Edward Brooks VC

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Edward Brooks VC Edward Brooks VC Edward Brooks was born in Oakley, Buckinghamshire, on 11 April 1883 and baptised in Oakley Church on 20 January 1884. He was one of twelve children of Thomas (born in Oakley in 1855) and Selina Brooks (born in Halesowen, Worcestershire in 1857). He was 34 years old, and a Company Sergeant Major in the 2/4th Battalion, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, British Army during the First World War when the following deed took place for which he was awarded the Victoria Cross. On 28 April 1917 at Fayet, near Saint-Quentin, France, Company Sergeant-Major Brooks, while taking part in a raid on the enemy's trenches, saw that the front wave was being checked by an enemy machine gun. On his own initiative he rushed forward from the second wave, killed one of the gunners with his revolver and bayoneted another. The remainder of the gun crew then made off, leaving the gun, whereupon the company sergeant-major turned it on the retreating enemy, after which he carried it back to Allied lines. His courageous action undoubtedly prevented many casualties and greatly added to the success of the operation.[1] Brooks received his Victoria Cross from the King on 18 July 1917, and on his return to Oxford was met at the railway station by the Mayor and Corporation and driven in a carriage preceded by the Headington Silver Band to Headington. After a presentation at Headington Manor House he returned to his home at 16 Windsor Street, which now sports an Oxfordshire blue plaque.[2] The medal His Victoria Cross is displayed at the Royal Green Jackets (Rifles) Museum, Winchester, England. .
Recommended publications
  • Chatham Delivery Delivered
    May 2018 News № 35 Crosses Recently Chatham Delivery Delivered A wreath in memory of William Hubbard was delivered to the Royal Engineers Boer War Memorial at Chatham Barracks, 21 April 2018 Kent on 26th April by Peter and Diana Gulland, accompanied Private by Diana’s cousins Joan and Jean who are natives of Chatham. Louis Herbert Plested As Haddenham residents it was appropriate for Peter and Diana Oxf & Bucks L I to deliver William’s wreath because he was born in Haddenham Julie West although he was brought up in Thame. Bruyelle War Cemetery, Hainault, Belgium. Diana wrote: On arrival at the Barracks we were welcomed by Corporal Jay . McLaughlin who was our host for the visit. After we had undergone a security 21 April 2018 check Jay escorted us to the memorial, a large stone arch some 40 feet in height Private which stands in front of a statue of Lord Kitchener. We located William William Chowns Hubbard’s name, listed under Drivers, and laid the wreath followed by a short Canadian Infantry service. Jay then led the party around the Barracks, which contained an Brian West impressive number of fine buildings, and into the Royal Engineers’ Museum. In Mons Communal Cemetery, Jay’s opinion, and one with which we would agree, the museum is one of the best Hainault, Belgium. of its type in the country. Covering the early history from the origins of the Royal . Engineers to modern warfare, the museum is vast. The party was particularly 21 April 2018 interested in the Sergeant Boer War and the Hugh Kidman First World War Queens Own Oxfordshire Hussars displays.
    [Show full text]
  • The Royal British Legion Cambridgeshire &
    August 2017 THE ROYAL BRITISH LEGION CAMBRIDGESHIRE & HUNTINGDONSHIRE NEWSLETTER SOHAM RBL BRANCH – Affiliation with East Cambridgeshire Police Cadets Soham RBL Branch have recently affiliated with the East Cambridgeshire Police Cadets. 1 Pictures from the night Branch and Cadets Officers signed the affiliation certificates. World War 1 Victoria Cross Recipients 10 April – 12 April 1917 John George Pattison VC - Pattison was 41 years old, and a private in the 50th (Calgary) Battalion, Canadian Expeditionary Force. On 10 April 1917 at the Battle of Vimy Ridge when the Canadian’s advamce was held up by an enemy machine-gun which was inflicting severe casualties. Pattison, with utter disregard of his own safety, sprang forward and jumping from shell-hole to shell-hole, reached cover within thirty yards of the enemy gun. From this point, in the face of heavy fire he hurled bombs killing and wounding some of the crew, and then rushed forward overcoming and bayoneting the surviving five gunners. Horace Waller VC - was As a 20-year-old private in the 10th Service Battalion, The King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry. On 10 April 1917 south of Heninel, France, when with a bombing section forming a block in the enemy line. A very violent counter-attack was made by the enemy on this post, and although five of the garrison were killed, Pte. Waller continued for more than an hour to throw bombs, and finally repulsed the attack. In the evening the enemy again counter-attacked the post and all the garrison became casualties, except Pte. Waller, who, although wounded later, continued to throw bombs for another half an hour until he was killed.
    [Show full text]
  • List of Barry War Dead
    List of Barry War Dead Lest We Forget - Is a partial list of the soldiers from the Barry area who were lost during the Great War. The list is broken down into casualties per month.It can either be accessed via the table below or on the menu above, by hovering over the Lest We Forget button and selecting the appropriate month. A copy of the list is also available from the button at the top right of the page. If anyone has any additional data relating to Barry's WW1 casualties, please feel free to contact us via our general contact email. February 1917 Corporal David Towers M. M., 17th Battalion Royal Welsh Fusiliers was killed in action on 2nd February, 1917 by shell fire and is buried in Ferme-Olivier Cemetery, Belgium. In December 1916 Corporal David Towers was awarded the Military Medal for: “gallant conduct during a raid on the enemy trenches on the night of 17/18th November, when attached to the 115th Trench Mortar Battery during the Battle of the Somme.” Private Dennis Dwyer of the 2nd Battalion, Royal Marine Light Infantry was killed in action on the 2nd February, 1917. He had been wounded on two previous occasions before receiving his fatal injury. He was buried in Connaught Cemetery, Thiepval, France. He had lived at 27, Faxten Street, Cadoxton and had joined the RMLI in 1912. Private David E. Lewis, Base M.T. Depot Army Service Corps, died in hospital in France on 3rd February, 1917 of bronchitis and heart disease. He was buried in Boulogne Cemetery, France.
    [Show full text]
  • Tribute to Company Sergeant Major Edward Brooks VC at the Unveiling
    Tribute to Company Sergeant Major Edward Brooks VC at the unveiling ceremony of an Oxfordshire Blue Plaque at 16 Windsor Street, Headington on Saturday 29th July 2017 given by Brigadier Nigel Mogg DL, Chairman Darell-Brown Robin Trust Company Sergeant Major Edward Brooks was, by any standards, a quite remarkable man. On behalf of his Regiment – The Oxfordshire & Buckinghamshire Light Infantry – I would like to thank Professor Evans and the Members of the Oxfordshire Blue Plaques Board for their recognition for posterity of his supreme courage just 100 years ago this year in placing a Blue Plaque on his house here at No. 16 Windsor Street. In winning the Victoria Cross in France, Edward Brooks was one of only two VCs to win the honour for the Regiment in the 1st World War. So you will understand that his actions and bravery at Fayet on 28th April 1917 are held in the highest possible esteem in his Regiment. Edward (or Ted as he was often known) was born in 1883, the sixth of 13 children, in Oakley, just across the county boundary in Buckinghamshire, a few miles to the north- west of Thame. His father was a farm labourer at Oakleywood Farm. Edward went to the village school in Oakley, but quickly showed his independence, leaving home at 13. Not for him life on the farm. With agricultural in depression, he went to Reading and got a job with Huntley & Palmers biscuits where his uncle worked. In 1899 he volunteered for Army service in South Africa in the Boer War, but was rejected as too young.
    [Show full text]
  • Grenadier Gazette 2010 V19
    GrenadierThe Gazette 2010 THE REGIMENTAL JOURNAL OF THE GRENADIER GUARDS IssueNo33 Price £5.00 IN MEMORIAM Gdsm Jamie Janes Gdsm Jamie Janes was killed by an improvised explosive device on October 5, 2009, just after arriving in theatre. He was the first Battalion and 11 Light Brigade fatality in Helmand Province. As a member of 6 Platoon, No 2 Company, he was terribly injured whilst clearing a route for his patrol and died en route to hospital near Nad-e_Ali district centre. On his second tour of Afghanistan, he was an experienced guardsman who willingly stepped forward to take on the difficult task of clearing routes; he was an example to all less experienced soldiers and gave his section and platoon great confidence. He died protecting his friends from danger. WO1 (RSM) Darren Chant On a day which no one within the serving Battalion will forget, WO1 (RSM) Chant was one of three Grenadiers murdered by a rogue Afghan policeman 3 November 2009. The policeman opened fire on a large number of British mentors at a secure Police checkpoint in the Nad-e-Ali having just returned from a joint patrol. The Sergeant Major, Sgt Matthew Telford and Gdsm James Major of the 1st Battalion were killed alongside two Royal Military Police mentors, Cpl Steve Boote and Cpl Nicholas Webster-Smith. As the senior soldier in the Battalion, WO1 (RSM) Chant had been detached from the remainder of the Battalion and been commanding the mixed team of British troops responsible for mentoring Afghan police in the area. He had joined the Regiment in 1986 and had served multiple tours of Northern Ireland, as well as Kuwait in 1990, Bosnia and previously in Afghanistan.
    [Show full text]
  • Victoria Cross Holders and Buckinghamshire Born In
    Victoria Cross Holders and Buckinghamshire Born in Buckinghamshire Company Sergeant Major Edward Brooks (1883-1944), 2/4th Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry. Born at Oakley, 11 April 1883. Won VC at St Quentin, 28 April 1917. Buried at Rose Hill Cemetery, Oxford. VC held by The Royal Green Jackets (Rifles) Museum, Winchester. Private Thomas Edwards (1863-1932), 1st Black Watch. Born at Brill, 19 April 1863. Won VC at Battle of Tamai, Sudan, 13 March 1884. Buried in St Mary’s Churchyard, Chigwell. VC held by The Black Watch Museum, Perth. Lieutenant Peter Scawen Watkinson Roberts (1917-79), Royal Navy. Born at Chesham Bois, 28 July 1917. Won VC in HM Submarine Thrasher off Crete, 16 February 1942. Buried at Holy Cross Churchyard, Newton Ferrers. VC held by The Ashcroft Collection, Imperial War Museum. Sergeant George Walters (1829-72), 49th Foot. Born at Newport Pagnell, 15 September 1829. Won VC at Battle of Inkerman, Crimean War, 5 November 1854. Buried in City of Westminster Cemetery, Finchley. VC held by The Rifles (Berkshire and Wiltshire) Museum, Salisbury. Second Lieutenant Frederick Youens (1893-1917), 13th Durham Light Infantry. Born at High Wycombe, 14 August 1893. Educated at Royal Grammar School, High Wycombe. Won VC at Hill 60, Ypres, 7 July 1917. Buried at Railway Dugouts Burial Ground (Transport Farm), Zillebeke, Belgium. VC held by The Durham Light Infantry Museum, Durham. Buried in Buckinghamshire Lieutenant Commander Geoffrey Heneage Drummond (1886-19), Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve. Born in London. Won VC at Ostend, 9-10 May 1918. Buried in St Peter’s Church, Chalfont St Peter.VC held by The Ashcroft Collection, Imperial War Museum.
    [Show full text]
  • The Royal Star & Garter Homes Names Floors After Local Heroes As
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE The Royal Star & Garter Homes names floors after local heroes as new £25m High Wycombe site opens • Results of competition to honour military heroes at The Royal Star & Garter Home in High Wycombe announced • RAF ace, pioneering female pilot, Victoria Cross recipient and Wycombe Wanderers Football Club legend are all honoured • First residents expected to move into the £25m state-of-the-art veterans’ care home in April The names of military heroes set to be immortalised at The Royal Star & Garter Home in High Wycombe have been announced, days before the first residents are welcomed. The new £25 million veterans’ care home will feature floors named after Frank Adams, Anthony ‘Bugs’ Bendell OBE, Edward Brooks VC and Lettice Curtis. They were chosen after members of the public put forward names of men and women with strong links to the military and the local area in The Royal Star & Garter Homes’ Who’s Your Hero? Competition. The Charity, which cares for ex- Servicemen and women and their partners who are living with disability or dementia, is keen to celebrate and remember their deeds at its new Home. A framed citation for each person will be placed in the floors, providing information as well as a photo. The announcement comes days before the Charity welcomes its first veterans into the 74-room Home. Residents are expected to move into the Home in April. A naming ceremony will take place at the Home in May and will be attended by relatives of the four veterans being honoured. The new Home will provide nursing and therapeutic care as well as specialist dementia care.
    [Show full text]
  • VE DAY WW2 Players As at May 2020
    CLAPTON ORIENT DURING WW2 -- as at 6 May 2020 In celebration of the 75th anniversary of Victory in Europe - VE Day on 8 May 1945 club historian Neilson Kaufman looks back at the men who appeared for O’s during World War Two Special Thanks A special word of thanks to five people who helped the Author in compiling this section. Peter Holme a researcher at the National Football Museum, Football Historians Ian Nannstead, Kenneth Westerberg and Terry Frost. Also special thanks to my assistant historian Davis Watson for his assistance in research some of the players. Finally, last, but not least, long standing O’s supporter and club Ambassador and friend Alan Chandler for the helping me on the research of players over the Second World War period, supplying team sheets for some matches over 1939-46. Sadly, Alan died Sunday, 8 December 2019 and also my former deputy historian and co-writer Alan Ravenhill, who died during September 2015. Without their help this section would not have been fully completed. Unlike in the First World War when three of O’s players were killed in action, none of those profiled below were killed over the Second World War unlike Arsenal who had nine of its players killed in action. This section on O’s history is dedicated to preserving and promoting the history and players of the O’s during World War Two Below are profiles of the wartime players to appear for O's and a name listing with appearances of the amateur players, where detailed profiled information was not always available? The Leading Appearance and Goalscorers over the War years Appearances Fred Bartlett 215, Stan Hall 132, Len Allum 110, Charlie Fletcher 85, George Rumbold 84, Bobby Black 82, Fred Tully 81 Goals Robert Shankly 29, George Willshaw 28, Matt Armstrong 27, Charlie Fletcher 21,Trevor Ford 15 THE A to Z of WARTIME PLAYERS 1939 – 1946 By club historian: Neilson N.
    [Show full text]
  • Visions March 18 REV FINAL.Pub
    VISIONS March 2018 Number 139 The city centre goes west By Ian Green, Chairman Part of the Osney Mead area that is due for redevelopment Photo courtesy of D Collins / Jolt Media The Society is generally optimistic about the future of our city Further acceleration of population growth to the east, south and but the Chairman argues we should all be concerned about the west in the early 20th century compounded the problem. The nettle future of the city centre. of shifting the main retail and commercial activities to eastern Oxford was considered but not grasped and for a long time the Our city centre suffers from traffic congestion on the roads, pedestri- only link between the eastern growth areas and the city centre an congestion on the pavements, inadequate cycle provision and services was across Magdalen Bridge which channelled traffic public transport that competes for road space with increasing vol- along the world-class High Street. Traffic movement is also con- umes of traffic. We lack a clear city centre housing policy while strained from the west along Botley Road and especially at the there is also failure to meet demands for office space and the retail Botley railway bridge, and from the south along Abingdon Road offer is in chaos. Tourism is stretching the capacity of the city and at Folly Bridge. centre’s flagging public realm, cultural offers are not clear to residents or visitors and there are continuing risks to the historic Enter the Balanced Transport Policy environment. Air pollution is a health risk and there is slow pro- From the 1930s and for nearly 30 years road building solutions gress to a low carbon economy.
    [Show full text]