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Thomas William Arthur Smart

This story relates to the contributor's father, Thomas William Arthur Smart, always known as William or Will. He was born on October 11th, 1891 in Wigston near Leicester. It is not known exactly when he joined up, but he was certainly in the Army in 1916, as the contributor has a postcard with this date on it. It is known from the contributor's mother that William was vaccinated against small pox and had a bad reaction to it. He contracted peritonitis and was seriously ill, which delayed him going to the Front. In 1917 he had double pneumonia, sent to Rugeley Camp Military Hospital, and he was so ill that they sent for his sister, as they did not think that he would live. The contributor's mother said the fact that he was in a military hospital saved him, because he had 24 hour care. He was told that he didn't have to go to the Front and could have an office job instead, but he insisted that he wanted to go. He went to the Front in 1918, reaching Boulogne on March 7th, 1918. He was in the Lincoln Regiment, Private W Smart, service number 43446. He had previously been in the South Staffordshire Regiment, but the contributor has a diary, in which he recorded his daily experiences, and on 7th March he records that he was drafted to the Lincolns. He then moved to the Front, and records his journey and subsequent experiences. On the 14th April he moved up to the line and took over some hastily dug trenches from another company. They were told that Jerry was a mile away. He wrote and later talked about being surrounded under fire. They were captured on the 15th or 16th and then marched to Armentières. Their eventual destination was a French barracks in Lille. They were hungry and thirsty and had their pocket knives taken away. He records, sending a POW card to Lily, his sister, on 17th April, that there were 353 men all crowded into a small room, 20' x 50', with awful sanitary arrangements and alive with lice. His diary also records all kinds of details of what they had to eat, where they were moved to, the work they had to do, medical treatments, such as inoculations that he was given, female civilians being forced to work and so on. He also talks about stealing food when they were sent to work at a ration dump at the station. He was a prisoner for the rest of the war, in a variety of places in Belgium, and in October left for Bavaria. When the war finally ended he was in a camp at Hammelburg. On November 10th 1918 he notes that the Jerries were leaving the camp and heard about the general Armistice on the 12th. They remained at the camp and had a photograph taken in the village on 16th December. He travelled back to Switzerland, travelling through Germany on the 22nd December. He finally arrived home in England on 30th December on the Caledonian and back to his home near Leicester on 2nd January. After the war he went back to his job in the Co-Operative offices in Wigston, Leicester. He married a Belgian girl, Helene Geens, in 1928, whom he had met on holiday. She had been a refugee in Prestatyn during the war; see story entitled: Belgian Refugees in North Wales.
Two postcards sent to William Smart. Photograph of staff and patients ? taken at Rugeley Camp Military Hospital, April 1917. Three photographs of William Smart, one with his mother and his sister, Lily. Three postcards sent to Lily, William's sister. Photograph of William Smart and four other POWs, Hammelburg, 1918. Taken just after Armistice.

Postcards sent to William Smart
2 postcards sent to William Smart (& reverse)
Postcard
Photograph of staff and patients ? taken at Rugeley Camp Military Hospital, April 1917 (& reverse)
Photograph of staff and patients ? taken at Rugeley Camp Military Hospital, April 1917.
Medical
Photograph
William Smart, his mother and sister, Lily
William Smart
William Smart (& reverse)
3 postcards sent to Lily, William's sister (& reverse)
Photograph of William Smart and four other POWs, Hammelburg, 1918. Taken just after Armistice.

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CONTRIBUTOR

Diane MacEwan

DATE

- 1918

LANGUAGE

eng

ITEMS

17

INSTITUTION

Europeana 1914-1918

PROGRESS

START DATE
TRANSCRIBERS
CHARACTERS
LOCATIONS
ENRICHMENTS

Generating story statistics and calculating story completion status!

METADATA

Source

UGC
Postcard
Photograph

Contributor

europeana19141918:agent/a98594d231c38ea50b481000cfda6973

Type

Story

Language

eng
English

Country

Europe

DataProvider

Europeana 1914-1918

Provider

Europeana 1914-1918

Year

1917
1918

DatasetName

2020601_Ag_ErsterWeltkrieg_EU

Begin

1917
Mon Jan 01 00:19:32 CET 1917
Tue Jan 01 00:19:32 CET 1918
Tue Jan 01 00:19:32 CET 1901

End

1918
Mon Dec 31 00:19:32 CET 1917
Tue Dec 31 00:19:32 CET 1918
Sun Dec 31 01:00:00 CET 2000
Sun Dec 31 00:19:32 CET 1933

Language

mul

Agent

Diane MacEwan | europeana19141918:agent/a98594d231c38ea50b481000cfda6973
Thomas William Arthur Smart | europeana19141918:agent/eb6128322032bfc81fe745855ab69b96

Created

2019-09-11T08:33:48.676Z
2019-09-11T08:33:48.648Z
2014-08-02 12:12:13 UTC
2014-09-12 15:06:41 UTC
2014-09-12 15:06:43 UTC
2014-09-12 15:06:45 UTC
2014-09-12 15:06:47 UTC
2014-09-12 15:06:55 UTC
1917-04
2014-09-12 15:06:59 UTC
2014-09-12 15:07:08 UTC
2014-09-12 15:07:12 UTC
2014-09-12 15:07:16 UTC
2014-09-12 15:07:22 UTC
2014-09-12 15:07:26 UTC
2014-09-12 15:07:29 UTC
2014-09-12 15:07:35 UTC
2014-09-12 15:07:40 UTC
2014-09-12 15:07:44 UTC
2014-09-12 15:07:47 UTC
2014-09-12 15:07:52 UTC

Provenance

BL01

Record ID

/2020601/https___1914_1918_europeana_eu_contributions_17064

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Thomas Bryers Hepple

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Thomas Bryers Hepple was the great uncle of the contributor. Born in Hetton-le-Hole, County Durham in 1897, he enlisted in 1916 and served in France as a gunner in the Royal Horse Artillery. His two elder brothers, Matthew and William also enlisted, and were charged to ‘look after Tom’ by their parents, John George and Grace. Although they all joined the Royal Horse Artillery, they were in fact deployed to different areas, and so were unable to fulfil this exhortation. Tom survived the war, but contracted influenza and died of pneumonia whilst still in France. He is interred in the Dunkirk Town Military cemetery in Dunkirk. He is also commemorated on the Easington Lane Memorial Clock and on his parents’ headstone at Easington Lane cemetery in County Durham. After the Armistice, Tom’s brother Matthew was on the train back home to Durham, but it was turned back at Ripon in Yorkshire and sent to Ireland instead. After the war, when John George and Grace were going to Dunkirk to visit Tom’s grave, they asked Matthew to accompany them, only he refused saying he would never set foot outside the country again, and his brother William went instead. Tom’s headstone in Dunkirk was subsequently inscribed “Too loved to be forgotten”. || One service medal, which has Tom’s name and number on it. Family photograph with parents John George and Grace, with sons Matthew, William and Tom all in uniform; Tom is on right at front. Two proof photographs of Thomas in uniform, one taken at Elemore (County Durham) in 1916. Scroll of service for those who died, which has been annotated on the back by G Sutton (the person who sent the medals and scrolls). A memorial card. 5 photographs in total; one of a war memorial erected in 1921 in Easington Lane in County Durham (Thomas is remembered on it), others are of Dunkirk war cemetery taken in the early 1920’s with the original wooden crosses: Thomas's parents John George and Grace Hepple had the photographs taken and are in the pictures. A final photograph of the eldest brother Mathew Hepple in uniform.

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