Detailed information of the people whose names are on the Cirencester Memorials

Click here to see Introduction to this project for an explanation of why the names are or are not on each memorial. These pages outline what we know about the named people, in many cases, very little. If you find errors or have more information we would be pleased to know. Contact: WW1 @ cirenhistory.org.uk

MAY, Evan 

Memorial Parish Church EVAN MAY

Memorial Hospital MAY E.

23167 [?23627] Private Evan Oliver Robert May. 10th (Service) Battalion, Gloucestershire Regiment. 

Born [c.1880. Turkdean, Cirencester]. 

Enlisted Cirencester. 

Died [21 or 31] August 1916. [Aged]. Killed in Action. France 

Pier and Face 5A and 5B. Thiepval Memorial.

 

In 1911 Census, Evan May, age 32, married, journeyman baker, living at 110 Cricklade Street, with wife and son

 

Wilts & Glos Standard 14 October 1916 

THE LATE PRIVATE EVAN MAY 

Further news regarding the death of her husband has been received by Mrs May, 160 Gloucester Street, in a letter from the officer commanding the deceased soldier’s company. The writer states: 

 

“Your husband was killed by a shell whilst in front line trench. He died immediately, and it is consoling to know that he suffered no pain. Kindly accept my deepest sympathy in your sad loss.” 

 

[Private Evan May died 31 August 1916] 

Source: FB image 1916 10 14 Ref 259 [Item 3]

MEDD, Alfred

Memorial Parish Church ALFRED MEDD

Memorial Hospital MEDD A. 

G/24895 Lance Corporal Alfred Wooldridge Medd. 10th Battalion, Queen’s Royal West Surrey Regiment. 

Born [c.1881. North Cerney]. 

Enlisted Cirencester. 

Died 5 September 1918. Aged 37. Killed in Action. France & Flanders,

Grave G.5. Grootebeek British Cemetery

 

Formerly 242018, East Kents. 

Commemorated in North Cerney All Saints parish memorial.

Son of Peter Goldsmith Medd, priest, North Cerney. Husband of Hilda Medd (nee Scholes): married Jan 1913. 

Probate: Alfred Wooldridge Medd of Shipton Bellinger near Andover, Hants, Lance Corporal Royal West Surrey Regiment died 5 Sep 1918 in France. Probate London 20 Nov to Hilda Maud Medd widow and Richard John Mullings solicitor. Effects £1519 16s 6d.

 

MILLS, Frank

Memorial Parish Church FRANK MILLS

Memorial Hospital MILLS F. 

37551 Private Frank Mills. 27th Field Ambulance, Royal Army Medical Corps. 

Born [c.1897. Cirencester]. 

Enlisted Cirencester. 

Died 12 October 1917. Aged 20. Killed in Action. France Panel 160. Tyne Cot Memorial

Son of William G. and Eliza Mills, 163 Cricklade Street. 

Plaque in nave of St John Baptist, Cirencester Company Church Lads Brigade, KRRC, includes Frank H. Mills. 

Family were saddlers at corner of Cricklade Street and Lewis Lane, now rebuilt. Related to Radways of Westonbirt. (Info. Nick Fear, 2006). 

 

Peter Grace, text submitted to Wilts & Glos Standard, 18.4.2000. Frank Mills enlisted in August 1914 at camp held in Cirencester Park; Cirencester Voluntary Aid (Men’s) Detachment of British Red Cross Society. Died near Ypres

 

See also Wilfred Larner. Grammar School Memorial, Bingham Hall, Cirencester. 

Wilts & Glos Standard [date?] 1917  

ANOTHER CICETER OLD GRAMMARIAN KILLED IN ACTION. 

On Thursday in last week Mr and Mrs W.G. Mills, of Cricklade Street, received through a comrade writing to his parents the sad news that their younger son, Private Frank Mills, R.A.M.C., had been killed. This was confirmed on Saturday morning by a letter from another comrade, Private E. Goodworth, who wrote: 

 

“It is with great regret that I have to announce to you that Frank was killed here, near St. Julien, in front of Ypres, about 5.20 on the morning of the 12th instant, during an attack. He and three others were bringing a stretcher case into the dressing station when a shell dropped beneath the stretcher, killing Frank and two others instantaneously, so you see he was doing his duty bravely as he always did. He was buried on the 14th instant, near where he was killed, with the other two. I feel his death very much, as you well know we enlisted together and had stuck together so long …” 

 

At the outbreak of war Private Frank Mills joined the local detachment of the “Red Cross,” which was in camp in Cirencester Park, and on August 25 1914, being then 17 years of age, enlisted, leaving Cirencester with other volunteers on September 1, and was attached to a Field Ambulance. He went to France in April 1915, and there he has served his country, with the exception of one leave in November last, until the time of his death. He was a bright lad and highly respected by all who knew him. He was a member of the Cirencester Town Cricket Club, playing mostly with the 2nd XI. His death adds another to the list of “Ciceter Old Grammarians” who have given their lives for their country. 

 

Source: FB image DSCN 3314, 3315, with photo

MOSS, Frank

Memorial Parish Church FRANK MOSS. 

Memorial Hospital MOSS F

Nothing Known

MOURBY, Tom

Memorial Parish Church TOM MOURBY

Memorial Hospital MOURBY T.

37499 Private Thomas Mourby. 1/5thBattalion, Duke of Cornwall’s Light Infantry.

Born [c.1899. North Cerney]. 

Enlisted Cirencester. 

Died 17 April 1918. Aged 19. Killed in Action. France 

Panel 68. Loos Memorial

 

Formerly 7/2671, T.Res.Bn. 

Son of Thomas and Clara Mourby, 1 Beech View, Victoria Road

MUSTOE, Edward D.C.M.

Memorial Parish Church EDWARD MUSTOE. D.C.M. 

Memorial Hospital MUSTOE E. 

6530 Sergeant Edward Mustoe. 1st Battalion, Gloucestershire Regiment. 

 [c.1884. Cirencester].

Enlisted Cirencester. 

Died 24 October 1918. Aged 34. Died of Wounds. France

Grave II.B.16. Vadencourt British Cemetery, Maissemy

Awarded D.C.M. In 1911 Census, in Malta with 2nd Battalion Gloucestershire. Single, age 26 (c.1885, Cirencester). Son of John Mustoe

Picture is believed to be DCM citation from London Gazette,found on a military history website

NEWELL, Charles H.

Memorial Parish Church CHARLES H. NEWELL

Memorial Hospital NEWELL C.H. Corporal Charles Henry Newell. [Battalion] [Regiment] 

Born [c.1880. Cirencester]. 

Enlisted [location]. 

Died 1 September 1920. Aged 40. Died of Injuries. 

Cemetery Cirencester Cemetery Section 3

Husband of Sarah Elizabeth Newell. 

Late addition to Parish Church, and not recorded by CWGC. 

Died of injuries received in the Great War. 

 

Wilts & Glos Standard 23 January 1915 

CIRENCESTER SOLDIER “IN THE PINK” 

In the course of a letter to his wife, Mrs Newell, of 149 Cricklade Street, Cirencester, Private C. Newell, of the 1st Battalion King’s Shropshire Light Infantry, throws an interesting side-light on the methods employed in the British Army to keep the forces physically fit by means of alternating periods of work and rest. We take some extracts: 

 

“I am ‘in the pink’ at present. We are out for a week’s rest again after a week’s hard work in the trenches, with plenty of digging. We have been all right this time, for they did not fire at us so much as at the last place we were in … We are having bad weather out here. At night time it is always raining, and it always seems to wait till night time before it starts. It is worst when we have to do our ‘sentry go’ … I am looking forward to the time when I shall be back.” 

 

Source:  FB image, 1915 01 23 Ref 518. 

 

Wilts & Glos Standard 4 September 1915 

CIRENCESTER SOLDIER’S EXPERIENCE AT HOOGE 

Private C. Newell, King’s Shropshire Light Infantry, writing to his wife at No. 146 Cricklade Street Cirencester, thus describes his experiences at Hooge: – 

 

“It was on a Thursday evening, 5th August, we relieved a battalion of Kitchener’s Army in the trenches to take up our position to make an attack on the Germans. As you know, our men had been driven out by burning liquid, and we had to take the trenches at any cost, so our division was picked out to do it. The boys, I can tell you, were all eager to get at grips with the Germans, and the attack was fixed for Sunday morning 8 August. Everybody was waiting for the time to come when our guns would open fire and the word ‘go’ be given. Well, we got the order, but it was cancelled for 24 hours, which was a disappointment, I can tell you, for all of us. On the Monday morning, about five minutes to three o’clock, it seemed as if the world was coming to an end. Every gun of the British spoke and every man was strained. But eager faces were waiting for the word to get over the top. At five past three it came and over we went, shells screaming over our heads, some bursting twenty yards in front of us, but we crept up till we got about thirty yards away from their lines, and then with one shout over to their trenches we went. Dead and dying were lying about. It seemed to me as if they must have lost three hundred in one crater, for it was full of them and the smell was awful. Anyhow we dug ourselves in and made the trenches safe for ourselves, but they kept shelling us all day and night. When it came down that we were getting relieved I think every man was pleased. Anyhow we set off to do it, we did it, and also showed them what England’s ‘contemptible Little Army’ can do. I will close now, hoping you will get the letter all right. I might say this – though there is no courage like the British, for when we took the trenches off the Germans we started smoking as we dug ourselves in and sang ‘Here we are, Here we are again,’ and they knew it, too. I might say I was proud of my regiment, proud of my comrades, and also proud of my dear old country.” 

 

Source: FB image 1915 09 04 Ref 328.

NEWMAN, Harold W.

Memorial Parish Church HAROLD W. NEWMAN

Memorial Hospital NEWMAN H.W. 

41273 Corporal Harold William Newman. 9th Battalion, Norfolk Regiment. 

Born [c.1894. Cirencester]. 

Enlisted Cirencester. 

Died 15 April 1918. Aged 24. Killed in Action. France 

Panel 34 to 35 and 162A. Tyne Cot Memorial

 

Only son of Andrew P. and Ellen Mary Newman, of 27 Chester Street. In 1911 Census, Harold (age 17) living at 27 Chester Street, Estate Agent clerk

NIVEN, William E.G. 

Memorial Parish Church WILLIAM E.G. NIVEN

Memorial Hospital NIVEN W.E.G. Lieutenant William Edward Graham Niven. Berkshire Yeomanry, Household Cavalry & Cavalry of the Line. 

Born [c.1878. Bayswater, London]. 

Enlisted [location]. 

Died 21 August 1915. Aged 37. Killed in Action. Gallipoli,

Special Memorial F.10. Green Hill Cemetery, Turkey

Son of William and Helen Niven. Husband of Henrietta Niven, married 1899: and father of actor, David Niven. 

 

In 1911 Census living at Golden Farm, Cirencester: private means, wife and four children, with servants. 

Peter Grace, text submitted to Wilts & Glos Standard, 5 Nov 2002. Killed the same day as H.B. Gething. Photo: departure from Cirencester of W.E.G. Niven. 

 

Wilts & Glos Standard October 17 1914 

FROM SOUTH AMERICA 

Lieut. W. Graham Niven, of the Golden Farm, Cirencester, is on his way home to join his regiment, the Berkshire Yeomanry, and is expected early next week. 

 

Wills and Administrations: William Edward Graham Niven, Probate date 30 Aug 1916; Death 21 August 1915. W.E.G. Niven, of the Golden Farm Cirencester, Lieutenant H.M. Army died on or since 21 August 1915 in Gallipoli Peninsula. Probate London 30 Aug 1916 to Henrietta Julia Niven widow. Effects £5893 3s 10d, Resworn £5760 11s 8d

OLLIFFE, R.

Memorial Parish Church ROLAND OLLIFFE

Memorial Hospital OLLIFFE R. 

Sergeant Roland Olliffe. United States Artillery. 

Born 1891, Cirencester. 

Enlisted [location]. 

Died 5 November 1918. Aged 27. Died California from pneumonia.

Grave/Memorial [Ref]. 

 

Roland Harry Olliffe, born 16 March 1891 in Cirencester, son of Albert and Frances Olliffe, 22 Victoria Road, carpenter; embarked 8 April 1913 with Albert Mabberley, George S. Cripps, Albert Brown on S.S. Cymric at Liverpool for Canada, but by 6 May 1917 was in Napa, California, and apparently U.S. citizen as he was then registered for draft, and is thought to have died there on 5 November 1918. 

 

Wilts & Glos Standard 7 December 1918 

DEATH OF SERGEANT R.H. OLIFFE (sic) 

We regret to hear that Mr and Mrs A. Oliffe, of 22 Victoria Road, Cirencester, have suffered bereavement by the death of their younger son, Sergeant R.H. Olliffe, of the United States Artillery, from pneumonia following influenza. Sergeant Olliffe, who, with his brother, had been resident in America some years, had transferred to another battery of Artillery with a view to a more early departure for the front, when he was stricken with illness and died at Fort Mac Arthur, San Pedro, California. He was removed to his brother’s home whence the military funeral took place. Deceased was 27 years of age. 

 

Source: FB image 1918 1st June 1918 to Dec 1918 12 07 Ref 431

PACE, Harold R.

Memorial Parish Church HAROLD PACE

Memorial Hospital PACE H.R. 

M/348119 Private Harold Reginald Pace. 717th M.T.Coy., Royal Army Service Corps. 

Born [c.1882. Cirencester]. 

Enlisted Cheltenham. 

Died 27 May 1918. Aged 36. Died of Wounds. France 

Grave III.A.43. Vailly British Cemetery

 

Son of Mary Ann Pace of 41 Chester Street and the late Frederick Pace. 

In 1911 Census living at 41 Chester Street, single, clerk. 

Grammar School Memorial, Bingham Hall, Cirencester. 

 

Wilts & Glos Standard 2 November 1918 

DEATH OF PRIVATE H.R. PACE, A.S.C.

Notification received of his death on 27 May 1918. [poor quality] 

 

Source: FB image 1918 1st June 1918 to Dec 1918 11 12 Ref 320

PAGET, Desmond O.

Memorial Parish Church DESMOND O. PAGET

Memorial Hospital Not recorded.

2/Lieutenant Desmond Otho Paget. 7th Battalion, King’s Royal Rifle Corps. 

Born [c.1899. Cirencester]. 

Enlisted [location]. 

Died 21 March 1918. Aged 18. Killed in Action. 

Grave I.G.17. Grand-Seraucourt British Cemetery

Son of Col. Arthur & Mrs Paget. 

In 1901 Census, aged 2 (c.1899, Cirencester) living at Highfield House, Gloucester Road, Stratton; with parent and siblings. 

Grammar School Memorial, Bingham Hall, Cirencester. 

 

Wilts & Glos Standard 4 May 1918 

LIEUTENANT DESMOND PAGET KILLED IN ACTION 

The death in action is reported of Second-Lieutenant Desmond Otto Paget, K.R.R.C., who will be remembered by many Ciceter readers as the elder of the two sons of the late Colonel Arthur Leopold Paget, of the 4th Gloucester Regiment, and the late Mrs Paget, who formerly resided at Stratton Wold. The late Colonel Paget served with the 4th Gloucesters at St. Helena, and was a member of the firm of Messrs. Paget, Rylands and Master, estate agents, Cirencester. He studied at the Royal Agricultural College in 1885-86. 

 

Source: FB image 1918 Jan 5th to July 27th 1918 05 04 Ref 240

PAISH, Harry

Memorial Parish Church HARRY PAISH

Memorial Hospital PAISH H. 

13096 [?130096] Private Harry Paish. 8th Service Battalion, Gloucestershire Regiment. 

Born [c.1893. Cerney Wick]. 

Enlisted Stroud. 

Died 3 June 1918. [Aged]. Died of Wounds. France 

Grave I.F.18. Bouilly Cross Roads Military Cemetery

 

In 1901 Census living at Rodmarton Cottages, Rodmarton, aged 8. His father, William, was an agricultural labourer

PAISH, William P.

Memorial Parish Church WILLIAM P. PAISH

Memorial Hospital PAISH W.P. 

65743 Corporal William Poulson Paish. 1/5th (Territorial), Northumberland Fusiliers.

Born [c.1890. Cirencester]. 

Enlisted Stafford. 

Died 27 May 1918. Aged 28. Died of Wounds. France 

Grave/Memorial [Ref]. Memorial

In 1901 Census, aged 10, living at 77 Castle Street with parents (father basket maker) and 4 sisters. [Photo of shop]. 

 

In 1911 Census, aged 20, boarder at 21 Sandyford Street, Stafford, single, newspaper clerk. Husband of Mary Veronica Paish, 28 Gaol Road, Stafford