Dorset, on 13th April 1988. His brother, Gordon James Gray, also served during the conflict.

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Victor William Davidge

Surname: Davidge
Other names: Victor William
Other people in this story:
David Davidge
Matilda Davidge née Chapman
Locations in this story:
Noad Street, Ashmore, Shaftesbury, Dorset
Sturminster, Dorset

Story:
Victor William Davidge was born at Ashmore, Shaftesbury, Dorset, on 26th December 1897 (registered as William Victor Davidge but mainly always referred to as Victor) and baptised there on 3rd April 1898, the son of David Davidge and Matilda Davidge (née Chapman).  He lived all his life, apart from Military Service, in the Noad Street, Ashmore, area.  He enlisted and joined the 4th Battalion of the Dorsetshire Regiment as a Private (Service No. 2472) later transferring to the 2nd Garrison Battalion of the Northumberland Fusiliers (Service No. 205820).  It is not know in which theatre of war he served but on his discharge he was awarded the Victory and British War medals.  The 1921 Census shows him living with his parents at 1 Noad Street, Ashmore, working as a Farm Labourer and he was still there at the time of the 1939 Register now described as a General Labourer and ARP Warden.  His death was recorded at the Sturminster, Dorset, Registry on 9th February 1956 and he was buried at Ashmore on 14th February 1956.  He remained single all his life.  Neither of his two surviving brothers at the outbreak of war served in the conflict.

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Spring Cottage, Ashmore

Edward Isaac White

Surname: White
Other names: Edward Isaac
Other people in this story:
Isaac White
Sarah Elizabeth White née Street
Edith Bessie White née Tanswell
Edward Leonard White
Locations in this story:
Ashmore, Shaftesbury, Dorset
Sturminster, Dorset
Stoke sub Hamdon, Somerset
Portsmouth, Hampshire

Story:
Edward Isaac White was born at Ashmore, Shaftesbury, Dorset, on 23rd November 1884 and baptised there on 15th February 1885. He was the son of Isaac White, a Carrier, and Sarah Elizabeth White (née Street).  He spent all his life, apart from Military Service, in the Ashmore area. He married Edith Bessie Tanswell at Stoke sub Hamdon, Somerset, on 5th January 1914.   He enlisted with the Royal Garrison Artillery as a Gunner (Service No. 239361).  It is not known where he served but on his discharge was awarded the Victory and British War medals.  The 1921 Census shows him living in Green Lane, Ashmore, working as a Farm Engine Tractor Driver, and later, by the time of the 1939 Register, at Laburnum Cottage, Ashmore, Shaftesbury, Dorset, described as a Gardener.  His death was registered at the Sturminster, Dorset, Registry on 28th January 1966 and he was buried at Ashmore on 15th February 1966. Edward had two children one of whom, Edward Leonard White (b. 1915), had served in the Royal Artillery (Service No. 3969933) with the 4th/2nd Maritime Regiment on board Royal Navy vessels.  He was reported killed in action on 28 Nov 1942 and remembered on the Portsmouth Naval Memorial, Portsmouth, Hampshire.

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Church Lane, Ashmore

Harry Taylor

Surname: Taylor
Other names: Harry
Other people in this story:
Harry Taylor
Louisa Taylor née Prince
George Taylor
Locations in this story:
Ashmore, Shaftesbury, Dorset
Shaftesbury, Dorset

Story:
Harry Taylor was born at Ashmore, Shaftesbury, Dorset, in 1900 and baptised there on 18th March 1900, the son of Harry Taylor and Louisa Taylor (née Prince). He lived all of his short life, apart from Military Service, in the Ashmore area.   He enlisted with the Dorsetshire Regiment as a Private (Service No. 4081) and later transferred to the Bedfordshire Regiment (Service No. 204344).  After his discharge he was awarded the British War Medal only, which indicates he did not serve abroad.  By the 1921 Census he was living with his parents in Church Lane, Ashmore, helping his father with Farm Work.  He died in the Westminster Memorial Hospital, Shaftesbury, Dorset, on 9th August 1939 aged only 39 years and was buried at Ashmore on 12 Aug 1939.  He remained single throughout his short life. Harry's brother George (b.1898) also served in the war, with the Royal Garrison Artillery.

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George Taylor
Green Lane, Ashmore

Edwin James Fry

Surname: Fry
Other names: Edwin James
Other people in this story:
Charles Fry
Eliza Fry née Kelly
Edith Mary Fry née West
Elsie Charlotte Ransome
Locations in this story:
Tollard Royal, Wiltshire
Ashmore, Shaftesbury, Dorset
Iwerne Minster, Shaftesbury, Dorset

Story:
Edwin James Fry was born at Tollard Royal, Wiltshire, on 16th March 1879, the son of Charles Fry and Eliza Fry (née Kelly).  By the time he was 12 years of age his family had moved to Green Lane, Ashmore, Shaftesbury, Dorset, and he spent the rest of his life in the area apart from his time in the Army.   He married Edith Mary West at Ashmore in 1899.  He enlisted with the Dorsetshire Regiment as a Private (Service No. 2484) and later transferred to the Oxfordshire & Buckinghamshire Light Infantry (Service No. 202886).  He transferred again to the Royal Engineers (Service No. 495986) and was discharged from their service on 6th March 1919 having been declared unfit for further duty due to arthritis and rheumatism (both attributable to his service) for which he received a pension.  He was also awarded the Victory and British War medals.  The 1921 Census shows him living in Noad Street, Ashmore, working as a Woodman and Hurdle Maker.  Regrettably his wife died on 14 Oct 1932 and by the time of the 1939 Register he had remarried Elsie Charlotte Ransome at Iwerne Minster, Shaftesbury, Dorset, on 26 Mar 1939 and were living at Freak's Coppice, Ashmore, Shaftesbury, Dorset, Edwin being described as a Forestry Worker.  He died in Ashmore in 1962 and was buried there on 15th February 1962.

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Ashmore Pond

Joseph Rideout

Surname: Rideout
Other names: Joseph
Other people in this story:
Isaac Rideout
Ann Rideout née Causton
Mabel Mary Rideout
Locations in this story:
Green Lane, Ashmore, Shaftesbury, Dorset
Salisbury, Wiltshire

Story:
Joseph Rideout was born at Ashmore, Shaftesbury, Dorset, on 12th December 1881 and baptised there on 12th February 1882, the son of Issac Rideout and Ann Rideout (née Causton).  He lived all his life in the Ashmore, Shaftesbury, area except for his period of Military Service.  He enlisted with the Dorsetshire Regiment as a Private (Service Nos. 2898 & 201128).  He served with the 1st/4th Battalion but it is not known to which area of conflict he was posted.  He was discharged on 22nd April 1919 and awarded the Victory and British War medals.   He married Mabel Mary Rideout (same surname) at Ashmore, Shaftesbury, Dorset, on 23rd August 1922.  His wife regrettably died in 1938.   By the time of the 1939 Register he was living in Green Lane, Ashmore, Shaftesbury, Dorset, a widower, working as an Estate Woodman.  His death was recorded at the Salisbury, Wiltshire, District Registry on 22nd March 1968 and he was buried at Ashmore on 27th March 1968.

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Laurence Digby

Surname: Digby
Other names: Laurence
Other people in this story:
Sidney William Digby
Lettie Digby née Lavis
Louisa Mary Agnes Sparham Rowse Etheridge
John Kenneth Digby
Locations in this story:
Shaftesbury, Dorset
Elham Kent
Arras, Flanders
Newton Abbot, Devon
Goland, St. Austell, Cornwall
Ashford, Kent

Story:
Laurence Digby was born in Shaftesbury, Dorset, on 23rd January 1898 and baptised at Holy Trinity Church on 28th February 1898, the son of Sidney William Digby and Lettie Digby (née Lavis). He spent his early years with his family at 35 High Street, Shaftesbury, where his father was in business as an ironmonger.  His father died on 31  Jan 1914 and the remaining family moved to 1 Belle Vue Terrace, Victoria Street, Shaftesbury.  Laurence had enlisted with the 4th Battalion of the Dorsetshire Regiment (Service No. P141655) and in time had been promoted to Temporary 2nd Lieutenant on 19 Jun 1918 with the 1st Battalion which rank was confirmed on 19 Dec 1916.  There is a pension record showing that he had been discharged due to Heart Palpitations and Defective Eyesight due to the effects of Mustard Gas.  It has subsequently been learnt that 6 officers (including Laurence) and 104 men had been subject to a gas attack near Arras, France, on 14 Apr 1918. Regrettably no medal records can be found but he would certainly have received at least the Victory and British War Medals.  He resigned his commission on 5 Jan 1920.   By the 1921 Census he was boarding at 10 High Street, Ashford, Kent, described as an Engineer and Contractor on his own account.   He married Louisa Mary Agnes Sparham Rowse Etheridge,  a widow, in Elham, Kent, during 1922.  By the time of the 1939 Register he was living at The Moorings, Goland, St. Austell, Cornwall, and was described as a Fisherman (Summer).  His death was recorded in St. Austell, Cornwall, in 1963.  His brother, John Kenneth Digby, also served and remained in the Army following the end of the war.   (Information on some of the Military period details have been kindly supplied by a former Volunteer at The Keep, Dorchester, based on Dorsetshire Regiment diaries.)

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William John Farris

Surname: Farris
Other names: William John
Other people in this story:
Charles Farris
Celia Jane Hoskins Farris née Mayo
Olive Rachel Farris née Hanney
Locations in this story:
Haimes Lane, Shaftesbury, Dorset
France
Russia
Bradford on Avon, Wiltshire

Story:
William John Farris was born in Shaftesbury, Dorset, on 3rd June 1898 and baptised at Holy Trinity Church on 3rd July 1898, the son of Charles Farris and Celia Jane Hoskins Farris (née Mayo).  He lived his early life with the family at 17 Haimes Lane, Shaftesbury.   William enlisted on 2nd June 1916 and served with, in succession, the Dorsetshire Regiment, the Army Service Corps (Motor Transport Reserve), the Essex Regiment (Service No. 39586) and the Yorkshire Regiment (Service No. 33829).  He became in time a Lance Corporal and during his time served in France as well as a short period after the armistice in Russia.  He was discharged on 3rd July 1919, being physically unfit to serve due to debility and defective vision.  He was awarded the Victory and British War medals.  By the 1921 Census he was living in Victoria Street, Shaftesbury described as an Engineer working to John Farris & Sons (the local foundry).  He married Olive Rachel Hanney in Bradford on Avon, Wiltshire, in 1923.  By the time of the 1939 Register he was living at 19 Haimes Lane, Shaftesbury, Dorset, described as an Agricultural Engineer (Works Manager) as well as being a volunteer with the local Fire Brigade.  He died in Shaftesbury on 1st October 1975.

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Victoria Street

Percival Stewart Morgan

Surname: Morgan
Other names: Percival Stewart
Other people in this story:
George Morgan
Emily Morgan née Brockway
Jessie Mary Morgan née Brockway
Sidney Charles Morgan
Locations in this story:
Shaftesbury, Dorset
Ambala, Punjab, India
Frizinghall, Yorkshire
Finchley, London, N3
Hendon, Middlesex
Bradford, Yorkshire

Story:
Percival Stewart Morgan was born in Shaftesbury, Dorset, on 10th November 1887 and baptised at Holy Trinity Church on 4th December 1887, the son of George Morgan and Emily Morgan (née Brockway).  He lived most of his early life at the family home at 7 Victoria Street, Shaftesbury.  (NB. Victoria Street was formerly called Malthouse Lane (see 1881 Census).  By the time of the 1911 Census, Percival had enlisted with the 1st Dragoon Guards (The Kings) as a Shoeing Smith (Service No. D/902).  He was based at Ambala, Punjab, India.  He was eventually discharged on 16th December 1919 and awarded the Victory and British War medals as well as the 1914 Star (his medal record shows he was not eligible for the 1915 Clasp).  He married Jessie Mary Brockway at St. Margarets Church, Frizinghall, Yorkshire, on 26th March 1921 and by the Census of that year they were boarding at 41 Alexandria Street, Bradford, Yorkshire, where Percival was working as a Blacksmith.  The 1939 Electoral  Register shows him living at 192 Regents Park Road, Finchley, London, N.3. yet his entry in the 1939 Register is still officially closed.  His death was registered at the Hendon, Middlesex, Registry on 8th November 1954 and his funeral carried out on 13 Nov 1954. Percival's brother Sidney Charles (b.1885) also served in the war, with the Dorsetshire Regiment and the Royal Engineers.

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  • Victoria Street

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Sidney Charles Morgan